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What is Fastly and why a slew of websites went offline

Bloomberg NewsbyBloomberg News
June 8, 2021
in All Posts
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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An outage at Fastly Inc., a cloud-based content platform that serves many leading international websites, sent swaths of the web offline on Tuesday. Fastly is one of a number of high-level website and application hosting services that large enterprises use to serve content to millions of users simultaneously.

Rather than hosting all website content on a single set of servers in one location, Fastly puts cloud infrastructure in dozens of locations to let people download from a server closest to them. Similar to Amazon Web Services, Cloudflare Inc., and Microsoft Corp.’s Azure, Fastly is designed to resist outages caused by a range of network issues. These range from congestion and localized power failures to the distributed denial-of-service attacks often used by hackers to overwhelm a website.

Photo by Pixabay

By using multiple machines to host the same content, Fastly attempts to make it extremely hard to push a company’s web presence offline.

What happened?

Major websites began reporting problems around 10:30 a.m. U.K. time on Tuesday, according to Downdetector.

Fastly acknowledged the issue at 10:58 a.m., saying “We’re currently investigating potential impact to performance with our CDN services.” At 11:44 a.m. the company said it had identified the problem and was implementing a fix. The company pared losses in premarket trading after a fall of more than 7% during the outage.

We identified a service configuration that triggered disruptions across our POPs globally and have disabled that configuration. Our global network is coming back online. Continued status is available at https://t.co/RIQWX0LWwl

— Fastly (@fastly) June 8, 2021

Websites hit by the outage, including Amazon, the New York Times, Reddit, and U.K. government sites, as well as Bloomberg News, were accessible again shortly afterward.

Why did the outage happen?

There are many similarities between this outage and an issue with Cloudflare last year. Cloudflare’s problems arose because — in simple terms — the company’s engineers tried to re-route internet traffic and everything exploded.

Both companies route website traffic through their servers. So when their servers break, so does everything else. These problems are also hard to prevent, and often happen when companies need to update their systems.

Was this a hack?

There is no evidence to suggest Fastly’s issues on Tuesday were the result of a malicious cyberattack. By contrast, all website system administrators know that network outages and downtime can happen, no matter the size of their hosting platform.

As such, a single outage in a year for under 60 minutes isn’t usually enough to warrant moving to a rival provider.

Depending on the service level agreement signed between it and affected customers, however, Fastly may offer refunds or credits equivalent to the number of minutes a website was unavailable, according to its website.

Haven’t we been here before?

Widespread outages are often the result of hackers, but not always the fault of the companies hosting content.

For instance, in 2016, millions of internet users lost access to some of the world’s most popular websites after hackers compromised Domain Name System service provider Dyn Inc.. That knocked offline sites including Twitter, Spotify, Reddit, CNN, Etsy and The New York Times.

—  By Nate Lanxon  (Bloomberg Mercury)

An outage at Fastly Inc., a cloud-based content platform that serves many leading international websites, sent swaths of the web offline on Tuesday. Fastly is one of a number of high-level website and application hosting services that large enterprises use to serve content to millions of users simultaneously.

Rather than hosting all website content on a single set of servers in one location, Fastly puts cloud infrastructure in dozens of locations to let people download from a server closest to them. Similar to Amazon Web Services, Cloudflare Inc., and Microsoft Corp.’s Azure, Fastly is designed to resist outages caused by a range of network issues. These range from congestion and localized power failures to the distributed denial-of-service attacks often used by hackers to overwhelm a website.

Photo by Pixabay

By using multiple machines to host the same content, Fastly attempts to make it extremely hard to push a company’s web presence offline.

What happened?

Major websites began reporting problems around 10:30 a.m. U.K. time on Tuesday, according to Downdetector.

Fastly acknowledged the issue at 10:58 a.m., saying “We’re currently investigating potential impact to performance with our CDN services.” At 11:44 a.m. the company said it had identified the problem and was implementing a fix. The company pared losses in premarket trading after a fall of more than 7% during the outage.

We identified a service configuration that triggered disruptions across our POPs globally and have disabled that configuration. Our global network is coming back online. Continued status is available at https://t.co/RIQWX0LWwl

— Fastly (@fastly) June 8, 2021

Websites hit by the outage, including Amazon, the New York Times, Reddit, and U.K. government sites, as well as Bloomberg News, were accessible again shortly afterward.

Why did the outage happen?

There are many similarities between this outage and an issue with Cloudflare last year. Cloudflare’s problems arose because — in simple terms — the company’s engineers tried to re-route internet traffic and everything exploded.

Both companies route website traffic through their servers. So when their servers break, so does everything else. These problems are also hard to prevent, and often happen when companies need to update their systems.

Was this a hack?

There is no evidence to suggest Fastly’s issues on Tuesday were the result of a malicious cyberattack. By contrast, all website system administrators know that network outages and downtime can happen, no matter the size of their hosting platform.

As such, a single outage in a year for under 60 minutes isn’t usually enough to warrant moving to a rival provider.

Depending on the service level agreement signed between it and affected customers, however, Fastly may offer refunds or credits equivalent to the number of minutes a website was unavailable, according to its website.

Haven’t we been here before?

Widespread outages are often the result of hackers, but not always the fault of the companies hosting content.

For instance, in 2016, millions of internet users lost access to some of the world’s most popular websites after hackers compromised Domain Name System service provider Dyn Inc.. That knocked offline sites including Twitter, Spotify, Reddit, CNN, Etsy and The New York Times.

—  By Nate Lanxon  (Bloomberg Mercury)

Tags: Amazon Web ServicesBloombergcloudflarefastlyMicrosoft Azure
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