More bad news for Microsoft: 

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2013/10/30/windows_azure_global_fail/

Windows Azure Compute cloud goes DOWN WORLDWIDE

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Microsoft's Windows Azure cloud suffered a worldwide partial compute outage on 
Wednesday, calling into question how effectively Redmond has partitioned the 
service.

The problems emerged at 2.35AM UTC, and were still ongoing as of 10.20PM UTC 
the same day, according to the company's service dashboard.


"Manual actions to perform Swap Deployment operations on Cloud Services may 
error, which will then restrict Service Management functions," the company said.

Every single Azure region – a geographically distant and independent set of 
data centers – was affected, but for posterity that included: West US, West 
Europe, Southeast Asia, South Central US, North Europe, North Central US, East 
Asia, and East US.

"We are taking all necessary steps to mitigate this incident for the affected 
hosted services as soon as possible. Further updates will be published within 2 
hours to keep you apprised of the situation. We apologize for any inconvenience 
this causes our customers," the company wrote at 10PM UTC.

Swap Deployment operations let developers initiate a virtual IP address swap 
between staging and production environments for services. Swap Deployment is an 
asynchronous operation that interacts with an Azure management service. Though 
not a main component of the IaaS cloud, an outage would be irritating for some 
heavy users, and a global outage is likely to damage confidence in Microsoft's 
ability to manage services at scale.


Dashboard dashed ... a global failure is the absolute worst thing that can 
happen to a cloud

Alongside a global fail to a sub-component of Compute, the Azure cloud's 
Website feature also reported a global problem with "FTP data access" which 
began at 7PM UTC, suggesting a cascading fail from some part of the problem 
that downed Swap Deployment.

The antithesis of cloud computing is a problem cropping up that affects all 
regions simultaneously, and yet this marks the second time in under a year that 
Microsoft has had a concurrent global fail.

Last time we had a Blue Sky of Death it was due to a lapsed security 
certificate which downed all worldwide Windows Azure storage services. This 
time a much more minor component of the cloud has gone down, but the fact it 
has failed globally is a severe indictment against the partitioning policies 
Microsoft may have put in place. ®

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