Hardware crash hits Telstra's Big Pond users

By Andrew Colley
25 October 2002 02:20 PM
Tags: telstra, docsis, bigpond, cable, outage, ip addresses, lawrence, customer
A weekend hardware failure has hampered attempts by users of Telstra's Big Pond cable service to gain access to the Internet for about two days, with some customers continuing to experience problems until this morning.

At around 6am on Saturday, Big Pond cable server hardware responsible for allocating IP addresses failed, leaving customers using DOCSIS compliant modems scrambling to secure a place on the service.

According to Telstra, customers that were not logged on to the service during the incident were forced to make repeated login attempts in order to be assigned an IP address.

It appears that the hardware failure greatly diminished the service's capacity to allocate IP addresses.

"We still haven't identified the root cause but we have alleviated the pressure on the load-handling capability of the computer of that allocates IP addresses and the impact should now should be negligible," said Telstra spokesperson Kerrina Lawrence.

Lawrence conceded some customers may still have been experiencing problems related to the failure until this morning.

According to Lawrence the problem has been referred to the equipment vendor for further investigation.

Refusing to name the equipment vendor, Telstra is reserving its comment on the disruption to closely-worded statements. However the statements it has made today echo those it issued in March when a routine software upgrade left some customers with DOCSIS modems offline for 12 hours.

Telstra conducted the software upgrade in the early hours of the morning, forcing customers issued with DOCSIS compliant cable modems to re-authenticate and be assigned with new IP addresses. However Bigpond's servers were unable to cope with the sudden rash of log-on attempts.

"We had some issues with the servers' traffic handling capabilities," said the Telstra spokesperson in March.

Talkback 4 comments

    Typical Tel$tra why cant they ...Bob Brown -- 21/10/02

    Typical Tel$tra why cant they just provide a service that works?

    Typical T(H)elstra planning. I ...Keith Styles (A very,very disgruntled user) -- 22/10/02

    Typical T(H)elstra planning. Insufficient, or a total lack of backup, redundancy, network & hardware forward planning is obvious to anyone who has only a meagre understanding of what it takes to run a network. T(H)elstra is arrogant beyond belief to think they can get a way with letting their customers wear the problems all the time, simply because they do not have full backup capabilities. Broadband services are not for the rich & famous. Business is now dependant on it for its day to day operations.
    Wake up T(H)elstra ! Your Tweddle Dumb & Tweedle Dee approach is amateurish in the extreme.

    12 Hours? More like 32 hours. ...David Stergo -- 28/10/02

    12 Hours? More like 32 hours. I couldn't work all weekend because of these blithering idiots. I wonder if they are going to compensate people for the pain? I mean we pay enough for the service. I don't like to pay so much to watch a few video's that I can hire from the store for a fraction of the amount I get charged for downloading. Imagine if you had to pay for each megabyte of data for watching a pay TV program! My spleen is vented now. Thankyou ZDNet for drawing this to the publics attention. It's not good enough Telstra!

    Since last Saturday, I still h ...Anonymous -- 29/10/02

    Since last Saturday, I still have problem to connect to the network. I was told by Tech. support ther problem was rectified but the connection was down til Tuesday morning.

    I am completely frustrated with the quality of service provided by Telstra.

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