You're viewing a single thread.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-07-19/what-is-crowdstrike-outage-explained/104120260
This has happened and taken a bunch of services down around the world.
21 2 ReplyWhat a garbage.
Just use Linux, SELinux, strong sandboxing, repositories, nonexecutable home directories, strong access control, offline backups.
18 5 ReplyHow about a testing environment separate from production
28 0 Replyand phased rollouts …
21 0 ReplyAnd my axe
18 0 ReplyI watched a ocean of computers go dead on the floor because I couldn't convince the sysadmin to do exactly that when pushing a major change.
11 0 ReplyAny more details?
This sounds like the setup to a fun story.
3 0 Reply
Best I can do is push it worldwide on a Friday morning
5 0 Reply
Does that cost money?
1 0 ReplyYes. And time.
We make a lot more money by testing in production, and let the users tell us what's wrong. It's much faster.
1 0 ReplyWe've successfully replaced the entire support team with an HTML form creating tickets for the one developer.
Surefire way to receive that efficiency performance bonus.
3 0 Reply
But how do I integrate everything into Microsoft 365 with that snazzy OneDrive feature? /s
9 0 ReplyYou will escort us to sector zero zero one.
4 0 Reply
Crowd strike did this to Linux in April.
8 0 ReplyDamn
1 0 Replyhttps://access.redhat.com/solutions/7068083
interesting it uses eBPF.
1 0 Reply
Pretty sure it's happened in Linux before, but because it's much less users, obviously it won't have same global outage like what happens now
8 2 ReplyI mean, I run Fedora and ran many others and had multiple crashes.
Fedora Atomic Desktops not anymore, but still not perfect.
1 0 Reply
And log monitoring with off machine collections
3 0 Reply