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To: Frank A. Coluccio who wrote (797)12/23/1999 3:34:00 PM
From: Curtis E. Bemis  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1782
 
Dependent on the IP network?

That is how VoIP works you know. Not over the PSTN but over
the ip infrastructure. This message you read right now, at least from me to SI and SI outbound to you does'nt use the PSTN either. Don't know about the "last mile" or two to you.



To: Frank A. Coluccio who wrote (797)12/24/1999 8:28:00 AM
From: Frank A. Coluccio  Respond to of 1782
 
re: "Further Y2K Silliness"

That's the name of a thread just started on NANOG. And this is further to the uplinked message I sent yesterday. Here's a part of the thread's opening message:
====



I just got the following email from a fairly large multinational company:

GROUP [XXXXXXX]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------

The following attachments were removed in accordance with Firm policy
effective 12/20/99. Attachments with file types .EXE, .COM, .JPG, .MPG,
.AVI, .SCR, .GIF, and .BMP. will be stripped from internet messages until
1/10/2000.
----------------------

Oh well, I guess there are gonna be many "retransmissions" during the first
week of January if this is gonna be corporate policy thruout the net. :-)

Regards,



To: Frank A. Coluccio who wrote (797)12/31/1999 1:27:00 PM
From: Frank A. Coluccio  Respond to of 1782
 
re: Y2K, some mid-day status notes from NANOG re: ISP route abnormalities

Note: see the first paragraph in the uplinked message (reply #839) which I posted last week. In the following, DoS stands for "denial of service."

============

From Japan:

"It seems there is no trouble related Y2K in Japan
Major IX, ISPs and root DNS server working fine."


============

Stateside:

"Happy Y2K to all! Looks as if GTEI has begun filtering ICMP type 0 and 8 (I
hope that's all) through their backbone. I heard that this was because of
DoS threats, but I haven't seen any other commentary on the subject. GTEIs
NOC claims that they have made no changes. From some places I can get
through the network, but others fail. CERFNet and others are clean.
Traceroute works fine everywhere. Has anyone else seen anything similar?"


Soon after, someone replied:

"Seems normal in their backbone from NYC to PaloAlto"

============

"A few (perhaps 2%) of the domains I've looked up today aren't
resolving. It appears that several hosting companies have turned off their nameservers until after this Y19100 foolishness is over. cihost.com is one of them. I wonder if their customer SLA covers this. It seems that this reaction is a lot like what many predict will happen to phone systems: the date rollover doesn't break things, panic does. Has anyone on the list shut down any equipment as preventative maintenence, and if so, how have your customers reacted?"

=============




To: Frank A. Coluccio who wrote (797)12/31/1999 6:04:00 PM
From: Frank A. Coluccio  Respond to of 1782
 
as an indicator for iran.

the facilities use satelite links via teleglobe/intelsat.

internal links use facilities of the Iranian PTT.

----- Forwarded message from Superuser <root@iran.com> -----
Date: Sat, 1 Jan 2000 01:15:07 +0330 (IRT)
From: root@iran.com (Superuser)
To: jim@reptiles.org
Subject: servers in tehran/iran ok in y2k

links are all up. no outages or faults.
routers are all up. no outages or faults.
servers are all up. no outages or faults.
x.25 links are working. no outages or faults.
dialup links are working. no outages or faults.



To: Frank A. Coluccio who wrote (797)12/31/1999 9:45:00 PM
From: Frank A. Coluccio  Respond to of 1782
 
UK GMT and CET Y2K Rollover Observations

"GMT and CET rolled over without any major incidents. The cellular
networks were busy but thats to be expected.

Regards,
--
Alive and Kicking.
DOMINO.ORG


===============

Some more advice from NZ some twelve hours after their rollover:

">>"The phone system is almost useless" is perhaps less accurate than
>>"the one person I have talked to has reported some problems with his
>>office handsets" :)

"I think in the Australian experience "the mobile phone system is
useless" was pretty accurate for at least an hour after midnight.
Landlines coped much better. For the places yet to experience 1/1/00 I
would suggest that if you need to keep in touch with your NOC (or
whatever) then be near a landline and give the mobile a night off."

[Regards,]



To: Frank A. Coluccio who wrote (797)12/31/1999 11:28:00 PM
From: Frank A. Coluccio  Respond to of 1782
 
More post-rollover observations from the UK. Note the level of p-c [which is still deemed to be the norm in most other parts of the English speaking world, at least] in this dude's signature line.

-----
What happened in the UK:

Date: Sat, 1 Jan 2000 01:37:52 +0000 (UTC)
From: [delete]

Sorry, I haven't got NANOG posting access at the moment - could you
forward this to them for me?

We rolled over 1h35m ago. Rollover saw (locally) two of the four mobile
networks drop the users in the room with me (ie they saw coverage totally
drop). However, the other two networks: Orange & One2One were fine, with
users being able to make and receive calls fine. Attempting to call from
Orange -> {Cellnet | Vodafone} received either line busy or network busy.

BT was alternating between telephone network being busy and being able to
connect a call. However, a dialtone was given instantly.

There seems to be no obvious network problems here, and all hardware is
fine.

Err, that's about it. :^)
--
| "When the hostess greeted me at the door dressed
in nothing but strategically placed vise-grips, I
realised that it was going to be an interesting party
after all" |



To: Frank A. Coluccio who wrote (797)1/2/2000 3:28:00 PM
From: Frank A. Coluccio  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1782
 
re: Synopsis of Internet Y2K "event" handling by the ISPs during the "rollover weekend," as posted by Consultant Sean Donelan on the NANOG List

When he refers to the decline in the number of "networks" he's referring to the individual networks (SPs, organizations, .edus, .govs, etc.) shutting down their servers and routes prior to, and during, the 'event.' Also, the "hotlines" he's referring to are the same class that GC and others had offered in the uplinked message to this post (reply #797).
=====

As a side note and personal set of observations, I was discussing the after effects of the Y2K hoops that many have jumped through for the past two plus years with one of this country's largest (top 2) banks, recently. And with some on our own staff who have been involved full time in this endeavor, as well.

The consensus invariably has been: As a result of the exercises that all have gone through in this regard, the nation's public and private networks have never had as much integrity from both a documentation standpoint and a perch of preparedness to extend into the future as they are now. Stated more simply, these networks have never been in as good a shape in all respects, as they are now. And not a moment too soon, as the entire networking world is going through its most radical changes, and at the highest rate of acceleration, in history, with no let-up in sight.

As someone put it, it was like a crash course and the simultaneous execution of the principles of excellence. From all of my own personal observations (at least in those client situations that I am familiar with), I'd have to agree.

Now, let's see what happens tomorrow, and a month from now during the tail end of the current billing cycle, when we really start to stress some of those back-office systems.

Enjoy, Frank Coluccio

======from the North American Network Operator Group (NANOG), verbatim:

"This was the final summary post for the NANOG ISP Y2K mailing list.
Special thanks to Merit for allowing the ad-hoc group of Internet
Service Providers to share the name for the NANOG ISP Y2K event.
This post is a couple of hours early, because I want to go to sleep.

NANOG ISP Y2K Summary Status
2-JAN-2000 12:30 UTC
Y2K Summary

"Although the "hotlines" got a lot of press, much of the information
came via e-mail. It was difficult to dial into the international
conference bridges near midnight in various countries due to
congestion on the international voice circuits.

"The Internet is a dynamic place. All numbers may vary depending
on where you are on the Internet. But the trends should be the
same.

"The Internet global routing table showed a slow decline in
networks from 71,200 on December 25, 1999 to 70,911 on
December 30, 1999. On December 31, 1999 the networks steadily
declined to 69,812 by 1 hour before Midnight EST. During
this hour the routing table quickly dropped to 67,795 routes,
and held steady from Midnight until 5am EST. After 5am EST
January 1, 2000 the number of networks started increasing
steadily to 70,455 on January 2, 2000.

"The number of unique ASNs in the global route table declined
from 6,380 on December 30, 1999 to 6,330 at January 1, 2000
Midnight EST. The number of terminating ASNs showed a similar
decline from 5,180 to 5,130. Which leads to the conclusion
transit networks did not disconnect during the rollover.

"Peak traffic levels across MAE-East were lower on Friday December 31,
about 1.6Gb versus 1.9Gb for a normal workday. There was a slight
but noticable 0.2Gb dip in traffic at Midnight EST. Followed by
a slight increase after Midnight EST. All well below peak traffic
capacity. Traffic flow followed the normal sine wave pattern, except
for the dip at Midnight EST.

"Summary of ISPs

"2 ISPs reported a routing problem, isolated to normal circuit problems.

"1 ISP reported voice-call (POTS) congestion in New Zealand shortly
after midnight through several voice carriers. Internet backbone
connectivity was not affected. This was the pattern through most
time zones.

"Several ISPs reported trouble synchronizing NTP servers. Congestion
on the NIST network is believed the cause. NTP servers elsewhere
did not show any problems.

"1 ISP reported messages sent in elm showed year as 100 instead

of 2000. Patch was available prior to Y2K.

"Several reports of user-written scripts containing poor date handling
practices.

"Report of one web site defacement after close of business.

"Report of some unauthorized domain name transfers at the beginning of
the holiday weekend. Not unusual, seems to happen every holiday
weekend.

"Two ccTLDs were down for part of the rollover. 13 ccTLDs had partial
problems. No Y2K faults were found. Circuit problems, administrators
turning off servers, and ordinary DNS problems.

"Exchange points worldwide reported a decrease in traffic immediately
before their midnight local time. A sharp increase immediately after
midnight local time, but less than peak capacity.

"Certain "event" web sites saw traffic increase 20 times over normal
levels. Some event sites report being overwhelmed. But overall,
traffic appears to have been lower than peak business day capacity.

"The use of many country-specific information sites, and the rolling
nature of the Y2K event helped distribute the traffic worldwide. In
general public interest waned about 30 minutes after local Midnight
in each timezone, leaving more bandwidth for each successive timezone.

"Midnight US Eastern time did dominate changes in traffic and routing.

"A few rumors sprung up throughout the night. Most were quickly determined
to be unfounded. But overall, not as many as I thought would spread.

"Issues known/predicted prior to the Y2K rollover

"Some sites plan to shutdown or disconnect from the Internet
over the New Year's weekend

"Some certificate authority certificates expire on
December 31, 1999

"Increase in voice and cellular calls immediately around local
midnight may cause some congestion on circuits

"Information from the media (Note: ISP names are from publicly
announced information. Names will not be included from
non-public sources.)

"C I Host (www.cihost.com) issued a press release about a name
server problem. No client data files were damaged. The data
corruption that occurred Dec. 29 is isolated to the [company
local] nameservers only and the restoration remains unrelated
to any Y2K issues.

"Keynote Internet Performance Update #2 reports slower access
to New Zealand after rollover, 6.2 seconds. No information
what the measurement was before the rollover. Appears to be
localized to specific web sites (i.e. congestion)

"France's National Weather Service Internet site had a display
problem with a date. The page shows 01/01/19100 instead of
01/01/2000.

"United States Naval Observatory web time site had a display
problem with a date. The page shows 19100 instead of 2000.

"Hacker target Japan Y2K Center. No intrusion or damage
reported.

"Several stories based on Keynote press releases report the
Internet passed through the Y2K rollover unaffected, other than
a few spots of congestion around particular web sites.

"The www.y2k.gov web servers were predicted able to handle 40 million
hits. Only 3 million showed on January 1.

"Many, MANY, ISPs, web hosting, and access providers issued press
releases throughout January 1, 2000 announcing they had no Y2K
problems (and I think they all sent me a copy).

"Summary from the Y2KCC/JP

"The number of reported troubles....25

Troubles with Stratum1 NTP server....4
Trouble with ICQ....1
Troubles with ccTLD....15
.......small partial troubles....13
.......others....2
Trouble with router....1
Trouble with Y2KCC/JP system....1
Latency of a particular site....1
Suspect of cracking....1
Trouble with NNTP server....1"

<delete>



To: Frank A. Coluccio who wrote (797)1/5/2000 5:18:00 PM
From: Frank A. Coluccio  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1782
 
re: Y2K - It's not over, quite yet

From Network World Fusion:

------------------------------------------
"The Y2K turnover went so smoothly some people outside of IT are already claiming it was much ado over nothing. Fred McClimans says we know better, of course. Still, he cautions there might be some Y2K glitches coming up over the next few weeks as systems come fully back online (how many people were actually using your network this past weekend?).DocFinder: 6141

nwfusion.com
-------------------------------------------

Y2K: Not over just yet

Network World Fusion, 01/03/00

"Well, another flu season is come
and gone ... the Y2K bug that was
supposed to bite didn't. Or did it?
Usually, come January 1, we'd be
talking about predictions for the
New Year. But that will have to wait for next week.

"We're already seeing a Y2K backlash. I've had
several people tell me how "we wasted all that effort."

"The world didn't end," they cry. "The ATM machine
still works," they shout. "The fear is over," they
ignorantly say.

"Of course, it's easy to claim IT professionals were
only crying wolf. But that's because they did their job
so well. The results were phenomenal. Not only did
we avert some pretty heavy failures, we've upgraded
much of our computing infrastructure in the process -
something that will be of great value as we march
along into the 21st century. So rather than cry "foul" at
the lack of Y2K failures, let's give a rousing hand of
applause to all those Y2K managers, all those
overworked programmers and all those critical testers
who made reading this column possible.

"At the same time, don't let your guard down too far.
While failures to date have been minimal, so too has
system usage. Reasonable estimates at this point call
for at least 50% of all Y2K failures in the business
sector to occur later this year as systems are fully
utilized in all their various and sundry configurations.

"And like the Pentagon satellite failure that went
unreported until it was fixed, don't for a minute expect
that all the failures have been (or will be) reported.

"And just to show it wasn't a total nonevent, here are
some interesting Y2K failures:

1.All the slot machines in the state of Delaware
failed when given their 1/1/2000 instructions ...
at 12 noon the day before.

2.A poor video store customer was charged over
$90,000 for a late video rented in 1999 and
returned in 2000.

3.The electric doors failed in a U.S. nuclear plant
(one of seven reactors worldwide that have
reported Y2K problems).

4.Electric doors also failed at some U.S.
government facilities, forcing people to pry
open doors manually.

5.Hospitals in Sweden reported the failure of
critical heart-monitoring systems.

6.Several airports reported sporadic power
problems and wind-shear systems were "blown
away" in Atlanta, Chicago, Denver, St. Louis
and Tampa.

"If you've seen an interesting or humorous Y2K bug,
send it in. The most unusual/humorous bug will get a
special, signed, limited edition Y2K t-shirt courtesy of
yours truly."