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To: The Phoenix who wrote (44114)4/14/1998 12:41:00 PM
From: Stimpson J. Cat  Respond to of 61433
 
Check out att.com

As if that wasn't enough, The AT&T VP of network services blamed the problem on Cisco.



To: The Phoenix who wrote (44114)4/14/1998 1:35:00 PM
From: HEXonX  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 61433
 
AT&T frame relay net goes down for the count
Carrier may be liable for huge SLA penalties.

By David Rohde and Sandra Gittlen
Network World Fusion, 4/14/98

AT&T's frame relay network has fallen and it can't seem to
get back up.

As of 10 a.m. today more than 25% of AT&T's frame relay
customers are still without service, according to a recording at AT&T's
network operations center.

The outage began at 3 p.m. Monday and continued through
the evening. The situation affected not only business-to-business data
communications but also a wide swath of the consumer economy. Bank ATM
machines, travel agency orders and credit card transactions were
disrupted.

Many customers reportedly switched to backup systems
running over private lines, ISDN or other carriers networks, alleviating
some of the disruption.

Nevertheless, the outage may trigger big penalties in
AT&Ts frame relay service-level agreements (SLA). Frequently negotiated
with individual customers, AT&Ts frame relay SLAs went mainstream in
January as the carrier loaded them into its tariffs.

Under the new standard SLAs, AT&T guarantees to provide
99.99% availability of its frame relay network from service interface to
service interface. The carrier also guarantees to restore lost permanent
virtual circuits within four hours, or the customer gets the affected
ports and PVCs free for a month.

An AT&T spokeswoman said the cause of the outage was
still unclear. "But we are looking into the interaction of two of the
frame relay switches," she said. The AT&T recording pointed to possible
problems in a Los Angeles switch. AT&Ts frame relay network runs over
StrataCom BPX switches from Cisco Systems, Inc., and the spokeswoman said
"we are working closely with Cisco" to resolve the outage.

A problem in one switch can affect much of the network
because PVCs are virtual circuits whose paths may vary depending on route
utilization. The spokeswoman could not specify when total service would be
restored.

A letter was on its way this morning to AT&Ts 6,000
frame relay customers from Chairman and CEO C. Michael Armstrong
apologizing for the outage and saying it was "unacceptable." Armstrong was
due to hold a briefing at noon to give more information, but that may not
assuage everyone.

"I lost $4 million of revenue today due to [the] frame
communication outage," said one user in a posting on Network World Fusion.
" I understand that all AT&T InterSpan frame customers and the entire
AT&T internal administration were out of service. The outage was so
devastating that I now have to reorder 50% of my carrier service and
diversify into Sprint and MCI."

The user speculated that because "AT&T has segmented
their net into three areas it might be architecture limitations which were
violated during normal switch port installation."

Another user criticized AT&T's response to the problem,
calling it "pathetic."

"This national outage by AT&T affected every single
customer who relies on this service, causing countless problems behind the
scenes at major corporations as well as affecting consumers who were
shopping," the user said.