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A number of you likely use Atlassian products like Jira, Confluence, Opsgenie, or something else. You might have been affected by a large outage they had (post incident blog, Company Q&A, TechRepublic report) recently which lasted at least 9 days. I don't know if all customers have their data back and are working, but this was a surprisingly poorly handled incident according to a number of reports from customers. There's a great write-up from the outside that you might want to read.
The bottom line in this issue is that Atlassian looked to deactivate a legacy product with a script, but they apparently didn't communicate well among their teams. The script ended up using the wrong customer IDs and also marked the sites for permanent removal, not temporary removal (soft delete). While they supposedly test their restore capabilities, they weren't prepared for partial restores of subsites. I'm guessing this is likely a partial database restore, which many of us know is way more complex than a full database restore.
Read the rest of Scripting Makes Mistakes Easier Than Ever
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A number of you likely use Atlassian products like Jira, Confluence, Opsgenie, or something else. You might have been affected by a large outage they had (post incident blog, Company Q&A, TechRepublic report) recently which lasted at least 9 days. I don't know if all customers have their data back and are working, but this was a surprisingly poorly handled incident according to a number of reports from customers. There's a great write-up from the outside that you might want to read.
The bottom line in this issue is that Atlassian looked to deactivate a legacy product with a script, but they apparently didn't communicate well among their teams. The script ended up using the wrong customer IDs and also marked the sites for permanent removal, not temporary removal (soft delete). While they supposedly test their restore capabilities, they weren't prepared for partial restores of subsites. I'm guessing this is likely a partial database restore, which many of us know is way more complex than a full database restore.
Read the rest of Scripting Makes Mistakes Easier Than Ever