OVH services still haven't been fully restored following fire

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OVH, Europe’s largest web hosting provider still hasn’t fully recovered from a catastrophic fire in one of its data centers in Strasbourg, France. 

OVH Co-founder and CTO Octave Klaba has pinned the blame on pandemic-related challenges that have made an already complex task a “real nightmare.”

A major fire ravaged through one of its four buildings in OVH's Strasbourg facility in March 2021, completely destroying one (SBG2), with the company also losing another facility (SBG1) in the following weeks after attempts to restart it. 

Tetris-esque

While the facility was written off, a majority of the servers it housed were perfectly unharmed, but needed to be tested before they could be moved to another building (SBG3). 

Smoke and soot have penetrated several servers, which need to be taken apart and cleaned, before they can be tested and pushed back into active duty. OVH said it takes their crews about seven hours to clean a server, though they are getting more efficient.

In a tweet Klaba likened the process of cleaning and shifting server racks, while assembling new ones, to a game of Tetris.  

As per the last official available status update posted on OVH’s website on April 12, a majority of the cloud hosting services run from the Strasbourg facilities have either been restored or replaced.

The company has already announced plans to offer a comprehensive backup policy for free to all its clients, following news that it can’t recover data from the backups of some of its customers, who hadn’t contracted the company for keeping them in the first place.

They’ve also stopped billing customers whose services were impacted due to the incident, and wouldn’t be charging them for any new orders placed as replacements.

Via: The Register

Mayank Sharma

With almost two decades of writing and reporting on Linux, Mayank Sharma would like everyone to think he’s TechRadar Pro’s expert on the topic. Of course, he’s just as interested in other computing topics, particularly cybersecurity, cloud, containers, and coding.