Have you ever tried to use Chat GPT or scroll on X and suddenly it went down? Well that happened yesterday! Cloudflare, a company that powers many of the websites we are used to smoothly getting our information did a global outage. ChatGPT, X, Spotify, Canva, and others are examples of sites that went down. Let’s examine what happened and how significant it was like we are talking over a cup of coffee.
When this happens:
Second, know your hosting dependencies: if you host your own website, and you're using Cloudflare as DNS or CDN, your website is still dependent on their network. Finally, be aware that unexpected outages can happen: critical systems can fail and it's understandable to have some surprises.
What happened with Cloudflare?
Cloudflare stated that the "incident" occurred shortly after 6:40 a.m. ET, prompting a global outage. Here’s what happened:- Shortly after 6:40 a.m. ET, services began to fail.
- A configuration routine change caused a bug in the system that allowed one file to snowball – it became too large and crashed a portion of the system.
- Cloudflare resolved the outage by 14:42 UTC (09:42 a.m. ET). Once resolved, most services commenced service.
Why this mattered
You may think, "It’s just websites down" - but its much larger than that. Cloudflare powers a huge chunk of the internet, it is not without speed, security, and traffic assistance.When this happens:
- A slew of websites that use Cloudflare’s CDN, DNS, and security tools stop functioning regularly, none “work” or it simply takes too long to load.
- Many popular services such as ChatGPT, X, Spotify, Canva, etc. were disabled.
- Users get an error message, like “500 internal server error” and “please try again.”
What Cloudflare said
Cloudflare assured this had nothing to do with hacking or anything malicious. It stated:- It has apologized for the outage.
- It resolved the problem, but there will be some residual effects.
- It will do its best to investigate and take action to ensure it doesn’t happen again.
What can we take away
This is what the outage revealed to us, one, the value of contingency plans: if your website or app is dependent on only one provider, it's best to have a backup hosting plan.Second, know your hosting dependencies: if you host your own website, and you're using Cloudflare as DNS or CDN, your website is still dependent on their network. Finally, be aware that unexpected outages can happen: critical systems can fail and it's understandable to have some surprises.