top | item 3982571

Rackspace hardware failure, all data lost. Oops...

13 points| nixle | 13 years ago

Just a friendly reminder to not put too much trust in "the cloud", it was just our development server and we are rebuilding... but not with Rackspace. The thing is that this is the only message I have received about it. It's pretty much: "yeah, we lost all your data, good luck".

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Hello,

This message is a follow-up to our previous emails. Despite the very best efforts of our engineering and datacenter operations teams, unfortunately the host machine that your cloud server xxxxx resides on was not able to be recovered. At this point, there is complete data loss on the server.

If you have taken a server image, your next step will be to build a new server from the server image. If you require the same IP address, please contact support prior to deleting the failed server from your account and we will assist you in sharing the IP to the new server. If you have not taken a server image, your next step will be to build a new server from a stock image and then upload data from your local backup.

We are extremely sorry for this inconvenience. Our Billing Team is going to process a xxxx credit for the server, equal to the monthly cost.

If you have any further questions, please contact a member of our support team by responding to this ticket, visiting us in live-chat, or by calling xxxxx or xxxxx

Best Regards, The Rackspace Cloud US Toll Free: xxxxxxxxx

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12 comments

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dholowiski|13 years ago

This all depends... were you paying for a managed server that they were supposed to be backing up? If so, massive fail by rackspace. But if you were supposed to be in charge of the backups, then don't blame rackspace.

facorreia|13 years ago

You can outsource your hardware, but you can't outsource your responsibility. Backups and redundancy are your responsibility, not your service provider's.

freehunter|13 years ago

Another thing of note is your service agreement. Check what responsibilities and restitution are present in the contract. If you need them to be liable for damages beyond downtime, make sure it says that in the contract. If you need them to failover, make sure it says that in the contract. If it doesn't, well... it's pretty much: "yeah, we lost all your data, good luck".

kaolinite|13 years ago

..unless you pay for automated backups.

jgeorge|13 years ago

Rage level depends on what you're paying for. I have a server at Rackspace, it's my job to ensure backups, not theirs. That's the service level I pay for. They offer a backup service through Cloud Files that puts your backup on a different server. About once a month (which is all I need for the little usage my server gets) I log in, click the button to do a Cloud Files backup, and I'm done. Costs me about 60 cents a month for the file storage, pretty cheap for an off-server backup. If the server holding my instance fails, it's a couple of clicks and about 10min to restore it back.

I hate it for anyone who loses data, but if you're not paying them for a backup service, it's an expensive lesson to learn.

hluska|13 years ago

No backups, hey? That's rough my friend and I feel bad for you. Best of luck recovering and thanks for the reminder; I'm going to make sure that my backup scripts work!!!