Google’s SLA Loophole Allows For Major Downtime
By Daya Baran at December 15, 2008 1 Comments|
Google Apps SLA loophole allows for major downtime without consequences reports Pingdom a leading internet uptime service. “Gmail could be unavailable for more than 21 hours in a day, and Google could still tell you that according to their SLA, the service has had 100% uptime.” It sounds impossible, but it’s a direct consequence of how Google has written its SLA for Google Apps (which includes Gmail, Google Docs, Google Calendar and more). Pingdom provides a detailed explaination below. What the Google Apps SLA says
So, “downtime periods” are what’s ultimately used for counting the uptime percentage for Google Apps, and these downtime periods ignore all downtime that lasts less than 10 minutes. A worst-case scenario Here is the problem: What if Google Apps was down for 9 minutes, up for 1 minute, down 9 minutes, etc. That would mean 54 minutes of downtime each hour, but Google still wouldn’t count it because none of the individual downtimes lasted 10 minutes of more. Over a day (24 hours), that’s 21 hours and 36 minutes of downtime that Google would simply ignore when calculating the final uptime percentage.
It’s an extreme and very unlikely worst-case scenario, but we wanted to illustrate the consequence of how Google’s SLA sums up its downtime and calculates its uptime percentage. A more likely scenario 3m, 8m, 12m, 5m, 9m, 14m, 4m = 57 minutes of actual downtime But Google would only count this as 26 minutes of downtime, including only the downtime periods lasting 12 and 14 minutes.
Short outages are common in the real world As you may know, we here at Pingdom run an uptime monitoring service, and we know from our own experience (and a LOT of data from thousands of sites) that it’s much more common for sites to have multiple short intervals of downtime instead of a few long ones. The 99.9% monthly uptime guarantee in the Google Apps SLA allows for 43 minutes of downtime in a 30-day month, but ignoring problems that last less than 10 minutes at a time will definitely make it much easier for Google to honor its SLA. |



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[...] Google Apps SLA loophole allows for major downtime without consequences reports Pingdom a leading internet uptime service. “Gmail could be unavailable for more than 21 hours in a day, and Google could still tell you that according to their SLA, the service has had 100% uptime.” It sounds impossiblGoogle Apps SLA loophole allows for major downtime without consequences reports Pingdom a leading internet uptime service. “Gmail could be unavailable for more than 21 hours in a day, and Google could still tell you that according to their SLA, the service has had 100% uptime.” It sounds impossible, but it’s a… More» [...]