Between 2:35 PM Pacific time and 3:03 PM Pacific time, our monitoring systems detected that connections to our primary data center from some locations on the Internet were slow or failing due to problems at an Internet “backbone”. Connections from other locations were unaffected.
We’re waiting for a full report from the data center team, but the problem appears to have been resolved, and all services are operating normally. We’re continuing to monitor it closely, and we sincerely apologize for the inconvenience this caused our customers.
We’ve renewed the SSL certificate on our mail servers (because it was due to expire soon).
Almost all customers shouldn’t notice any change, but if you read e-mail using a secure connection with an unusual mail program that doesn’t handle SSL connections properly, you might be asked to “accept” the new mail.tigertech.net certificate.
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If you use WordPress blog software on your site, be sure to upgrade to WordPress 3.0.2 as soon as possible. The upgrade contains an important security fix for a vulnerability that allows any WordPress “author” to become an “administrator”.
Although all WordPress users should upgrade right away, we’ve added security rules to our servers to protect our Web hosting customers who haven’t yet upgraded. Other people may find the rules useful if they use mod_security on Apache Web servers. The rest of this post contains more technical details.
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Our business offices will be closed on Thursday, November 25 to observe the US legal holiday for Thanksgiving.
As always, we’ll provide same-day support for time-sensitive issues via our ticket and e-mail systems. However, questions that aren’t time-sensitive (including most billing matters) may not be answered until Friday, and telephone support (via callbacks) will be available only for urgent problems.
A major power failure at our primary data center in Fremont, California, caused a complete outage for nearly all services beginning at 8:32 PM Pacific time Saturday night. It lasted between six and 13 minutes, depending on the server. Only our blog and redundant DNS infrastructure was unaffected.
All services are now fully operational; please don’t hesitate to contact us if you have any questions. We sincerely apologize for the inconvenience this caused our customers.
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Google has announced that they’ve created a nifty new Apache Web server module called mod_pagespeed that can speed up some Web sites.
We’ve been asked if we’re going to offer it, and the answer is “probably, but not yet”.
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At approximately 10:00 PM Pacific time tonight, October 23, the “flexo” Web server will be restarted.
As a result, for customers on the “flexo” server (only), Web site service and the ability to read incoming e-mail will be unavailable for approximately five minutes. Customers on other servers will not be affected.
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Back in May, we posted that we now offer basic SSL certificates for just $19.00 a year, allowing you to protect your Web site without going broke.
Today, we’ve added another option: you can optionally choose a “wildcard” AlphaSSL certificate instead for just $49.00 a year.
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We’ve fixed a bug in our Webmail system that could, in rare cases, make Japanese language symbols display incorrectly. This change shouldn’t affect anything else, but as always, feel free to contact us if you have any trouble.
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When we store older Apache Web server access logs for your site — those that are more than two months old — we re-compress the original logs into single monthly files. These take up less disk space for your account when you have a lot of them. (We have some customers with log files going back more than ten years!)
Until now, we’ve re-compressed these files using gzip compression. However, we’re going to switch to a different modern compression format, bzip2 compression, which reduces the size even more. The resulting files are about half the size of gzip.
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