nanog mailing list archives

Re: Mitigating human error in the SP


From: Jared Mauch <jared () puck nether net>
Date: Tue, 2 Feb 2010 12:33:50 -0500

We have solved 98% of this with standard configurations and templates.

To deviate from this requires management approval/exception approval after an evaluation of the business risks.

Automation of config building is not too hard, and certainly things like peer-groups (cisco) and regular groups 
(juniper) make it easier.

If you go for the holy grail, you want something that takes into account the following:

1) each phase in the provisioning/turn-up state
2) each phase in infrastructure troubleshooting (turn-up, temporary outage/temporary testing, production)
3) automated pushing of config via load override/commit replace to your config space.

Obviously testing, etc.. is important.  I've found that whenever a human is involved, mistakes happen.  There is also 
the "Software is imperfect" mantra that should be repeated.  I find vendors at times have demanding customers who want 
perfection.  Bugs happen, Outages happen, the question is how do you respond to these risks.

If you have poor handling of bugs, outages, etc.. in your process or are decision gridlocked, very bad things happen.

- Jared

On Feb 1, 2010, at 9:21 PM, Chadwick Sorrell wrote:

Hello NANOG,

Long time listener, first time caller.

A recent organizational change at my company has put someone in charge
who is determined to make things perfect.  We are a service provider,
not an enterprise company, and our business is doing provisioning work
during the day.  We recently experienced an outage when an engineer,
troubleshooting a failed turn-up, changed the ethertype on the wrong
port losing both management and customer data on said device.  This
isn't a common occurrence, and the engineer in question has a pristine
track record.

This outage, of a high profile customer, triggered upper management to
react by calling a meeting just days after.  Put bluntly, we've been
told "Human errors are unacceptable, and they will be completely
eliminated.  One is too many."

I am asking the respectable NANOG engineers....

What measures have you taken to mitigate human mistakes?

Have they been successful?

Any other comments on the subject would be appreciated, we would like
to come to our next meeting armed and dangerous.

Thanks!
Chad



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