Optus identifies cause of nationwide outage, says ‘changes to routing information’ after software upgrade to blame

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Optus says “changes to routing information” after a “routine software upgrade” was behind last week’s nationwide outage, affecting 10.2 million Australians and impacting 400,000 businesses.

In a statement released on Monday afternoon, Optus says its network was affected by “changes to routing information from an international peering network” around 4:05am AEDT last Wednesday, “following a routine software upgrade”.

“These routing information changes propagated through multiple layers in our network and exceeded preset safety levels on key routers which could not handle these,” the company said.

“This resulted in those routers disconnecting from the Optus IP Core network to protect themselves.”

The scale of the outage meant Optus technicians had to physically reconnect or reboot the system, the telco said, and also meant the investigation into the cause “took longer than we would have liked”.

“The restoration required a large-scale effort of the team and in some cases required Optus to reconnect or reboot routers physically, requiring the dispatch of people across a number of sites in Australia,” an Optus spokesperson said.



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