Skype crash: Software bug and server overloads blamed

Skype error page, AFP/Getty Skype said the service outage lasted for about 24

hours

Server overloads and a bug in Skype for Windows caused the two-day outage for

the net phone firm.

Details of what caused the service to be unusable for millions of users prior

to Christmas have been posted on the firm's blog.

The two events combined to create a cascade of problems that managed to knock

out much of the network underpinning the phone service.

Skype is assessing how its network is built to stop the problem recurring.

Traffic cascade

Writing on the Skype blog, Lars Rabbe, chief information officer at the

company, said the problems started on 22 December, when some of its servers

that handle instant messaging started getting overloaded.

This meant that the responses they sent to Windows machines running Skype were

slightly delayed. Unfortunately, a bug in one version of Skype for Windows

meant this delay caused the program to crash.

About 50% of all Skype users ran the buggy 5.0.0.152 version of the software,

said Mr Rabbe.

Start Quote

We know that we fell short in both fulfilling your expectations and

communicating with you during this incident

End Quote Lars Rabbe Skype

This caused problems for Skype because of the way the network supporting it is

organised. Some of the data travelling round Skype's network are passed through

all those machines logged on to the service.

Those participating machines act as what Skype calls "supernodes" and carry out

some of the administrative tasks of the global network and help to ensure calls

get through.

With a huge number of these machines offline because of the crash, the rest of

the network quickly became overloaded.

Mr Rabbe wrote that the disappearance of the supernodes meant the remaining

ones were swamped by traffic.

"The initial crashes happened just before our usual daily peak-hour and very

shortly after the initial crash," wrote Mr Rabbe, "which resulted in traffic to

the supernodes that was about 100 times what would normally be expected at that

time of day."

Traffic levels were so high that they blew through the safe operating

specifications supernodes usually use. As a result, more supernodes shut down.

Compensation offer

The "confluence of events", said Mr Rabbe, led to Skype being offline for about

24 hours as engineers put in place hundreds of dedicated supernodes and

gradually brought the service back to life.

To ensure the outage does not happen again, Mr Rabbe said Skype would look at

its update policy, to see if it should automatically move users to newer

versions of its software.

A version of Skype for Windows that is free of the bug already exists, but is

not automatically given to users.

It said it would also look at its network to improve capacity and get on with

an investment programme that would boost this resilience.

Mr Rabbe apologised again on behalf of the company and added: "We know that we

fell short in both fulfilling your expectations and communicating with you

during this incident."

Skype has offered compensation to customers in the form of vouchers for pre-pay

users and a free week of service for subscribers.