Google is promising to recover lost messages and to restore service for affected users soon.
Google on Monday evening reported that it had identified why a small percentage of Gmail users have been unable to access their messages since Sunday: buggy software.
"We released a storage software update that introduced the unexpected bug, which caused 0.02% of Gmail users to temporarily lose access to their e-mail," said Google engineering VP Ben Treynor in a blog post. "When we discovered the problem, we immediately stopped the deployment of the new software and reverted to the old version."
Unstable software in one of Google's European data centers caused a less lengthy service disruption in 2009. In the wake of that outage, Google introduced its App Status Dashboard to give customers more visibility into its operations.
Google has promised to remedy the situation as soon as possible, but that's taking longer than usual because the flaw wiped out affected customers' e-mail in multiple data centers, forcing Google's engineers to restore accounts from backup tapes. Restoring data from tapes rather than a nearby data center takes hours instead of milliseconds, explained Treynor.
The App Status Dashboard on Tuesday indicates that the recovery operation is ongoing. The message posted at 8:10 am says, "Google Mail service has already been restored for some users, and we expect a resolution for all users in the near future. Please note this time frame is an estimate and may change. At the moment, we are working on restoring the affected accounts. Once the restore is complete, we will start reinstating accounts and delivering messages."
Google has declined to provide an absolute number of users affected. Based on recent estimates that the Gmail user base has reached 170 million worldwide, 0.02% works out to about 34,000 users.
Google did not immediately respond to a request to provide information about whether any users covered by the Google Apps for Business service level agreement will receive credit for downtime.
Google on Monday evening reported that it had identified why a small percentage of Gmail users have been unable to access their messages since Sunday: buggy software.
"We released a storage software update that introduced the unexpected bug, which caused 0.02% of Gmail users to temporarily lose access to their e-mail," said Google engineering VP Ben Treynor in a blog post. "When we discovered the problem, we immediately stopped the deployment of the new software and reverted to the old version."
Unstable software in one of Google's European data centers caused a less lengthy service disruption in 2009. In the wake of that outage, Google introduced its App Status Dashboard to give customers more visibility into its operations.
Google has promised to remedy the situation as soon as possible, but that's taking longer than usual because the flaw wiped out affected customers' e-mail in multiple data centers, forcing Google's engineers to restore accounts from backup tapes. Restoring data from tapes rather than a nearby data center takes hours instead of milliseconds, explained Treynor.
The App Status Dashboard on Tuesday indicates that the recovery operation is ongoing. The message posted at 8:10 am says, "Google Mail service has already been restored for some users, and we expect a resolution for all users in the near future. Please note this time frame is an estimate and may change. At the moment, we are working on restoring the affected accounts. Once the restore is complete, we will start reinstating accounts and delivering messages."
Google has declined to provide an absolute number of users affected. Based on recent estimates that the Gmail user base has reached 170 million worldwide, 0.02% works out to about 34,000 users.
Google did not immediately respond to a request to provide information about whether any users covered by the Google Apps for Business service level agreement will receive credit for downtime.