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Heroku down for production and staging apps

status.heroku.com

29 points by julioademar 13 years ago · 15 comments

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julioademarOP 13 years ago

I still dream of the day they'll let us set up different availability zones. Not that I'm sure this wouldn't occur, mind you.

  • sync 13 years ago

    Dynos already run in different availability zones: https://devcenter.heroku.com/articles/production-check

    You can take that a step further by running dynos in the European (eu-west-1) region: https://devcenter.heroku.com/articles/regions

    • 1qaz2wsx3edc 13 years ago

      > Multiple dynos are also more likely to run on different physical infrastructure (for example, separate AWS Availability Zones), further increasing redundancy.

      It's not guaranteed. As I understand it, it's random.

      And as for regions. They only help you locate content to a closer region. You cannot use them for balancing/redundancy. As any data or third party add-on you use, will manage it's data in it's own specific zone. Thus creating latency issues.

    • julioademarOP 13 years ago

      That's still in Beta though.

      • kxu 13 years ago

        I'm running a production webapp since May on the Heroku EU region, not a scratch since then. It's a Beta suited for production apps since February:

        "Beta Testers,

        Heroku Europe is ready to begin running your production apps!

        Create an app in the region:

            $ heroku create --region eu
        
        Then add add-ons, deploy, and scale as usual. Please note we're still adding capacity in this area, so contact us if you expect to run more than 30 dynos or do more than 500 reqs/second on any app in Europe.

        As always, private betas should be considered confidential. Please don’t tweet, blog, or talk about this feature publicly until we announce it ourselves.

        Documentation: https://devcenter.heroku.com/articles/regions Questions & feedback: eu-beta@heroku.com

        Best,

        The Heroku Team"

  • gabrtv 13 years ago

    If you need deeper control of your application platform infrastructure, you should check out something like http://deis.io/. You can run a private Heroku in any EC2 region, zones, etc.

    Running your own PaaS is not for the faint of heart -- and Heroku certainly saves you time and headache -- but it's nice to have a private PaaS option that is Heroku compatible.

crashoverdrive 13 years ago

I'd be curious to see the numbers of how often Heroku pushes code to production, and also how often those pushes break the build.

webbruce 13 years ago

Yeah, seems to be Amazon, not Heroku this time.

  • chubot 13 years ago

    Note from last time: https://status.heroku.com/incidents/151

    "This post will reference the AWS services that we use behind the scenes so that we can be very specific. Note that although we will be discussing various AWS service failures, we don't blame them for what our customers experienced in any way. Heroku takes 100% of the responsibility for the downtime affecting our customers last week."

    In other words, they shouldn't be exposing AWS outages to users (although as as long as they use a single cloud provider that's impossible to avoid in general.)

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