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  3. A few days ago, a client’s data center "vanished" overnight.

A few days ago, a client’s data center "vanished" overnight.

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sysadminhorrorstoriesithorrorstoriesmonitoring
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  • stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafeS stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafe

    @marios @EnigmaRotor consider this: https://it-notes.dragas.net/2024/07/22/install-uptime-kuma-freebsd-jail/

    marios@mastodon.bsd.cafeM This user is from outside of this forum
    marios@mastodon.bsd.cafeM This user is from outside of this forum
    marios@mastodon.bsd.cafe
    schrieb zuletzt editiert von
    #32

    @stefano

    You were reading my mind

    1 Antwort Letzte Antwort
    0
    • stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafeS stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafe

      @toxy this will probably be a longer blog post (with some more details)

      toxy@mastodon.acc.sunet.seT This user is from outside of this forum
      toxy@mastodon.acc.sunet.seT This user is from outside of this forum
      toxy@mastodon.acc.sunet.se
      schrieb zuletzt editiert von
      #33

      @stefano Featuring Hans Gruber?

      stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafeS 1 Antwort Letzte Antwort
      0
      • toxy@mastodon.acc.sunet.seT toxy@mastodon.acc.sunet.se

        @stefano Featuring Hans Gruber?

        stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafeS This user is from outside of this forum
        stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafeS This user is from outside of this forum
        stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafe
        schrieb zuletzt editiert von
        #34

        @toxy featuring me 😆

        1 Antwort Letzte Antwort
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        • stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafeS stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafe

          A few days ago, a client’s data center "vanished" overnight. My monitoring showed that all devices were unreachable. Not even the ISP routers responded, so I assumed a sudden connectivity drop. The strange part? Not even via 4G.

          I then suspected a power failure, but the UPS should have sent an alert.

          The office was closed for the holidays, but I contacted the IT manager anyway. He was home sick with a serious family issue, but he got moving.

          To make a long story short: the company deals in gold and precious metals. They have an underground bunker with two-meter thick walls. They were targeted by a professional gang. They used a tactic seen in similar hits: they identify the main power line, tamper with it at night, and send a massive voltage spike through it.

          The goal is to fry all alarm and surveillance systems. Even if battery-backed, they rarely survive a surge like that. Thieves count on the fact that during holidays, owners are away and fried systems can't send alerts. Monitoring companies often have reduced staff and might not notice the "silence" immediately.

          That is exactly what happened here. But there is a "but": they didn't account for my Uptime Kuma instance monitoring their MikroTik router, installed just weeks ago. Since it is an external check, it flagged the lack of response from all IPs without needing an internal alert to be triggered from the inside.

          The team rushed to the site and found the mess. Luckily, they found an emergency electrical crew to bypass the damage and restore the cameras and alarms. They swapped the fried server UPS with a spare and everything came back up.

          The police warned that the chances of the crew returning the next night to "finish" the job were high, though seeing the systems back online would likely make them move on. They also warned that thieves sometimes break in just to destroy servers to wipe any video evidence.

          Nothing happened in the end. But in the meantime, I had to sync all their data off-site (thankfully they have dual 1Gbps FTTH), set up an emergency cluster, and ensure everything was redundant.

          Never rely only on internal monitoring. Never.

          #IT #SysAdmin #HorrorStories #ITHorrorStories #Monitoring

          valhalla@social.gl-como.itV This user is from outside of this forum
          valhalla@social.gl-como.itV This user is from outside of this forum
          valhalla@social.gl-como.it
          schrieb zuletzt editiert von
          #35
          @stefano feeling of :xkcd:`705` intensifies 😄
          stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafeS 1 Antwort Letzte Antwort
          0
          • valhalla@social.gl-como.itV valhalla@social.gl-como.it
            @stefano feeling of :xkcd:`705` intensifies 😄
            stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafeS This user is from outside of this forum
            stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafeS This user is from outside of this forum
            stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafe
            schrieb zuletzt editiert von
            #36

            @valhalla totally!

            luca@sironi.xyzL 1 Antwort Letzte Antwort
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            • stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafeS stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafe

              @valhalla totally!

              luca@sironi.xyzL This user is from outside of this forum
              luca@sironi.xyzL This user is from outside of this forum
              luca@sironi.xyz
              schrieb zuletzt editiert von
              #37

              @stefano @valhalla shit, we have to deal with a bsd guy 😈

              stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafeS 1 Antwort Letzte Antwort
              0
              • jamesoff@mastodon.jamesoff.netJ jamesoff@mastodon.jamesoff.net

                @rhoot @stefano I have my cronjob scripts touch a file as their final action and my monitoring stuff alarms if the file is too old

                richlv@mastodon.socialR This user is from outside of this forum
                richlv@mastodon.socialR This user is from outside of this forum
                richlv@mastodon.social
                schrieb zuletzt editiert von
                #38

                @jamesoff @rhoot @stefano When I managed such things in the past, I had the backup script use zabbix_sender to send a value to Zabbix and then alert if that is missing, like you just said.

                But after one incident I also added monitoring of backup size and alerting if it changes by > 10% from the previous.

                If backup starts getting failed DB dumps, it's good to know early that "hey, backups just dropped in size by 90%" 🙂

                Also, if a backup suddenly grows a lot, something's weird.

                jamesoff@mastodon.jamesoff.netJ 1 Antwort Letzte Antwort
                0
                • richlv@mastodon.socialR richlv@mastodon.social

                  @jamesoff @rhoot @stefano When I managed such things in the past, I had the backup script use zabbix_sender to send a value to Zabbix and then alert if that is missing, like you just said.

                  But after one incident I also added monitoring of backup size and alerting if it changes by > 10% from the previous.

                  If backup starts getting failed DB dumps, it's good to know early that "hey, backups just dropped in size by 90%" 🙂

                  Also, if a backup suddenly grows a lot, something's weird.

                  jamesoff@mastodon.jamesoff.netJ This user is from outside of this forum
                  jamesoff@mastodon.jamesoff.netJ This user is from outside of this forum
                  jamesoff@mastodon.jamesoff.net
                  schrieb zuletzt editiert von
                  #39

                  @richlv @rhoot @stefano I also do this 🙂

                  (https://simplemonitor.readthedocs.io/en/latest/monitors/filestat.html)

                  1 Antwort Letzte Antwort
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                  • luca@sironi.xyzL luca@sironi.xyz

                    @stefano @valhalla shit, we have to deal with a bsd guy 😈

                    stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafeS This user is from outside of this forum
                    stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafeS This user is from outside of this forum
                    stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafe
                    schrieb zuletzt editiert von
                    #40

                    @luca @valhalla those are terrible! 😆

                    1 Antwort Letzte Antwort
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                    • stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafeS stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafe

                      A few days ago, a client’s data center "vanished" overnight. My monitoring showed that all devices were unreachable. Not even the ISP routers responded, so I assumed a sudden connectivity drop. The strange part? Not even via 4G.

                      I then suspected a power failure, but the UPS should have sent an alert.

                      The office was closed for the holidays, but I contacted the IT manager anyway. He was home sick with a serious family issue, but he got moving.

                      To make a long story short: the company deals in gold and precious metals. They have an underground bunker with two-meter thick walls. They were targeted by a professional gang. They used a tactic seen in similar hits: they identify the main power line, tamper with it at night, and send a massive voltage spike through it.

                      The goal is to fry all alarm and surveillance systems. Even if battery-backed, they rarely survive a surge like that. Thieves count on the fact that during holidays, owners are away and fried systems can't send alerts. Monitoring companies often have reduced staff and might not notice the "silence" immediately.

                      That is exactly what happened here. But there is a "but": they didn't account for my Uptime Kuma instance monitoring their MikroTik router, installed just weeks ago. Since it is an external check, it flagged the lack of response from all IPs without needing an internal alert to be triggered from the inside.

                      The team rushed to the site and found the mess. Luckily, they found an emergency electrical crew to bypass the damage and restore the cameras and alarms. They swapped the fried server UPS with a spare and everything came back up.

                      The police warned that the chances of the crew returning the next night to "finish" the job were high, though seeing the systems back online would likely make them move on. They also warned that thieves sometimes break in just to destroy servers to wipe any video evidence.

                      Nothing happened in the end. But in the meantime, I had to sync all their data off-site (thankfully they have dual 1Gbps FTTH), set up an emergency cluster, and ensure everything was redundant.

                      Never rely only on internal monitoring. Never.

                      #IT #SysAdmin #HorrorStories #ITHorrorStories #Monitoring

                      n_dimension@infosec.exchangeN This user is from outside of this forum
                      n_dimension@infosec.exchangeN This user is from outside of this forum
                      n_dimension@infosec.exchange
                      schrieb zuletzt editiert von
                      #41

                      @stefano

                      You are the hero I aspire to be!

                      stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafeS lienrag@mastodon.tedomum.netL 2 Antworten Letzte Antwort
                      0
                      • n_dimension@infosec.exchangeN n_dimension@infosec.exchange

                        @stefano

                        You are the hero I aspire to be!

                        stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafeS This user is from outside of this forum
                        stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafeS This user is from outside of this forum
                        stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafe
                        schrieb zuletzt editiert von
                        #42

                        @n_dimension ahah thank you, but I'm not a hero. I'm just doing my job anche checking the alerts.

                        1 Antwort Letzte Antwort
                        0
                        • stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafeS stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafe

                          A few days ago, a client’s data center "vanished" overnight. My monitoring showed that all devices were unreachable. Not even the ISP routers responded, so I assumed a sudden connectivity drop. The strange part? Not even via 4G.

                          I then suspected a power failure, but the UPS should have sent an alert.

                          The office was closed for the holidays, but I contacted the IT manager anyway. He was home sick with a serious family issue, but he got moving.

                          To make a long story short: the company deals in gold and precious metals. They have an underground bunker with two-meter thick walls. They were targeted by a professional gang. They used a tactic seen in similar hits: they identify the main power line, tamper with it at night, and send a massive voltage spike through it.

                          The goal is to fry all alarm and surveillance systems. Even if battery-backed, they rarely survive a surge like that. Thieves count on the fact that during holidays, owners are away and fried systems can't send alerts. Monitoring companies often have reduced staff and might not notice the "silence" immediately.

                          That is exactly what happened here. But there is a "but": they didn't account for my Uptime Kuma instance monitoring their MikroTik router, installed just weeks ago. Since it is an external check, it flagged the lack of response from all IPs without needing an internal alert to be triggered from the inside.

                          The team rushed to the site and found the mess. Luckily, they found an emergency electrical crew to bypass the damage and restore the cameras and alarms. They swapped the fried server UPS with a spare and everything came back up.

                          The police warned that the chances of the crew returning the next night to "finish" the job were high, though seeing the systems back online would likely make them move on. They also warned that thieves sometimes break in just to destroy servers to wipe any video evidence.

                          Nothing happened in the end. But in the meantime, I had to sync all their data off-site (thankfully they have dual 1Gbps FTTH), set up an emergency cluster, and ensure everything was redundant.

                          Never rely only on internal monitoring. Never.

                          #IT #SysAdmin #HorrorStories #ITHorrorStories #Monitoring

                          alisca@mastodon.ieA This user is from outside of this forum
                          alisca@mastodon.ieA This user is from outside of this forum
                          alisca@mastodon.ie
                          schrieb zuletzt editiert von
                          #43

                          @stefano Uptime Kuma instance from waaaaay downtown!!!

                          1 Antwort Letzte Antwort
                          0
                          • stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafeS stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafe

                            A few days ago, a client’s data center "vanished" overnight. My monitoring showed that all devices were unreachable. Not even the ISP routers responded, so I assumed a sudden connectivity drop. The strange part? Not even via 4G.

                            I then suspected a power failure, but the UPS should have sent an alert.

                            The office was closed for the holidays, but I contacted the IT manager anyway. He was home sick with a serious family issue, but he got moving.

                            To make a long story short: the company deals in gold and precious metals. They have an underground bunker with two-meter thick walls. They were targeted by a professional gang. They used a tactic seen in similar hits: they identify the main power line, tamper with it at night, and send a massive voltage spike through it.

                            The goal is to fry all alarm and surveillance systems. Even if battery-backed, they rarely survive a surge like that. Thieves count on the fact that during holidays, owners are away and fried systems can't send alerts. Monitoring companies often have reduced staff and might not notice the "silence" immediately.

                            That is exactly what happened here. But there is a "but": they didn't account for my Uptime Kuma instance monitoring their MikroTik router, installed just weeks ago. Since it is an external check, it flagged the lack of response from all IPs without needing an internal alert to be triggered from the inside.

                            The team rushed to the site and found the mess. Luckily, they found an emergency electrical crew to bypass the damage and restore the cameras and alarms. They swapped the fried server UPS with a spare and everything came back up.

                            The police warned that the chances of the crew returning the next night to "finish" the job were high, though seeing the systems back online would likely make them move on. They also warned that thieves sometimes break in just to destroy servers to wipe any video evidence.

                            Nothing happened in the end. But in the meantime, I had to sync all their data off-site (thankfully they have dual 1Gbps FTTH), set up an emergency cluster, and ensure everything was redundant.

                            Never rely only on internal monitoring. Never.

                            #IT #SysAdmin #HorrorStories #ITHorrorStories #Monitoring

                            bojanlandekic@mastodon.socialB This user is from outside of this forum
                            bojanlandekic@mastodon.socialB This user is from outside of this forum
                            bojanlandekic@mastodon.social
                            schrieb zuletzt editiert von
                            #44

                            @stefano so refreshing to read a quality tech tale on Mastodon. Thanks for sharing!

                            stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafeS 1 Antwort Letzte Antwort
                            0
                            • stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafeS stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafe

                              A few days ago, a client’s data center "vanished" overnight. My monitoring showed that all devices were unreachable. Not even the ISP routers responded, so I assumed a sudden connectivity drop. The strange part? Not even via 4G.

                              I then suspected a power failure, but the UPS should have sent an alert.

                              The office was closed for the holidays, but I contacted the IT manager anyway. He was home sick with a serious family issue, but he got moving.

                              To make a long story short: the company deals in gold and precious metals. They have an underground bunker with two-meter thick walls. They were targeted by a professional gang. They used a tactic seen in similar hits: they identify the main power line, tamper with it at night, and send a massive voltage spike through it.

                              The goal is to fry all alarm and surveillance systems. Even if battery-backed, they rarely survive a surge like that. Thieves count on the fact that during holidays, owners are away and fried systems can't send alerts. Monitoring companies often have reduced staff and might not notice the "silence" immediately.

                              That is exactly what happened here. But there is a "but": they didn't account for my Uptime Kuma instance monitoring their MikroTik router, installed just weeks ago. Since it is an external check, it flagged the lack of response from all IPs without needing an internal alert to be triggered from the inside.

                              The team rushed to the site and found the mess. Luckily, they found an emergency electrical crew to bypass the damage and restore the cameras and alarms. They swapped the fried server UPS with a spare and everything came back up.

                              The police warned that the chances of the crew returning the next night to "finish" the job were high, though seeing the systems back online would likely make them move on. They also warned that thieves sometimes break in just to destroy servers to wipe any video evidence.

                              Nothing happened in the end. But in the meantime, I had to sync all their data off-site (thankfully they have dual 1Gbps FTTH), set up an emergency cluster, and ensure everything was redundant.

                              Never rely only on internal monitoring. Never.

                              #IT #SysAdmin #HorrorStories #ITHorrorStories #Monitoring

                              neurovagrant@masto.deoan.orgN This user is from outside of this forum
                              neurovagrant@masto.deoan.orgN This user is from outside of this forum
                              neurovagrant@masto.deoan.org
                              schrieb zuletzt editiert von
                              #45

                              @stefano This is such a good, if niche, example of "paying attention to the fundamentals and the alerts covers all sorts of things you'd never imagine happening."

                              Thanks for sharing.

                              stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafeS 1 Antwort Letzte Antwort
                              0
                              • mindtunes@troet.cafeM mindtunes@troet.cafe shared this topic
                              • enigmarotor@mastodon.bsd.cafeE enigmarotor@mastodon.bsd.cafe

                                @stefano Stefano Jones P.A. a very noir series.

                                _elena@mastodon.social_ This user is from outside of this forum
                                _elena@mastodon.social_ This user is from outside of this forum
                                _elena@mastodon.social
                                schrieb zuletzt editiert von
                                #46

                                @EnigmaRotor reading this at lunch in a cafe near my house and I keep chuckling and smiling from ear to ear. @stefano is such a treasure 🙌🏆

                                ozoned@btfree.socialO stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafeS enigmarotor@mastodon.bsd.cafeE 3 Antworten Letzte Antwort
                                0
                                • stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafeS stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafe

                                  A few days ago, a client’s data center "vanished" overnight. My monitoring showed that all devices were unreachable. Not even the ISP routers responded, so I assumed a sudden connectivity drop. The strange part? Not even via 4G.

                                  I then suspected a power failure, but the UPS should have sent an alert.

                                  The office was closed for the holidays, but I contacted the IT manager anyway. He was home sick with a serious family issue, but he got moving.

                                  To make a long story short: the company deals in gold and precious metals. They have an underground bunker with two-meter thick walls. They were targeted by a professional gang. They used a tactic seen in similar hits: they identify the main power line, tamper with it at night, and send a massive voltage spike through it.

                                  The goal is to fry all alarm and surveillance systems. Even if battery-backed, they rarely survive a surge like that. Thieves count on the fact that during holidays, owners are away and fried systems can't send alerts. Monitoring companies often have reduced staff and might not notice the "silence" immediately.

                                  That is exactly what happened here. But there is a "but": they didn't account for my Uptime Kuma instance monitoring their MikroTik router, installed just weeks ago. Since it is an external check, it flagged the lack of response from all IPs without needing an internal alert to be triggered from the inside.

                                  The team rushed to the site and found the mess. Luckily, they found an emergency electrical crew to bypass the damage and restore the cameras and alarms. They swapped the fried server UPS with a spare and everything came back up.

                                  The police warned that the chances of the crew returning the next night to "finish" the job were high, though seeing the systems back online would likely make them move on. They also warned that thieves sometimes break in just to destroy servers to wipe any video evidence.

                                  Nothing happened in the end. But in the meantime, I had to sync all their data off-site (thankfully they have dual 1Gbps FTTH), set up an emergency cluster, and ensure everything was redundant.

                                  Never rely only on internal monitoring. Never.

                                  #IT #SysAdmin #HorrorStories #ITHorrorStories #Monitoring

                                  _elena@mastodon.social_ This user is from outside of this forum
                                  _elena@mastodon.social_ This user is from outside of this forum
                                  _elena@mastodon.social
                                  schrieb zuletzt editiert von
                                  #47

                                  @stefano you’re a hero Stefano! As your Fedi friend and documentary filmmaker I hope I get preferential treatment when one of your amazing stories gets optioned for a film 🤗

                                  stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafeS 1 Antwort Letzte Antwort
                                  0
                                  • _elena@mastodon.social_ _elena@mastodon.social

                                    @EnigmaRotor reading this at lunch in a cafe near my house and I keep chuckling and smiling from ear to ear. @stefano is such a treasure 🙌🏆

                                    ozoned@btfree.socialO This user is from outside of this forum
                                    ozoned@btfree.socialO This user is from outside of this forum
                                    ozoned@btfree.social
                                    schrieb zuletzt editiert von
                                    #48

                                    @_elena@mastodon.social When you direct the movie, can I star as the legendary @stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafe ​?

                                    _elena@mastodon.social_ stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafeS 2 Antworten Letzte Antwort
                                    0
                                    • bojanlandekic@mastodon.socialB bojanlandekic@mastodon.social

                                      @stefano so refreshing to read a quality tech tale on Mastodon. Thanks for sharing!

                                      stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafeS This user is from outside of this forum
                                      stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafeS This user is from outside of this forum
                                      stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafe
                                      schrieb zuletzt editiert von
                                      #49

                                      @bojanlandekic thank you! I'm just trying to spread some real life experiences

                                      bojanlandekic@mastodon.socialB 1 Antwort Letzte Antwort
                                      0
                                      • jamesoff@mastodon.jamesoff.netJ jamesoff@mastodon.jamesoff.net

                                        @rhoot @stefano I have my cronjob scripts touch a file as their final action and my monitoring stuff alarms if the file is too old

                                        randomized@masto.bikeR This user is from outside of this forum
                                        randomized@masto.bikeR This user is from outside of this forum
                                        randomized@masto.bike
                                        schrieb zuletzt editiert von
                                        #50

                                        @jamesoff
                                        I have
                                        my backup scripts write their return code in a file.

                                        I monitor file content and mtime, get an alert if content not 0 or file too old

                                        I also regularly manually test backup restore.

                                        Then I can sleep

                                        @rhoot @stefano

                                        jamesoff@mastodon.jamesoff.netJ 1 Antwort Letzte Antwort
                                        0
                                        • neurovagrant@masto.deoan.orgN neurovagrant@masto.deoan.org

                                          @stefano This is such a good, if niche, example of "paying attention to the fundamentals and the alerts covers all sorts of things you'd never imagine happening."

                                          Thanks for sharing.

                                          stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafeS This user is from outside of this forum
                                          stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafeS This user is from outside of this forum
                                          stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafe
                                          schrieb zuletzt editiert von
                                          #51

                                          @neurovagrant thank you! My rule is: we need moooarr alerts, as you never know how and when (not if - we know it will happen) your alertil system will break.

                                          1 Antwort Letzte Antwort
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