Has anyone lost any critical data in a humorous but catastrophic way?
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My dad was getting trained once and a guy told him never to "type this command" typed that and then hit return. He immediately went, "F**k!". They had to reload everything back from the backup tapes |
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Here's another: Some time around '95 or '96, the biggest ISP in Norway hired a security expert to have a look around their web site to look for weak spots. He saw that the shell script for searching, calling WAIS, was not careful about sanitizing input. He decided to test it by searching for something akin to ';rm . -R It worked. It went all the way to the courts. (If my unix example is impossible, I'd like to state that I'm no expert in shell scripting.) |
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As the family computer 'expert' I am often called upon as free tech support. Got a call from a family member saying her computer was running slow and could I look at it. So I went over and did the usual things. Update anti-virus and anti-spyware and run them. Download Windows updates. Disk Cleanup. Defragment. The next day I get a call, her file is missing, what did I do to it? Long story short she was storing important docs in the Recycle Bin so she "would always know where they were". |
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A near loss, but I always found it humorous: I used to work for a large finanical institution that shall remain nameless that started backing up its mainframes only after a scud missile landed practically on the front door of its data center during the gulf war. |
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Two examples, one mine, one a colleague of mine, from long ago when I had far less wisdom. My refusal to succumb to the evils of using GUI configuration tools while administering UNIX boxes. I decided that, to add a user, I need only execute:
then I logged out and found, to my disgust, I couldn't log back in as root (or any other user but bob, who had no power whatsoever). Guess I should have examined the redirection character(s) a little more closely. My colleague was better: in our HP-UX application install script, which runs as root in the root directory, he had coded the following:
which set all our files to have a specific owner, group and permission. At least it would have if our application wasn't in /opt/application. Needless to say, the system was unworkable after having every single file in the filesystem (including the commands needed to fix it) changing ownership and permissions. Live and learn. |
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The Student Accounting system at a local university used to fit on one deck of punch cards. There was no backup, and the entire system burned up in the back seat of a Corvair when the car's after-market gas heater caught fire. |
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A big logistics company hired a new hp-ux admin in september 1997. To familiarize himself with the system he had a look at the disks and file systems and found a lot of unpartitioned space. So he created some new partitions. The sybase was running on these raw devices, so it promptly crashed. Good thing there were backup tapes. But they had not been tested for recoverability, and they had to step back to may same year to find anything that could be recovered. This company had mostly huge customer accounts that were invoiced 4 times a year. This was just days before invoicing. Almost 3 months of revenue was gone. The only guy with the knowledge to piece the most of the database back from the freshly partitioned disks was an independant consultant living in another country. He was shipped in on a friday afternoon and went straight to work on a huge hourly rate. He was left alone that night to work through to next morning. But the next morning he was gone back to his home country. They called him to ask why he jumped ship right in the middle of the job. The reply was that his wife had to go to her job and their kid had a fever and couldn't stay at the grandparents that weekend. He would be happy to not charge them for the incomplete job and expenses if they preferred. It took the logistics company a millisecond to decide to sugarcoat a reaction in the tone of please come back and save us if you can. We'll pay anything if you'll just come back. True story. |
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Back when I was still very new to UNIX but relatively comfortable with DOS, I had a C++ programming homework assignment due. I did all the work, saving the files with .cc extensions. Then, just before class, decided that I preferred the .C extension. So I attempted a global rename from the shell based on my DOS background:
Yah, that pretty much wiped out all of my work. I made it a priority to learn about shell pre-processing of wildcards immediately thereafter. |
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In my first co-op work term (I turned 19 during the term), I was the operator of a couple of VM systems at IBM in Toronto. Mainly I was there to mount tapes when requested. But while doing some "cleanup", I found a whole bunch of emails in some place called "spool". I thought they were specific to the account I had logged in as, so I wiped them all. It turned out that they were all of the unread emails for all users on the system, including a VP or two. They were not pleased, but I believe most of the emails managed to get recovered. |
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When I was in the US Air Force I was the system admin on a Unisys System 11. We were always told not to enter $! on the console...but not told why. Being curious I looked up what $! did (actually looked it up in a book...before the 'net). It caused a a panic dump of the entire system...to the printer. A couple of weeks after I got out I heard that some operator entered $! "just to see what it did" and the system was down for 5 days. I was later told that they had started the paperwork to get me reactivated (drafted essentially) to come back and fix it. |
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I was the co-op student administrator of a very ancient UNIX box (a Pixel-80 if I remember correctly). It was running out of disk space, and I had spend the morning deleting old garbage files in various sub directories. As I was getting done, one of my friends came by and suggested we go out for lunch. I agreed and said I was almost done. I bounced up a couple more directories and saw this simple file that was only called 'unix' with no extension. I figured it was some mistyped text thing (which I had been removing all morning), so I deleted it. Bad, bad mistake, since it was the unix kernel for that box. All was fine, until later in the afternoon, after lunch I stared getting weird errors so I rebooted ... And the backups were corrupt and/or missing ... And the boot disk was corrupt ... And the version of the OS was so old the company that made the machine didn't have boot disks ... Later in the next week, after waiting for a shipment, then installing a new OS, then backing it up, then downgrading, then restoring some of the original backups with some of the new ones, the system more or less worked as normal again. Mostly ... Some lessons are best learned on co-op work terms ;-) Paul. |
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One of our employees complained that his laptop was really slow, so one day I took a look at it. I'd never seen a hard drive with so much fragmentation. Attempts to defragment were unsuccessful because he didn't have enough free space, so I tried to free up some space by deleting temporary files. The largest file with the most fragments was a PST file. In a moment which was not one of my proudest, I concluded that it was a backup and the real e-mail database was stored elsewhere, so I deleted it. He lost several years worth of e-mail and had no backups. He forgave me, but never let me forget it. |
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Not very big in the grand scheme of things, but... I started work as a programmer at a new department, working on a Unix box. I knew there was an automated backup system so I didn't worry about packing things up myself; until about a month later when I mentioned it to someone and they said "No, you machine is new - it's not on the backup system". I decided I would copy my work to another disk that night before I went home. That very afternoon the disk on my new machine crashed - the only disk crash I have every suffered in a career of twenty years - taking every single byte of my work with it. |
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Many moons ago at a company long gone. We had hired a 3D expert from UK to hand optimize a 3D terrain model for a Truck simulator. He worked a whole week and managed to make the terrain run smoothly on a Silicon Graphics IR machine. The week after a co-worker had the task to transport and install the terrain database in a truck simulator in france. He |
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A friend of mine was advising his friend who was writing an essay. Given her essay was in a foreign language and she was annoyed with having to enter the foreign characters on a UK keyboard, said friend advised her to just use a specific character instead and do a search and replace at the very end. She chose * Search + Save at 5am with no backups..... Gutted! |
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DiskDoctor was the disk repair program bundled with the Commodore Amiga OS, with a far from ideal track record.
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The old days of DOS. FDISK C: Whoops! I meant the D drive! |
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I remember all cash machines (ATMs) were down for three days 5-6 years ago because somebody did a low-level disk backup the wrong way. They mirrored an entire set of blank disks onto the existing full disks. |
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Let me just say this about my data loss: You should never try to spook someone carrying a running laptop. |
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One of my friends was typing a paper in Word, and accidentally hit the close button. He was nervous and hit "No" instead of "Yes" at "The file as not been saved. Would you like to save now?" (He was probably expecting "Files have not been saved! Are you sure you'd like to exit?") Another vote for programs that just do things instead of give you popups. Filed under not-critical-as-in-my-company-didn't-blow-up, but something-needs-to-be-done-about-UI. |
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The only thing I can think of that I've ever found humorous about data loss was the time a few years back when this Western Digital 500 gig drive failed (evidently there was a model this was a common occurrence with), and if you held it up to your ear and turned it on the rotational axis of the disk platters, it made a sound exactly like a dog's squeaky toy. |
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Not really critical data either, but it reminds me of the dad of a high school friend, back in the 80s, who was writing a game of Bridge using TRS80 Basic. The idea was that, at a prompt, my friend's dad, for debugging purposes, had written a system where he could check each hand, or a collection of hands, by entering the 'direction' of the hand, North South East West by simply typing N, S, E or W, or any combination of them. He once forgot to run the app before trying to check North, East and West. Anyone who used an 80s Basic computer can tell you what happens to an application in memory when you type NEW and hit Return. Apparently he stayed up all night to rebuild it. |
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There was the time I promoted a shell script from the test area to the production area, and wound up overwriting the production-critical stuff that some yahoo (possibly my manager) had written into the production area without bothering with a backup. I don't feel the least bit guilty about that one, as I was following company standard process. Names are withheld here to protect the guilty. Then, at a company that shall be nameless, the configuration manager, whose name was not Joe, wanted to rearrange the source directory tree. Since this was under CVS, it was a matter of moving things around in the repository. (CVS versions files, and just projects the repository directory structure onto the working copy.) CVS was smart enough to check out the new Y directory, but not smart enough to notice that the X directory was gone. In order to clean up, and prevent us from working on an X directory that was suddenly not in the repository, Joe provided a cleanup script. In that version, it just deleted the no-longer-relevant working copy directories. I was just finishing up a rewrite of the stuff in the X directory. It was getting close to ready to check in, I certainly didn't want to check it in when it didn't actually work, and I was new to CVS and didn't want to create a branch. There went a couple of weeks of work. I figured what the heck, and asked the local admin about the backups. Turned out he hadn't added my machine to the backup list yet. Fortunately, I managed to find a fairly recent copy of my changes in a partial install on another test machine. For the next reorganization, Joe's cleanup script moved all the removed or changed directories to a holding area, so that although nobody was going to work on them there the files were still intact. |
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I was getting to grips with an ecommerce site's admin interface. After looking through the orders I spotted a button with the text 'clear payment details'. I clicked on it expecting a message box to ask me if I was sure, or explaining what it did. Instead the page refreshed and all of the un-processed orders lost their payment information immediately. Luckily it was put down to human error. At my previous job, I gave the backup tapes to my boss to file away in the safe. On a business trip her handbag was stolen, along with her main keys to the safe. Unfortunately, she kept the spare keys... in the safe. |
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Using
Instead of
in bash once cost me a couple of hours... |
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