Windows Azure crashes on leap year error

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Leaves customers cloud-less for hours.

Microsoft has confirmed that a major worldwide outage on its Windows Azure cloud service was likely caused by a leap year coding error.

Windows Azure crashes on leap year error

The firm's corporate vice president for cloud, Bill Laing, said in a blog post that the issue was determined "to be caused by a software bug".

"While final root cause analysis is in progress, this issue appears to be due to a time calculation that was incorrect for the leap year," he said.

The outage left customers without cloud access for between 12 and 23 hours, according to various reports.

While a fix had been pushed out in a bid to resolve the error, Laing noted yesterday that "some sub-regions and customers are still experiencing issues and as a result of these issues they may be experiencing a loss of application functionality."

The sub-regions included parts of the United States and Northern Europe, according to arstechnica.

Those problems were only completely resolved early Friday morning Australian time.

Microsoft said it would provide a full post-incident report within 10 days.

Microsoft was not the only firm to suffer leap year problems. In Australia, the HICAPS health payment service suffered issues, also allegedly due to a coding error that did not account for February 29.

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