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by tristor 1024 days ago
This is the real answer. The amount of logs generated at cloud provider scale now are massive compared to what they were just a few years ago. The last time I was involved in these sorts of systems, circa 2014, logging was one of the core functions at a cloud provider that was /most/ demanding of physical hardware, everything from compute, memory, and storage, all the way to networking. A typical server in the environment in that provider in 2014 would have 2x10GigE connections set up for redundancy, log servers needed a minimum 2x40GigE connections /for throughput/.

These days I wouldn't be surprised if they are running 100GigE or 400GigE networks just for managing logs throughput at aggregation points.

1 comments

we’re talking an intrusion to the corp network not to the prod one (getting the keys from the crash dump)

I assume that’s a way smaller scale. However the document doesn’t go into detail which kind of logs exactly they were missing, so maybe these were network logs