Dear GBIF community
Please be aware of this communication from DataCite which will likely cause some disruption on GBIF services with relation to DOI issuing.
Many thanks,
Tim
From: Martin Fenner <martin.fenner@datacite.org>
Reply-To: "allusers@datacite.org" <allusers@datacite.org>
Date: Friday, 2 August 2019 at 08.22
To: DataCite Allmembers <allmembers@datacite.org>, DataCite Allusers <allusers@datacite.org>
Subject: [datacite-allusers] Delays in DOI registrations and updates
Dear DataCite members and users,
processing of DOI registrations is currently delayed by up to 12 hours, affecting registration in the handle system and inclusion in the search index. This is caused by an unusually very large number of maintenance
jobs running in our system, and we expect this to be resolved by the end of the day. This is a delay in processing, all DOI registrations and updates are successfully captured by our system. Requesting or searching DOI metadata is not affected. Please check
https://status.datacite.org for updated status information, or subscribe to email updates at this site.
The reason for the very large number of maintenance jobs is two important updates to better handle malformed dates in DOI metadata and to prepare for affiliation identifier support in the upcoming schema 4.3.
The load on the system for these two tasks is much higher than expected, causing the delays described above. I sincerely apologize for the inconvenience this is causing, and going forward we will be better in giving advance notice with scheduled maintenances
for situations like this.
What is happening today is unrelated to the service incident we reported on July 24 (https://status.datacite.org/incidents/d00gnm05ps3k). That
incident was caused by a very high number (> 1 million in 24 hours) of DOI registration requests by a single client, temporarily overloading the system. To prevent this from happening in the future, we have this Monday implemented rate-limiting of 3,000 requests
per IP address within 5 min, which translates to 10 requests per second or 36,000 requests per hour per IP address. Please reach out to
support@datacite.org if you need higher rate-limits temporarily or generally, and we can adjust the rate-limits for your IP addresses. This is the first time we implemented rate-limiting, but we had to take this step
to make sure DOI registrations for all users are not affected by high numbers of requests by a single user. We have also increased the number of servers and improved monitoring to better handle these kinds of situations in the future.
Please reach out to me via
support@datacite.org if you have any comments or feedback.
Kind regards,
Martin Fenner
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