A technical problem in a license management server at SonicWall created havoc Tuesday for users of the company's e-mail security
products, leaving many customers temporarily unprotected against spam, phishing and malware threats while others were unable to log into their own systems.
Colleen Nichols, a spokeswoman for SonicWall , said Tuesday evening that the Sunnyvale, Calif.-based vendor had resolved the server issue as of noontime PST and that
affected customers could "resynchronize their licenses" by visiting the customer support section of the company's Web site.
It wasn't immediately clear how many customers were affected by the license server glitch. But numerous users posted angry
messages on a forum on the SonicWall site during a period that lasted for several hours.
According to a user who reported the problem to Computerworld via e-mail, the glitch affected all customers of SonicWall's
ES series of e-mail security appliances, based on what he was told by a person he described as the vendor's "general support ticket-taker."
The user, who asked not to be identified, said that during the overnight hours from Monday into Tuesday, SonicWall's license
manager erroneously reset the license keys for products installed on his systems and those of other customers, thereby making
the licenses appear to be invalid.
"Very early this morning," Nichols confirmed via e-mail, "one server in SonicWall's licensing server pool that handles distribution
of [digital] signatures and license keys malfunctioned." The malfunction caused "some" license keys to be reset, requiring
them to later be resynchronized with SonicWall's servers, she said.
The company shut off the problematic license server "shortly after it began malfunctioning, and at the same time proactively
stopped automatic license key updates while we verified the integrity of the rest of our licensing servers," Nichols wrote.
During that period, customers were still able to manually download updates and resynchronize their licenses through the company's
Web site, she added.
Nichols said that SonicWall was working to contact customers believed to have been affected by the problem to ensure them
that the technical issues had been resolved.
In posts on the user forum, a person named Jody Spoor who identified herself as a senior technical support engineer at SonicWall
said that the company had been alerted about the problem "as early as we could be" and had taken immediate steps to prevent
the issue from spreading further.
For more enterprise computing news, visit Computerworld. Story copyright Computerworld, Inc.