The first step in any incident response process is to determine what actually constitutes an incident. We have two high level categories for classifying incidents: this is done using "SR" or "IN" defintions with an attached priority of "Minor", "Normal" or "Major". "SR" are "Service requests" initiated by a customer and usually do not constitute a critical issue (there are exceptions) while "IN" are "incidents" which are generally "urgent". All of our operational issues are to be classified as either a Service Request or an Incident. Incidents have priority over Service Requests provided that there are no Service Requests with a higher priority. In general you will want to resolve a higher severity SR or IN than a lower one (a "Major" priority gets a more intensive response than a "Normal" incident for example). !!! note "Always Assume The Worst" If you are unsure which level an incident is (e.g. not sure if IN is Major or Normal), **treat it as the higher one**. During an incident is not the time to discuss or litigate severities, just assume the highest and review during a post-mortem.
Severity | Description | What To Do |
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Major |
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See During an Incident. |
Normal |
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See During an Incident. |
Anything above this line is considered a "Major Incident". These are generally Incidents (IN). Below are service requests (SR) which are usually initiated by a human who can help with prioritizing. A call is triggered for all major incidents (indifferently of SR or IN). | ||
Normal |
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Normal |
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Low |
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