Uptime Institute recently awarded its Efficient IT (EIT) Stamp of Approval to LinkedIn for its new data center in Infomart Portland, signaling that the modern new facility had exceeded extremely high standards for enterprise leadership, operations, and computing infrastructure. These standards are designed to help organizations lower costs and increase efficiency, and leverage technology for good stewardship of corporate and environmental resources. Uptime Institute congratulates LinkedIn on this significant accomplishment.
Sonu Nayyar, VP of Production Operations & IT for LinkedIn, said “Our newest data center is a big step forward, allowing us to adopt a hyperscale architecture while being even more efficient about how we consume resource. Uptime Institute’s Efficient IT Stamp of Approval is a strong confirmation that our management functions of IT, data center engineering, finance, and sustainability are aligned. We look forward to improving how we source energy and ultimately reaching our goal of 100 percent renewable energy.”
John Sheputis, President of Infomart Data Centers, said, “We knew this project would be special from the moment we began collaborating on design. Efficiency and sustainability are achieved through superior control of resources, not sacrificing performance or availability. We view this award as further evidence of Infomart’s long-term commitment to working with customers to create the most sustainable IT operations in the world.”
LinkedIn expressed its enthusiasm about both this new project and the Efficient IT Stamp of Approval in the LinkedIn Engineering blog post below.
LinkedIn’s Oregon Data Center Goes Live
By Shawn Zandi and Mike Yamaguchi
The shift to simplification in order to own and control our architecture motivated us to also use our own 100G Ethernet open switch platform, called Project Falco. The advantages of using our own software stack are numerous: faster time to market, uniformity, simplification in feature requirements as well as deployment, and controlling our architecture and scale, to name a few.
In addition to the infrastructure innovation mentioned earlier, our Oregon data center has been designed and deployed to use IPv6 (next generation internet protocol) from day one. This is part of our larger vision to move our entire stack to IPv6 globally in order to retire IPv4 in our existing data centers. The move to IPv6 enabled us to run our application stack and our private cloud, LPS (LinkedIn Platform as a Service), without the limitations of traditional stacks.
As we moved to a distributed security system by creating a distributed firewall and removing network load balancers, the process of preparing and migrating our site to the new data center became a complicated task. It required significant automation and code development, as well as changes to procedures and software configurations, but ultimately reduced our infrastructure costs and gave us additional operational flexibility.
Our site reliability engineers and systems engineering teams introduced a number of innovations in deployment and provisioning, which allowed us to streamline the software buildout process. This, combined with zero touch deployment, resulted in a shorter timeline and smoother process for bringing a data center live than we’ve ever achieved before.
YouTube Link
Acknowledgements
We’re delighted to participate in the growth of Oregon as a next-generation sustainable technology center. The Uptime Institute has recognized LinkedIn with an Efficient IT award for our efforts! This award evaluates the management processes and organizational behaviors to achieve lasting reductions in cost, utilities, staff time, and carbon emissions for data centers.
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