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Betfair scores 100 per cent uptime Down Under

Oz launch goes off without a hitch...

Tags: betfair

By Munir Kotadia

Published: 20 September 2006 11:50 GMT

What does an online betting service and a stock exchange have in common?

When UK-based online trading site Betfair was granted a licence to operate in Australia this January, it built a new data centre and flew the entire set-up from the UK to Tasmania on two chartered aeroplanes. In the first three weeks of going live, the company has achieved 100 per cent uptime.

Betfair is an online trading exchange and according to the company's director of infrastructure Paul Moss, the challenges of keeping such a system available are similar to - and sometimes more demanding than - a stock exchange.

Moss said: "The site always has to be available. Unlike the stock exchange, which shuts down at 17:00 for storage upgrades and firmware upgrades, Betfair can't stop. It is just like a stock exchange but 24/7.

In the UK, the data centre handles 1.4 million transactions per day and on a busy day we do 3,000 requests per second.

"You can bet right up to the last second [during a race or football match]. So Betfair is all about performance, capacity and availability. We do as many credit card transactions as any European site so security is important as well."

When asked about downtime, Moss said it was "not tolerated". He claimed Betfair in the UK achieved five nines (99.999 per cent availability) last year and he hoped Betfair's Tasmanian data centre would maintain its perfect record.

Moss said: "I should point out that we have been live for exactly three weeks and two days so the fact that we have maintained 100 per cent isn't really anything to crow about so far but nonetheless I think that we have proved that the infrastructure we have deployed is fundamentally sound."

Moss explained that once the company knew it would be opening up a hub in Australia, it decided to purchase all the necessary equipment in the UK and build its data centre there - where it already had the expertise, experience and testing facilities. Once ready and working, it was loaded onto two 747 aeroplanes and flown to Hobart.

Moss claimed the company spends a "minimal" amount on Microsoft licences.

He said: "At the back end we have got Sun enterprise boxes running Solaris and an Oracle database. On the web tier we have got Sun AMD Opteron machines that run Red Hat Linux. All of the networking gear is Cisco and Citrix Netscalers are used to load balance."

Although Betfair in Australia is relatively new, Moss claims the servers are already being tested and the traffic is expected to continue growing at a healthy rate.

He said: "In Tasmania, the centre peaks at about 500 requests per second. In the UK, the data centre handles 1.4 million transactions per day and on a busy day we do 3,000 requests per second.

"We take great pride in what we do… at 15:20 on a Saturday afternoon - peak time - you want everything to work."

When asked if Betfair's Australian operations could maintain their perfect record, Moss said: "I hope so, that's the whole idea - to maintain 100 per cent."

According to Moss, Betfair is keen to seek out any technology that could help the company improve its site's performance and availability but before the company invests in any new technology it puts the products through a 'real world' test in its labs.

He said: "We basically record one of our busiest days - people logging in, placing bets, cancelling bets - it actually records a true day, so we have got a very good idea of the performance of the kit we are buying."

One of the products highlighted by Moss was the Citrix Netscaler, which is a load balancing appliance that is capable of managing network traffic on the application layer. It is usually deployed in front of application servers to ensure traffic is evenly distributed but it is also capable of compressing HTTP traffic to reduce bandwidth and improve application performance.

Betfair's UK office, which is where Moss was originally located, switched to NetScaler around three years ago from the BIG-IP appliance from F5 Networks. The BIG-IP offers similar features to NetScaler and Moss said that although there was nothing wrong with them, the NetScaler simply provided better performance for Betfair's requirements.

He said: "The F5 BIG-IP is great. I have nothing negative to say about F5. We have got F5's in the lab," adding that should F5 boost the BIG-IP's performance to surpass that of the NetScaler, he would consider switching back.

Munir Kotadia writes for ZDNet Australia

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