This Saturday, October 23rd, starting at about 2 PM Pacific, we will be migrating all of our primary sites from the Corvallis, OR datacenter to the New York, NY datacenter.

Please be advised that this is a major move, and while we will do everything we can to prevent major service interruptions (largely with a read-only site mode we’re introducing), there may be a few hours of unavoidable downtime.
This move is good news, though:
- NYC is approximately 80 milliseconds closer to Europe, which is where a significant portion of our audience arrives from. And of course dramatically closer to the rest of the east coast of the USA.
- The Peer 1 internet network infrastructure should be faster.
- The servers all have twice as much memory (16 GB web tier, 64 GB database tier) and their CPUs are one generation ahead of what we have in Corvallis (Core 2 vs Core i7 class).
- There’s a lot more of … uh, everything.
At worst this NYC configuration will be the same speed overall — but much more robust. At best, you should notice 100 to 150 millisecond improvement in response time on every single page.
As always, you can read real time updates and details about the move on blog.serverfault.com.
update: this migration is now complete. We have a few very minor things left to clean up, but for the most part everything should be working as before.




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41 Comments
I hope none of the servers catch dysentery or drown wading through a river
(oh and meta.stackoverflow.com has been running in NYC for over a week now, so that’s the kind of performance you can expect..)
Wow, NYC datacenter FTW! The speed of the sites already rocks. If you’ll make them 100 to 150ms faster, will the responses be here before I send the requests? ;-)
Good luck!
Stefan
PS: A picture of the data migration leaked: http://www.umdiewelt.de/photos/3542/3539/21/250331.jpg
(This is from Norway)
Latency against the last hop before serverfault.com: 226
Latency against meta.stackoverflow.com: 142
Quite the large improvement, thumbs up!
For the rest of us *not* in the city of the Angels, here’s what “2PM PST” will mean:
http://www.timeanddate.com/worldclock/fixedtime.html?month=10&day=23&year=2010&hour=14&min=0&sec=0&p1=137
Those of us in the Old World will surely love the change… :)
I think we’re co-lo neighbors now :)
Sweet, it is closer to me too!
So Jeff, since S.E. is worrying about sub 100 ms gains – why isn’t RAW DEFLATE compressed content being served? http://www.vervestudios.co/projects/compression-tests/results
Your GZIP compression methods are having to compute googols of unnecessary checksums. I know you know the advantages of deflate over gzip (http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/2008/10/youre-reading-the-worlds-most-dangerous-programming-blog.html)…so what is the reason?
Just make sure that this won’t break my consecutive days. What is 150ms for each request compared to maybe losing a badge or two? Looking forward to the speed gain.
-1 for not making the trail at least pass *through* Independence, MO. ;)
What about those of us on the West Coast? Can we expect 80ms of additional delay?
Adam, if the server response times really are 100ms faster (due to faster/more procs and faster/more RAM) as Jeff eluded to, then it should be a wash.
If they’re not faster, then yes – latency from the west coast will be worse.
However, I don’t think it matters. Service robustness is clearly more important than sub-second response time variance and based on what they’ve described for the new setup, I think outages (not due to admin/programmer error) will be far less likely.
@Bill – must be keeping his relations in Iowa City happy.
Woohoooo! Big up for the move, can’t wait to see the improvements!
I just ran a traceroute for
- meta.stackoverflow.com
- stackoverflow.com
From my PC in the UK.
meta – 109ms in 7 hops
stackoveflow – timed out after 200ms and 14 hops.
Thumbs up from me! Great news.
This is a major improvement! I hope everything goes right! Support guys, don’t mess with our database :)
The ideal location would be Jon Skeet’s lounge, but I’m glad us Europeans are getting the sites a bit faster
Wishing you a Happy and Safe journey… :)
Well, doesn’t this mean the servers are now farther from Asia?
@Adam: you can just ping meta to check out how it’ll be.
Ok, that’s good! Now we are going to have a faster perfomance
From here in B’ham, WA USA, Serverfault is currently about 25ms away (wow!) and MSO is around 95ms.
Looking at the routes, though, I understand why. My ISP has a direct link to Level 3, which goes directly to peak’s upstream in the same POP. The MSO route goes through 4 Level 3 POPs before it hits the MSO edge. In this modern internet it’s hard to get closer to SF from residential broadband.
From work… jebus… ServerFault is all of 12ms away and MSO 75ms. At those speeds, I’ll miss Oregon. IIRC the plan is to get both datacenters online for some geographic load-balancing. Wheee!
Yeah, it’ll be slower for me. However, the NYC DC is closer to a large majority of users than out here where the electricity is a lot cheaper.
Hopefully my questions will be answered 200 ms faster
Similar to `Codemwnci`, but from Amsterdam.
Note: the reverse DNS might need some attention.
Tracing route to meta.stackoverflow.com [64.34.119.12]
over a maximum of 30 hops:
…
12 158 ms 207 ms 103 ms oc48-po3-0.nyc-75bre-dis-1.peer1.net [216.187.115.134]
13 115 ms 108 ms 101 ms stackoverflow.com [64.34.41.58]
14 102 ms 102 ms 99 ms stackoverflow.com [64.34.119.12]
Tracing route to stackoverflow.com [69.59.196.211]
over a maximum of 30 hops:
…
15 183 ms 171 ms 173 ms ge-1-0-0-cvo-core2.peak.org [69.59.218.193]
16 184 ms 180 ms 173 ms vlan5-cvo-colo2.peak.org [69.59.218.226]
17 * * * Request timed out.
Congrats on the move!
–jeroen
Seems good
The REAL reason behind the migration is to get the servers closer to Jon Skeet.
Italy here. A quick mtr shows that the ping is HALVED. Looking forward to it!
Vancouver, BC here. Will miss having SO 20 ms away :(
16GB of ram per machine just for your application servers? You poor things.
@rob what can I say?
Hardware is Cheap, Programmers are Expensive
http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/2008/12/hardware-is-cheap-programmers-are-expensive.html
Where were you guys colocated at in Corvallis? Just going into an exchange building in Portland or Seattle probably would have bought you quite a bit.
Good luck on the move though! Hopefully it goes as smooth as possible :)
From Afghanistan:
Ping time to stackoverflow.com: 565ms
Ping time to meta.stackoverflow.com: 546ms
If you use a Google Maps screenshot, you need to make sure it has the copyrights on it.
And as a European, I’m looking forward to a speed up on an already fast site.
@NYC is approximately 80 milliseconds closer to Europe, which is where a significant portion of our audience arrives from. And of course dramatically closer to the rest of the east coast of the USA…
GGGN right?;)
About time. East coast’s where it’s at.
I hope Peer1 will not format your production hard disks / RAID devices as they are known to do this ;)
http://www.webhostingtalk.com/showthread.php?t=969502
stackoverflow.com now pings at 112 ms (12 hops) from Berlin, load times also feel better. blog.stackoverflow.com (on the west coast at Peak) pings at 196 ms after 18 hops.
The move was definately worth the trouble for us poor folks on the other side of the pond.
We added a CDN to our sites (we uses Akamai) and worldwide latency dropped significantly for the majority of the page that never updates. Just a thought as the systems at SO continue to grow. Not sure the revenue model supports that level of caching though, but it sure is nice when India gets the same response time as Dallas. :)
Congrats on the completion of the move!
–jeroen
Okay, so now that the move is done, how about a follow-up post with lessons learned, things you’d do differently next time, etc. I think we’d all enjoy reading that!
Nice work all,
ErikA
@Erik I say +1 to that!