On The Insider: Britney's Bikini-Clad Top 10
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

By Stephen Shankland
Posted on ZDNet News: Jan 22, 2004 7:52:00 PM

NEW YORK--It's not the first time Amazon.com has proclaimed its support for Linux, but it's the most detailed.

At the LinuxWorld Conference and Expo here, Amazon Vice President of Infrastructure Tom Killalea described in detail Wednesday how the online retailer is using the open-source operating system in nearly every corner of its business.

Amazon began to use Linux in 2000 for basic tasks, Killalea said. It then spread to more critical areas, notably the company's database.

The transition received attention in 2001, when the company noted in a Securities and Exchange Commission filing that moving to Linux had cut costs by $17 million.

By the holiday season of 2003, Amazon's computers supported a heavy load, with peak demand of 1 million packages shipped in a day and 20 million inventory updates processed in a single day. The company has nine worldwide distribution centers with a total of 4.2 million square feet. "Everything that happens in them is driven by Linux," Killalea said.

Amazon's Linux switch began in the third quarter of 2000 with Web servers, lower-end machines that deliver Web pages. In the second quarter of 2001, the company moved its own applications for fulfilling orders, managing customer relationships and tracking company accounting.

The most recent phase, begun in 2003 and continuing, is moving database servers to Linux computers running Oracle's database software. "We're a very demanding and heavy user of Oracle," Killalea said.

The final phase will be moving its data warehouse to Linux, he said.

Amazon uses a message-based system in which one server, such as a machine that just logged a customer order, sends messages to other machines, such as those that take care of billing or shipping, Killalea said. With tasks handled by the next available system in a large pool, the design can easily expand to meet demand, he said.

Amazon's Linux systems also are the basis for the e-commerce engine the company sells to other retailers, including Toys "R" Us, Target, Borders Group, Nordstrom, The Gap, CDNow and the National Basketball Association.

SponsoredWhite Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 13 Talkback(s)
Silly...
I hear Linus gets as much as half the profits on every free download

NO, that's not completely true. A friend's cousin's former girlfriend's aunt's sister's son's boss's butler heard fr... (Read the rest)
Posted by: doe_z Posted on: 01/25/04 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
a bit more, from an x-insider  JosePinchero | 01/22/04
Microsucks is already being forced to drop prices!  realitycheck101 | 01/22/04
(NT) Quote.com reports stock at $28.60  Update victim | 01/23/04
Linux's Dirty Little Secret  BFD | 01/22/04
"I have listened to a number of developers who have done Linux migrations"  DanIelWalker_z | 01/24/04
Dirty and clean secrets  michael-t | 01/24/04
re: a bit more, from an x-insider  betelgeuse68 | 01/22/04
re: re: a bit more, from an x-insider  dlu | 01/22/04
When Amazon started, Netscape Enterprise Server was the only SSL server  DanIelWalker_z | 01/24/04
Let's say you are correct,  Update victim | 01/23/04
Linux Myths  michael-t | 01/23/04
Linux Myths 'n' Maths  gafisher@... | 01/23/04
Silly...  doe_z | 01/25/04

What do you think?

advertisement
advertisement

White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

SmartPlanet

  • Thought-provoking progressive ideas on diverse topics that intersect with technology, business, and life, and matter to the world at large. Visit SmartPlanet
  • More from IBM
  • Innovate your business' process model, play against the market, compete against others on our scoreboards and WIN! Try INNOV8 2.0: A BPM Simulator
  • Enabling Real-World Business Transformation through IBM Service Management Read the EMA Analyst Report
Click Here