The New York Stock Exchange and its European subsidiary
exchanges are running their trading systems on Red Hat Enterprise
Linux, Red Hat announced Wednesday, as it unveiled a new marquee
customer.
Linux has been known to be in use at several New York financial
services firms, but few have stepped up to the podium to testify on
the value of their implementations. As a result of mergers and
acquisitions, the New York Stock Exchange has migrated over the
last few years from HP-UX to IBM AIX to Sun Solaris to Linux. NYSE
Group CIO Steve Rubinow said the conversion to Linux followed the
acquisition of the Euronext exchange in 2007. Unlike some trading
companies that suggest Linux is running their secondary systems,
Rubinow emphasized that Linux is running the NYSE's
mission-critical trading systems.
"Red Hat is like water; it's pervasive within our architecture.
... Without it, most of our computers wouldn't be running," he said
in a prepared statement and in a video recorded for Red Hat's Web
site.
Instead of running on proprietary hardware, the exchange, now
known as NYSE Euronext, runs on 200 four-way HP ProLiant DL585
servers and 400 ProLiant BL 685c blade servers.
The NYSE and its subsidiaries conduct trading in the United
States and five European countries. Its subsidiary trading
companies include the U.S. online trader NYSE Arca Options;
Euronext trading in Belgium, France, the Netherlands, Portugal, and
the United Kingdom; the Euronext commodities trading arm Liffe; and
Alternext, an equity trading firm for small and medium-sized
businesses in countries covered by Euronext. These companies trade
equities, bonds, options, derivatives, and other securities. NYSE
Euronext lists the stocks of about 4,000 companies and constitutes
the largest trading organization in the world, its spokesmen
said.
Rubinow said NYSE Euronext investigated two competing Linuxes
and chose Red Hat on the basis of its technical support.