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OSU Open Source Lab

Data Center Migration Update and Fundraising Campaign | OSU Open Source Lab Featured: Strong support stabilizes funding for the Open Source Lab | OSU Open Source Lab We're Hiring: Join the OSU Open Source Lab as a Student Systems Engineer! | OSU Open Source Lab Forging Our Future: OSL's Path to Sustainability – A Call for Smart Solutions and Enduring Support | OSU Open Source Lab Future of OSL in Jeopardy | OSU Open Source Lab Now Providing Access to POWER10 for Open Source Projects | OSU Open Source Lab FTP Server Rebuild - March 2024 | OSU Open Source Lab On Leaving the Open Source Lab, Jonathan Frederick | OSU Open Source Lab Reflections on My Time at the Open Source Lab, Travis Whitehead | OSU Open Source Lab OSL Alumnus Matthew Johnson on working at Tesla | OSU Open Source Lab Hiring two DevOps student positions | OSU Open Source Lab TDS Telecom Support of OSU Open Source Lab Tops $5 Million | OSU Open Source Lab Goodbye Letter from Graduating Senior, Cody Holliday | OSU Open Source Lab Mohamed Eldebri on OSL's participation in the Corvallis Maker Fair | OSU Open Source Lab Cody Holliday on the Department of Energy Cyber Defense Competition 2018 | OSU Open Source Lab OSL's Cody Holliday Wins Regional DOE Cyber Defense Competition | OSU Open Source Lab OSL Alumnus Alex Plovi sells CoreOS to RedHat | OSU Open Source Lab Changing the World, One Line of Code at a Time | OSU Open Source Lab Jonathan Frederick on Packer Templates project at the OSL | OSU Open Source Lab Ganeti Production Rebuild - Dec 11-15 & 18-19, 2017 | OSU Open Source Lab Thank You for Supporting our Crowdfunding Campaign! | OSU Open Source Lab A Message from the Director | OSU Open Source Lab New Project: polr | OSU Open Source Lab Donate to Our Crowdfunding Campaign! | OSU Open Source Lab Cody Holliday on Why we should stop using C | OSU Open Source Lab Amanda Kelner on Graduating | OSU Open Source Lab Beaver BarCamp 17: New Horizons | OSU Open Source Lab New Project: libpng Now Mirrored on ftp.osuosl.org | OSU Open Source Lab Network Outage 2016-12-17 Post-mortem | OSU Open Source Lab OSL Summer 2016 Internship | OSU Open Source Lab The OSL at PyCon | OSU Open Source Lab Congratulations 2016 Graduates! | OSU Open Source Lab RTEMS | OSU Open Source Lab CASS and the AllSeen Alliance | OSU Open Source Lab DevOps DayCamp 2015 | OSU Open Source Lab OSL GSOC 2015 - Oregon's Catch | OSU Open Source Lab OSL GSOC 2015 - Protein Geometry Database | OSU Open Source Lab Mysql1-vip Outage Post-Mortem | OSU Open Source Lab Write the Docs '15 | OSU Open Source Lab Coming Soon: Beaver BarCamp 15 | OSU Open Source Lab SCALE x13 | OSU Open Source Lab A Successful DevOps DayCamp | OSU Open Source Lab Using Variables in a Custom Drupal Theme | OSU Open Source Lab DevOps DayCamp | OSU Open Source Lab Make Bash, Not War | OSU Open Source Lab A Recap of OSCON 2014 | OSU Open Source Lab Google Migration Post-mortem | OSU Open Source Lab Vim Trick FTW! | OSU Open Source Lab OpenStack on OpenPOWER | OSU Open Source Lab Protein Geometry - What the Heck is That? 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OSL Infrastructure Migration: A Move to Oregon's State Data Center | OSU Open Source Lab
2025-12-23 · via OSU Open Source Lab

Earlier this year, I shared our “OSL Future” update, outlining the roadmap to build a more sustainable and resilient OSU Open Source Lab. A key part of that plan was finding a professional-grade physical home for our core infrastructure to replace the facility we’ve called home for the last two decades.

Today, I am thrilled to announce a major milestone: The OSL is officially moving to Oregon’s State Data Center (SDC) in Salem, Oregon.

The Legacy of the Kerr B210 Data Center

For over 20 years, the heartbeat of the OSL has been Kerr Administration Building, Room B210: a dedicated data center that holds a legendary place in the history of the global open source community. Originally the home of the OSU mainframe, Kerr B210 underwent a mission-critical renovation in 2005 and 2006; it was converted into a data center to support the OSL’s rapid growth and other OSU Department co-location needs.

In the years following, OSUOSL became the primary home for the Linux Foundation and hosted Kernel.org for an extended period. The OSL also onboarded major projects including Gentoo Linux, Debian, and Drupal during this time, and continues to host these and many other projects today. While not designed as a high-density facility, Kerr B210 served as a critical hub for major open source projects. In recent years, both the Linux Foundation and Kernel.org have graduated to cloud infrastructure, a testament to how successfully OSUOSL helped them to scale and grow. We remain proud partners with the Linux Foundation, and continue supporting their mission to advance open source development.

While Kerr B210 served the Lab well for twenty years, the facility has reached the end of its intended lifecycle for the OSL’s needs. As the infrastructure aged, it became clear that continued investment in the facility would be necessary, and OSU was unable to support further capital improvements. Additionally, no other locations on campus could meet the OSL’s space and power requirements. Moving to a dedicated, professional-grade facility like Oregon’s State Data Center is the logical next step in our evolution.

Oregon’s State Data Center Facility

OSL’s racks in the Oregon’s State Data Center

The Oregon State Data Center (SDC) in Salem provides the stability and infrastructure we need for the next 20 years. Originally established in 2007 through the Computing and Networking Infrastructure Consolidation (CNIC) project, a $63.6 million legislative investment to centralize fragmented IT infrastructure from 12 major state agencies, the facility was designed from the ground up for high-availability enterprise operations.

The purpose-built, energy-efficient data center leverages Oregon’s temperate climate for “free cooling” (natural air intake), a feature that has historically reduced energy consumption by approximately 35% compared to traditional mechanical-only cooling facilities.

Between 2017 and 2021, the SDC underwent a significant $17.8 million infrastructure modernization and lifecycle refresh. This project specifically enhanced the facility’s capacity for co-location services, introducing modern hot/cold aisle containment, upgraded electrical switch gear, and enhanced backup power systems. The result is a “Tier 3” equivalent facility, meeting industry standards for 99.98% uptime, providing enterprise-grade resiliency and security.

By moving to the SDC, the Open Source Lab gains access to:

  • Enterprise-Grade Resiliency: The facility features N+1 power and cooling redundancy, backed by industrial-scale generators and a professional State IT Operations Team monitoring the environment 24/7.
  • A Scalable Footprint: We are starting with 12 high-density racks in a 45U configuration, an upgrade from our previous 42U standard. The SDC offers the physical floor space and power density required for future growth as the OSL takes on new hardware partners and global projects.
  • Professional Governance: The facility is managed by Enterprise Information Services (EIS), the Office of the State Chief Information Officer. While the OSL retains full control and management of our own equipment and software stacks, EIS provides the world-class physical security (including 24/7 guarded access and biometric controls) and environmental infrastructure necessary for a modern data center.

Moving Forward: Infrastructure and Network Strategy

This move also represents a significant infrastructure upgrade. Earlier in 2025, Intel generously donated 30 high-performance servers with a total value of approximately $50,000 to support OSUOSL infrastructure modernization. Each system is equipped with:

  • 768GB of RAM
  • 1TB NVMe storage
  • 6-bay 2.5" SATA configuration providing flexibility for various storage and workload configurations

These servers will become the backbone for several critical workloads, including our GitLab CI/CD x86_64 runners, OpenStack x86 hypervisors, and hosting for projects such as Sourceware, OpenWRT, OSGEO, and many others.

Network Continuity: LinkOregon and VPWS

A migration of this scale, with hundreds of physical servers and petabytes of data to relocate, requires a sophisticated networking approach. For this, OSUOSL is leaning on our long-standing partnership with LinkOregon, the state’s non-profit research and education network. In fact, it was critical that the Lab relocate to a facility where LinkOregon has a presence, as this allows us to maintain our existing IP address space and ensure continuity for our hosted projects.

LinkOregon has worked closely with the OSL to establish a VPWS (Virtual Private Wire Service), essentially a “pseudo-wire” between Kerr B210 and Oregon’s State Data Center. This Layer 2 bridge provides several critical advantages for our migration:

  • IP Continuity: The pseudo-wire allows the servers in Salem to behave as if they are still in Corvallis. We can move physical hardware and plug it in at Oregon’s State Data Center without having to change its IP address.
  • Phased Migration: This allows us to migrate OSL systems gradually over several months, ensuring each service is verified before we proceed to the next.
  • The Final Cutover: Once the migration is complete, we will migrate the routing IPs for all our subnets to OSL routers hosted directly in Oregon’s State Data Center, finalizing the transition.

Timeline and Next Steps

The work has already begun. Starting on December 3rd, I have made multiple trips to Salem to complete the initial build-out of our first four racks, with the foundational setup completed by December 19th. Core networking gear and power infrastructure are both ready for the next phase. On December 12th, I successfully connected our fiber link to LinkOregon, and by December 17th, the VPWS pseudo-wire was fully operational, creating OSL’s critical network bridge between Corvallis and Salem.

Projected timeline:

  • January: With generous support from OSU UIT, I will continue moving internal OSL core management systems, including backend Ceph storage, OpenStack and Ganeti hypervisors, and other supporting infrastructure.
  • Q1/Early Q2: Phased migration of projects with colocated equipment will begin. This move is expected to take approximately 2-3 months.

The transition from Kerr B210 to Oregon’s State Data Center represents a pivotal moment in the OSL’s history: a move to a modern, professionally-managed facility that will support the global open source community for decades to come.

There will of course be significant costs associated with these benefits: Oregon’s State Data Center charges a per-rack fee for colocation services, and OSUOSL is investing in new equipment to ensure optimal performance in the new location.

To help offset these costs and support the OSL’s mission, we will be launching a fundraising drive in the coming weeks. We welcome all continued and additional support from the community, donors, and partners who value the work OSUOSL does to support the global open source ecosystem.

As the OSUOSL embarks on this next chapter, we remain committed to empowering open source communities through reliable, world-class infrastructure. This move ensures the Lab’s ability to continue serving the projects and people who depend on us, while positioning the OSL for sustainable growth well into the future. I will continue to share updates and documentation throughout the migration process.

If you’ve gotten this far, thank you for being a part of this journey.

With gratitude,

Lance Albertson, Director

A Note on Potential Delays

Due to the scope and complexity of this migration, response times to new requests may be delayed during this period. Staff will do our best to manage any urgent issues that arise. For visibility into planned outages and the current status of OSL services, please visit status.osuosl.org.