Synthetic Monitoring

Simulate visitor interaction with your site to monitor the end user experience.

View Product Info

FEATURES

Simulate visitor interaction

Identify bottlenecks and speed up your website.

Learn More

Real User Monitoring

Enhance your site performance with data from actual site visitors

View Product Info

FEATURES

Real user insights in real time

Know how your site or web app is performing with real user insights

Learn More

Infrastructure Monitoring Powered by SolarWinds AppOptics

Instant visibility into servers, virtual hosts, and containerized environments

View Infrastructure Monitoring Info
Comprehensive set of turnkey infrastructure integrations

Including dozens of AWS and Azure services, container orchestrations like Docker and Kubernetes, and more 

Learn More

Application Performance Monitoring Powered by SolarWinds AppOptics

Comprehensive, full-stack visibility, and troubleshooting

View Application Performance Monitoring Info
Complete visibility into application issues

Pinpoint the root cause down to a poor-performing line of code

Learn More

Log Management and Analytics Powered by SolarWinds Loggly

Integrated, cost-effective, hosted, and scalable full-stack, multi-source log management

 View Log Management and Analytics Info
Collect, search, and analyze log data

Quickly jump into the relevant logs to accelerate troubleshooting

Learn More

Is LinkedIn having scaling issues?

LinkedIn, the popular social network for professionals, has had several periods of downtime lately. The last one came last evening (US time), and lasted just over an hour.

The website’s recurring availability issues are making us wonder if LinkedIn has perhaps started to run into scaling issues. According to their website, LinkedIn currently has more than 25 million users, compared to 14 million a year ago. That’s almost a doubling of their user base in just a year.

LinkedIn outages in September and October

Here are the latest outages, in reverse chronological order (detected by Pingdom’s own monitoring of www.linkedin.com):

  • Oct 9: 1h 5m of continuous downtime in the evening, US time.
  • Oct 2: 2h 30m of downtime spread over the day, including a one-hour outage and several shorter ones lasting 10-25 minutes each.
  • Sep 23: A 30-minute outage in the evening, US time.
  • Sep 6: 5h 25m of continuous downtime, starting in the evening, US time.

The longest outage for LinkedIn so far in 2008 occurred on September 6 (a Saturday), when the site was down for more than five hours, starting at 09:31 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time.

According to LinkedIn, this specific outage was due to maintenance work on their front end load balancer. LinkedIn did put up a maintenance message some time into the outage. (See screenshots further down.)

So far in 2008, LinkedIn.com has been unavailable for a total of more than 33 hours.

The nature of the problem

LinkedIn’s downtime doesn’t seem to be network-related. Every time the LinkedIn website has been unavailable, the error we have recorded is an HTTP 500 server error. It’s an unspecified “internal server error” reply from the web server which basically means that it’s unable to serve the requested page.

Australian blogger Mark Aufflick was able to take some screenshots of the LinkedIn website during the September 6 outage, which he has kindly let us include here below. You will also see a message from LinkedIn in the comments to his post, explaining the cause of the outage.


Screenshots courtesy of Mark Aufflick.

Is LinkedIn a victim of its own growth?

Aside from the already stated user base increase, third-party data from Google Trends for Websites shows that the number of daily visitors to the LinkedIn website is increasing steadily. Even if the absolute numbers reported by Google are estimates and won’t be 100% accurate, the trend is what counts here.

This is just speculation, but has LinkedIn started to run into scaling issues? It happens to most growing social networks at one point or another. Perhaps it’s LinkedIn’s turn now?

All monitoring performed by the Pingdom uptime monitoring service.

Introduction to Observability

These days, systems and applications evolve at a rapid pace. This makes analyzi [...]

Webpages Are Getting Larger Every Year, and Here’s Why it Matters

Last updated: February 29, 2024 Average size of a webpage matters because it [...]

A Beginner’s Guide to Using CDNs

Last updated: February 28, 2024 Websites have become larger and more complex [...]

The Five Most Common HTTP Errors According to Google

Last updated: February 28, 2024 Sometimes when you try to visit a web page, [...]

Page Load Time vs. Response Time – What Is the Difference?

Last updated: February 28, 2024 Page load time and response time are key met [...]

Monitor your website’s uptime and performance

With Pingdom's website monitoring you are always the first to know when your site is in trouble, and as a result you are making the Internet faster and more reliable. Nice, huh?

START YOUR FREE 30-DAY TRIAL

MONITOR YOUR WEB APPLICATION PERFORMANCE

Gain availability and performance insights with Pingdom – a comprehensive web application performance and digital experience monitoring tool.

START YOUR FREE 30-DAY TRIAL
Start monitoring for free