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For those not familiar with it, a realtime bidding ad exchange is a relatively new way to allow advertisers to "bid" for the right to show their ad to an individual.

It works like this: A user hits a website that contains a space for an ad. This website then pings the ad exchange and requests an ad. The ad exchange then pings all advertisers that are "subscribed" to that type of ad impression via a REST API that the advertisers must expose, providing information about the ad showing opportunity. Each advertiser then responds with a "bid", how much would they pay to show their ad. Advertisers have only 100ms to respond, and whoever wins this auction gets the right to show their ad.

With a typical ad exchange this entire process may occur 2,000 times per second!

I've been thinking about the architecture and infrastructure that must be required for something like this, and it seems mind-boggling to me. It implies initiating millions of outbound HTTP connections every second, waiting up to 100ms for each to respond, and then processing the responses.

Does anyone have any experience of building an architecture like this? How can it be achieved?

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  • Probably just a well-written server in C(#/++) or Java with optimized or in-memory databases.
    – CodeJoust
    Dec 5, 2010 at 17:36
  • Keeping stale data (i.e., caching) is the key to a system like this. "Millions of outbound HTTP connections" sounds problematic. On the other hand, you only write the code once :)... why not try making a million HTTP connections in your favorite lang and see if it brings the VM or interpreter/whatever to its knees? Dec 5, 2010 at 17:37
  • @sanity:Why do you want to use web services for this?
    – Cratylus
    Dec 5, 2010 at 17:49
  • @user384706: What is the alternative?
    – sanity
    Dec 5, 2010 at 18:06
  • @sanity:I mean for the subscription to the ad exchange,the advertisers will send POST to subscribe and receive POST for the bid.So they act both as client and server.How are the advertisers deployed?
    – Cratylus
    Dec 5, 2010 at 18:18

2 Answers 2

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You may visit

http://inetmgr.blogspot.com/

This blog tried to demystify the technology and the facts.

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There is a solution in development that provides a web service exchange:

http://www.instabid.io

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