Re: Very impressive CouchDB story.
Yeah thanks for sharing. I really enjoyed the talk and will be passing it around to some friends. On Wed, Nov 9, 2011 at 1:19 AM, Jason Smith wrote: > CouchDB is brilliant. Cloudant is brilliant. > > What a fantastic, level-headed, retrospective about real-world CouchDB. > > Thank you very much for the link, Riyad! > > On Wed, Nov 9, 2011 at 2:50 AM, Riyad Kalla wrote: > > This is an aside and also a "you guys rock" to the CouchDB dev team... I > > watched a talk by Benjamin Anderson at Meteor today: > > http://www.dataversity.net/archives/6714?t=1320768580 > > > > where he talked about their experience with running CouchDB (via > Cloudant) > > for 2 years in production, scaling from what I imagine was 2 or 3 nodes > to > > a 14-node cluster. In the last year alone their traffic has grown 5x > while > > their Couch cluster has only grown 20% to cover that. > > > > Benjamin is straight forward with some of the shortcomings they have had, > > but the take-away from this that floored me and is a testament to what > you > > guys do... in all these years after all these 10s of terabytes of data, > > they have never lost data or had downtime. > > > > They just kept growing their cluster, adding nodes as needed and got back > > to work. > > > > No world-ending events, total cluster failures or total rebuilds. Couch > > just happily chugged along, keeping track of data and smiling. (not > > discrediting any world Cloudant put in here to make that happen, I just > > don't know what it was). > > > > He also specifically called out how the backend API to Couch has > > (practically) not changed at all in the last 2 years, allowing them to > > focus their development efforts on customer-facing features and not spend > > time writing and rewriting backend persistence features as Couch grew and > > released new versions. > > > > To all of you committers that spend your nights and weekends on Couch, > this > > is a glowing testament to the hard decisions you have made. > > > > Really great job guys. > > > > -Riyad > > > > > > -- > Iris Couch > -- “The limits of language are the limits of one's world. “ - Ludwig von Wittgenstein "Water is fluid, soft and yielding. But water will wear away rock, which is rigid and cannot yield. As a rule, whatever is fluid, soft and yielding will overcome whatever is rigid and hard. This is another paradox: what is soft is strong." - Lao-Tzu
Re: Very impressive CouchDB story.
CouchDB is brilliant. Cloudant is brilliant. What a fantastic, level-headed, retrospective about real-world CouchDB. Thank you very much for the link, Riyad! On Wed, Nov 9, 2011 at 2:50 AM, Riyad Kalla wrote: > This is an aside and also a "you guys rock" to the CouchDB dev team... I > watched a talk by Benjamin Anderson at Meteor today: > http://www.dataversity.net/archives/6714?t=1320768580 > > where he talked about their experience with running CouchDB (via Cloudant) > for 2 years in production, scaling from what I imagine was 2 or 3 nodes to > a 14-node cluster. In the last year alone their traffic has grown 5x while > their Couch cluster has only grown 20% to cover that. > > Benjamin is straight forward with some of the shortcomings they have had, > but the take-away from this that floored me and is a testament to what you > guys do... in all these years after all these 10s of terabytes of data, > they have never lost data or had downtime. > > They just kept growing their cluster, adding nodes as needed and got back > to work. > > No world-ending events, total cluster failures or total rebuilds. Couch > just happily chugged along, keeping track of data and smiling. (not > discrediting any world Cloudant put in here to make that happen, I just > don't know what it was). > > He also specifically called out how the backend API to Couch has > (practically) not changed at all in the last 2 years, allowing them to > focus their development efforts on customer-facing features and not spend > time writing and rewriting backend persistence features as Couch grew and > released new versions. > > To all of you committers that spend your nights and weekends on Couch, this > is a glowing testament to the hard decisions you have made. > > Really great job guys. > > -Riyad > -- Iris Couch
Very impressive CouchDB story.
This is an aside and also a "you guys rock" to the CouchDB dev team... I watched a talk by Benjamin Anderson at Meteor today: http://www.dataversity.net/archives/6714?t=1320768580 where he talked about their experience with running CouchDB (via Cloudant) for 2 years in production, scaling from what I imagine was 2 or 3 nodes to a 14-node cluster. In the last year alone their traffic has grown 5x while their Couch cluster has only grown 20% to cover that. Benjamin is straight forward with some of the shortcomings they have had, but the take-away from this that floored me and is a testament to what you guys do... in all these years after all these 10s of terabytes of data, they have never lost data or had downtime. They just kept growing their cluster, adding nodes as needed and got back to work. No world-ending events, total cluster failures or total rebuilds. Couch just happily chugged along, keeping track of data and smiling. (not discrediting any world Cloudant put in here to make that happen, I just don't know what it was). He also specifically called out how the backend API to Couch has (practically) not changed at all in the last 2 years, allowing them to focus their development efforts on customer-facing features and not spend time writing and rewriting backend persistence features as Couch grew and released new versions. To all of you committers that spend your nights and weekends on Couch, this is a glowing testament to the hard decisions you have made. Really great job guys. -Riyad