Web Operations: Keeping the Data On Time"O'Reilly Media, Inc.", 2010 M06 21 - 338 páginas A web application involves many specialists, but it takes people in web ops to ensure that everything works together throughout an application's lifetime. It's the expertise you need when your start-up gets an unexpected spike in web traffic, or when a new feature causes your mature application to fail. In this collection of essays and interviews, web veterans such as Theo Schlossnagle, Baron Schwartz, and Alistair Croll offer insights into this evolving field. You'll learn stories from the trenches--from builders of some of the biggest sites on the Web--on what's necessary to help a site thrive.
Contributors include: John Allspaw |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 30
... MySQL, Python) stack (see Figure 2-1). However, our servers don't do a lot when compared to many other sites. The vast majority of the Picnik experience is actually contained within an Adobe Flash application. This means the server side ...
... MySQL Storage (Local) Figure 2-1. picnik's architecture Renderers (Local) Flash has traditionally had a number of security restrictions that limit its ability to access local files and talk to servers in different domains. To bypass ...
... MySQL tables or debugged Mogile's Perl code. In those cases, S3 picked up 100% of our traffic, and our users never knew that anything happened. One danger of “infinite” storage is that it becomes easy to waste it. In our case, I wasn't ...
... MySQL database servers. Our web-serving layer is highly coupled to our databases, so it makes sense to keep the latency between them very low. That implies that they are either both in the cloud or both out of the cloud. Until very ...
... (MySQL) on a daily basis, gathered nightly (less than daily isn't needed for these purposes) • Feature-specific, application-level metrics stored in a database (MySQL) in real time (as those events happen) • Higher-resolution systems and ...
Contenido
1 | |
11 | |
21 | |
49 | |
5 Infrastructure As Code | 65 |
6 Monitoring | 81 |
7 How Complex Systems Fail | 107 |
8 Community Management and Web Operations | 117 |
10 Dev and Ops Collaboration and Cooperation | 139 |
UserFacing Metrics | 157 |
12 Relational Database Strategy and Tactics for the Web | 187 |
The Art and Science of Postmortems | 219 |
14 Storage | 227 |
15 Nonrelational Databases | 247 |
16 Agile Infrastructure | 263 |
17 Things That Go Bump in the Night and How to Sleep Through Them | 285 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Web Operations: Keeping the Data On Time John Allspaw,Jesse Robbins Sin vista previa disponible - 2010 |
Web Operations: Keeping the Data On Time John Allspaw,Jesse Robbins Sin vista previa disponible - 2010 |