Front cover image for Web operations

Web operations

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. Learn the skills needed in web operations, and why they're gained through experience rather than schooling Understand why it's important to gather metrics from both your application and infrastructure Consider common approaches to database architectures and the pitfalls that come with increasing scale Learn how to handle the human side of outages and degradations Find out how one company avoided disaster after a huge traffic deluge Discover what went wrong after a problem occurs, and how to prevent it from happening again Contributors include: John AllspawHeather ChampMichael ChristianRichard CookAlistair CrollPatrick DeboisEric FlorenzanoPaul HammondJustin HuffAdam JacobJacob LoomisMatt MassieBrian MoonAnoop NagwaniSean PowerEric RiesTheo SchlossnagleBaron SchwartzAndrew Shafer
eBook, English, ©2010
O'Reilly, Beijing [China], ©2010
Web Programming; Web Design; Internet; Networking
1 online resource (xvii, 315 pages) : illustrations
9781449377441, 9781449394158, 1449377440, 1449394159
858889525
Print version:
"Learn the skills needed in web operations, and why they're gained through experience rather than schooling; understand why it's important to gather metrics from both your application and your infrastructure; consider common approaches to database architectures and the pitfalls that come with increasing scale; learn how to handle the human side of outages and degradation; find out how one company avoided disaster after a huge traffic deluge; discover--after a problem occurs--what went wrong and how to prevent it from happening again"--Page 4 of cover
Includes index