- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- [email protected]
- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- [email protected]
Sharing some lessons I learned from 10 years/millions of users in production. I’ll be in the comments if anyone has any questions!
Sharing some lessons I learned from 10 years/millions of users in production. I’ll be in the comments if anyone has any questions!
You make some great points, but I’m concerned that your preferred solutions may ignore the needs of working with peers. When I’ve worked with similar solutions before, we had a lot of on call, and it all went to the same person, regardless of who actually answered the phone.
There’s nuance to be had in the middle ground:
Anyway, interesting read. Thank you. The only way the current awful state of hosting is going to improve is by having this conversation.
I keep hearing “most people aren’t ready for K8S”. But there’s no such thing. There’s just whether K8S (or whatever replaces it) is ready for most people’s use cases.
Totally hear you and have the same experience myself. The approach I’m advocating for is simply running a binary on a server with rsync to deploy, and architecting your product around that limitation. Teaching a team the basics of Linux sysadmin will be incredibly useful for their careers, and it’s something that the whole team can easily learn. Then you don’t need to hire a k8s team – any engineer can do some basic debugging when things go sideways.
Intriguing!
I’m looking forward to your blog series on this.