high_scalability high_scalability-2007 high_scalability-2007-87 knowledge-graph by maker-knowledge-mining
Source: html
Introduction: Theo Schlossnagle is the author of Scalable Internet Architecture and the funder of OmniTI , a global leader in Internet technology services that power the World Wide Web and email. As you might imagine Theo frequently posts on interesting topics for the scalable website builder. A Quick Hit of What's Inside Partitioning vs. Federation vs. Sharding , PostgreSQL warm standby on ZFS crack , Scalability vs. Performance: it isn't a battle  Site: http://lethargy.org/~jesus
sentIndex sentText sentNum sentScore
1 Theo Schlossnagle is the author of Scalable Internet Architecture and the funder of OmniTI , a global leader in Internet technology services that power the World Wide Web and email. [sent-1, score-0.653]
2 As you might imagine Theo frequently posts on interesting topics for the scalable website builder. [sent-2, score-0.856]
3 Sharding , PostgreSQL warm standby on ZFS crack , Scalability vs. [sent-5, score-0.454]
4 Performance: it isn't a battle  Site: http://lethargy. [sent-6, score-0.206]
wordName wordTfidf (topN-words)
[('theo', 0.42), ('architectureand', 0.333), ('ofscalable', 0.333), ('zfs', 0.259), ('federation', 0.249), ('standby', 0.237), ('warm', 0.217), ('schlossnagle', 0.214), ('battle', 0.206), ('internet', 0.183), ('author', 0.182), ('leader', 0.159), ('frequently', 0.156), ('topics', 0.147), ('posts', 0.145), ('quick', 0.128), ('imagine', 0.125), ('wide', 0.121), ('hit', 0.115), ('global', 0.095), ('website', 0.086), ('technology', 0.077), ('http', 0.075), ('power', 0.074), ('might', 0.072), ('site', 0.07), ('services', 0.066), ('world', 0.065), ('interesting', 0.065), ('scalable', 0.06), ('web', 0.041), ('performance', 0.038)]
simIndex simValue blogId blogTitle
same-blog 1 0.99999994 87 high scalability-2007-09-10-Blog: Esoteric Curio by Theo Schlossnagle
Introduction: Theo Schlossnagle is the author of Scalable Internet Architecture and the funder of OmniTI , a global leader in Internet technology services that power the World Wide Web and email. As you might imagine Theo frequently posts on interesting topics for the scalable website builder. A Quick Hit of What's Inside Partitioning vs. Federation vs. Sharding , PostgreSQL warm standby on ZFS crack , Scalability vs. Performance: it isn't a battle  Site: http://lethargy.org/~jesus
2 0.35452634 89 high scalability-2007-09-10-Is there a difference between partitioning and federation and sharding?
Introduction: Unlike Theo Schlossnagle, author of Scalable Internet Architectures , I am not a stickler for semantics because I have an unswerving faith in the ultimate unknowability of the world as experienced by others. That's why it is Theo who bravely tackles the differences in his informative blog post Partitioning vs. Federation vs. Sharding . Royans Tharakan also talks about it on his blog . Is there a difference and does it really matter to all our intrepid scalable website builders? Generally whatever Theo says is probably close to the truth. Yet, in my mind I think of partitioning as a basic level category and federation and sharding as more specific (subordinate) instances of partitioning. And partitioning is a more specific instance of the more more general (superordinate) category divide-and-conquer. Which isn't a useful way to think about the topic at all. So, let's say federation is like Star Trek. The Vulcans, Klingons, and Humans live in very separate p
3 0.17837605 88 high scalability-2007-09-10-Blog: Scalable Web Architectures by Royans Tharakan
Introduction: Royans' scalability blog and his main blog are excellent sources of scalability information. Take a look. A Quick Hit of What's Inside Sharding: Different from Partitioning and Federation ? , Adventures of scaling eins.de , Session, state and scalability Site: http://www.royans.net/
4 0.1452954 680 high scalability-2009-08-13-Reconnoiter - Large-Scale Trending and Fault-Detection
Introduction: One of the top recommendations from the collective wisdom contained in Real Life Architectures is to add monitoring to your system. Now! Loud is the lament for not adding monitoring early and often. The reason is easy to understand. Without monitoring you don't know what your system is doing which means you can't fix it and you can't improve it. Feedback loops require data. Some popular monitor options are Munin, Nagios, Cacti and Hyperic. A relatively new entrant is a product called Reconnoiter from Theo Schlossnagle, President and CEO of OmniTI, leading consultants on solving problems of scalability, performance, architecture, infrastructure, and data management. Theo's name might sound familiar. He gives lots of talks and is the author of the very influential Scalable Internet Architectures book. So right away you know Reconnoiter has a good pedigree. As Theo says, their products are born of pain, from the fire of solving real-life problems and that's always a harbinger of
5 0.14270447 117 high scalability-2007-10-08-Paper: Understanding and Building High Availability-Load Balanced Clusters
Introduction: A superb explanation by Theo Schlossnagle of how to deploy a high availability load balanced system using mod backhand and Wackamole . The idea is you don't need to buy expensive redundant hardware load balancers, you can make use of the hosts you already have to the same effect. The discussion of using peer-based HA solutions versus a single front-end HA device is well worth the read. Another interesting perspective in the document is to view load balancing as a resource allocation problem. There's also a nice discussion of the negative of effect of keep-alives on performance.
6 0.11979787 533 high scalability-2009-03-11-The Implications of Punctuated Scalabilium for Website Architecture
7 0.10884491 1047 high scalability-2011-05-25-Stuff to Watch from Surge 2010
8 0.090764038 344 high scalability-2008-06-09-FaceStat's Rousing Tale of Scaling Woe and Wisdom Won
9 0.074776232 51 high scalability-2007-07-31-Book: Scalable Internet Architectures
10 0.071821883 864 high scalability-2010-07-24-4 New Podcasts for Scalable Summertime Reading
11 0.06750121 9 high scalability-2007-07-15-Blog: Occam’s Razor by Avinash Kaushik
12 0.066911846 935 high scalability-2010-11-05-Hot Scalability Links For November 5th, 2010
13 0.06597434 618 high scalability-2009-06-05-Google Wave Architecture
14 0.065234073 1389 high scalability-2013-01-18-Stuff The Internet Says On Scalability For January 18, 2013
15 0.065225199 15 high scalability-2007-07-16-Blog: MySQL Performance Blog - Everything about MySQL Performance.
16 0.06489338 586 high scalability-2009-04-29-Presentations: MySQL Conference & Expo 2009
17 0.064384229 18 high scalability-2007-07-16-Paper: MySQL Scale-Out by application partitioning
18 0.06435845 308 high scalability-2008-04-22-Simple NFS failover solution with symbolic link?
19 0.064289048 465 high scalability-2008-12-14-Scaling MySQL on a 256-way T5440 server using Solaris ZFS and Java 1.7
topicId topicWeight
[(0, 0.071), (1, -0.004), (2, 0.007), (3, -0.007), (4, 0.02), (5, -0.038), (6, -0.064), (7, -0.02), (8, -0.015), (9, 0.046), (10, -0.044), (11, -0.019), (12, -0.002), (13, 0.021), (14, 0.027), (15, -0.029), (16, 0.049), (17, -0.001), (18, 0.026), (19, -0.032), (20, -0.018), (21, 0.023), (22, -0.073), (23, 0.027), (24, -0.04), (25, 0.016), (26, 0.011), (27, 0.044), (28, -0.03), (29, -0.014), (30, 0.011), (31, -0.018), (32, 0.049), (33, 0.028), (34, 0.012), (35, 0.076), (36, -0.032), (37, -0.004), (38, -0.012), (39, 0.01), (40, 0.007), (41, 0.01), (42, 0.036), (43, -0.014), (44, 0.038), (45, 0.057), (46, 0.004), (47, -0.025), (48, -0.114), (49, 0.08)]
simIndex simValue blogId blogTitle
same-blog 1 0.95012683 87 high scalability-2007-09-10-Blog: Esoteric Curio by Theo Schlossnagle
Introduction: Theo Schlossnagle is the author of Scalable Internet Architecture and the funder of OmniTI , a global leader in Internet technology services that power the World Wide Web and email. As you might imagine Theo frequently posts on interesting topics for the scalable website builder. A Quick Hit of What's Inside Partitioning vs. Federation vs. Sharding , PostgreSQL warm standby on ZFS crack , Scalability vs. Performance: it isn't a battle  Site: http://lethargy.org/~jesus
2 0.68796849 148 high scalability-2007-11-11-Linkedin architecture
Introduction: Hi, An interesting post on Linkedin architecture: http://furiouspurpose.blogspot.com/2007/11/qcon-linkedin-architecture.html
3 0.65849102 94 high scalability-2007-09-17-Blog: Adding Simplicity by Dan Pritchett
Introduction: Dan has genuine insight into building software and large scale scalable systems in particular. You'll always learn something interesting reading his blog. A Quick Hit of What's Inside Inverting the Reliability Stack , In Support of Non-Stop Software , Chaotic Perspectives , Latency Exists, Cope! , A Real eBay Architect Analyzes Part 3 , Avoiding Two Phase Commit, Redux Site: http://www.addsimplicity.com/
4 0.6417439 89 high scalability-2007-09-10-Is there a difference between partitioning and federation and sharding?
Introduction: Unlike Theo Schlossnagle, author of Scalable Internet Architectures , I am not a stickler for semantics because I have an unswerving faith in the ultimate unknowability of the world as experienced by others. That's why it is Theo who bravely tackles the differences in his informative blog post Partitioning vs. Federation vs. Sharding . Royans Tharakan also talks about it on his blog . Is there a difference and does it really matter to all our intrepid scalable website builders? Generally whatever Theo says is probably close to the truth. Yet, in my mind I think of partitioning as a basic level category and federation and sharding as more specific (subordinate) instances of partitioning. And partitioning is a more specific instance of the more more general (superordinate) category divide-and-conquer. Which isn't a useful way to think about the topic at all. So, let's say federation is like Star Trek. The Vulcans, Klingons, and Humans live in very separate p
5 0.63255924 51 high scalability-2007-07-31-Book: Scalable Internet Architectures
Introduction: As a developer, you are aware of the increasing concern amongst developers and site architects that websites be able to handle the vast number of visitors that flood the Internet on a daily basis. Scalable Internet Architecture addresses these concerns by teaching you both good and bad design methodologies for building new sites and how to scale existing websites to robust, high-availability websites. Primarily example-based, the book discusses major topics in web architectural design, presenting existing solutions and how they work. Technology budget tight? This book will work for you, too, as it introduces new and innovative concepts to solving traditionally expensive problems without a large technology budget. Using open source and proprietary examples, you will be engaged in best practice design methodologies for building new sites, as well as appropriately scaling both growing and shrinking sites. Website development help has arrived in the form of Scalable Internet Architecture.
6 0.62250787 88 high scalability-2007-09-10-Blog: Scalable Web Architectures by Royans Tharakan
7 0.59661096 339 high scalability-2008-06-04-LinkedIn Architecture
8 0.59104663 523 high scalability-2009-02-25-Relating business, systems & technology during turbulent time -By John Zachman
9 0.58144671 154 high scalability-2007-11-15-Lessons from Yahoo, eBay, Orbitz, LinkedIn architecture
10 0.55518675 316 high scalability-2008-05-05-Put the web server on a diet and increase scalability
11 0.54926831 110 high scalability-2007-10-03-Why most large-scale Web sites are not written in Java
12 0.52246046 446 high scalability-2008-11-18-Scalability Perspectives #2: Van Jacobson – Content-Centric Networking
13 0.50687176 1 high scalability-2007-07-06-Start Here
14 0.50123852 1453 high scalability-2013-05-07-Not Invented Here: A Comical Series on Scalability
15 0.50097662 405 high scalability-2008-10-07-Help a Scoble out. What should Robert ask in his scalability interview?
16 0.48803014 1047 high scalability-2011-05-25-Stuff to Watch from Surge 2010
17 0.48587203 322 high scalability-2008-05-19-Conference: Infoscale 2008 in Italy (June 4-6)
18 0.48346978 407 high scalability-2008-10-10-The Art of Capacity Planning: Scaling Web Resources
19 0.48048243 1651 high scalability-2014-05-20-It's Networking. In Space! Or How E.T. Will Phone Home.
topicId topicWeight
[(1, 0.166), (2, 0.081), (69, 0.474), (79, 0.114)]
simIndex simValue blogId blogTitle
1 0.85902035 1298 high scalability-2012-08-05-Ask MemSQL: Anything you want to know about MemSQL?
Introduction: A very shy team of ex-Facebookers have created MemSQL , what they claim is the world's fastest database, and I'll be interviewing them on Tuesday. Are there any questions you would like to ask the MemSQL team? If so, please contact me or make a comment on this thread.
same-blog 2 0.76476192 87 high scalability-2007-09-10-Blog: Esoteric Curio by Theo Schlossnagle
Introduction: Theo Schlossnagle is the author of Scalable Internet Architecture and the funder of OmniTI , a global leader in Internet technology services that power the World Wide Web and email. As you might imagine Theo frequently posts on interesting topics for the scalable website builder. A Quick Hit of What's Inside Partitioning vs. Federation vs. Sharding , PostgreSQL warm standby on ZFS crack , Scalability vs. Performance: it isn't a battle  Site: http://lethargy.org/~jesus
3 0.69483149 515 high scalability-2009-02-19-GIS Application Hosting
Introduction: Share the experience of hosting highly scalable/reliable GIS based application which involves Map Server, Spatially enabled database, j2ee, Routing Applications etc.
4 0.68091506 488 high scalability-2009-01-08-file synchronization solutions
Introduction: I have two servers connected via Internet (NOT IN THE SAME LAN) serving the same website (http://www.ourexample.com).The problem is files uploaded on serverA and serverB cannot see each other immediately,thus rsync with certain intervals is not a good solution. Can anybody give me some advice on the following options? 1.NFS over Internet for file sharing 2.sshfs 3.inotify(our system's kernel does not support this and we donot want to risk upgrading our kernel as well) 4.drbd in active-active mode 5 or any other solutions Any suggestions will be welcomed. Thank you in advance.
Introduction: This is a repost of the blog entry written by NuoDB's Tommy Reilly . We at NuoDB were recently given the opportunity to kick the tires on the Google Compute Engine by our friends over at Google. You can watch the entire Google Developer Live Session by clicking here . In order to access the capabilities of GCE we decided to run the same YCSB based benchmark we ran at our General Availability Launch back in January. For those of you who missed it we demonstrated running the YCSB benchmark on a 24 machine cluster running on our private cloud in the NuoDB datacenter. The salient results were 1.7 million transactions per second with sub-millisecond latencies. Public cloud environments typically mean virtualization, inconsistent network performance and potentially slow or low bandwidth disk access. It just so happens that NuoDB was designed to work well in such harsh environments (we don’t call it a cloud database for nothing). Still, the faster the CPU, network and disk t
6 0.6538353 31 high scalability-2007-07-26-Product: Symfony a Web Framework
7 0.59609932 1047 high scalability-2011-05-25-Stuff to Watch from Surge 2010
8 0.48453259 1136 high scalability-2011-11-03-Paper: G2 : A Graph Processing System for Diagnosing Distributed Systems
9 0.4787204 763 high scalability-2010-01-22-How BuddyPoke Scales on Facebook Using Google App Engine
10 0.47287202 116 high scalability-2007-10-08-Lessons from Pownce - The Early Years
11 0.43374842 1275 high scalability-2012-07-02-C is for Compute - Google Compute Engine (GCE)
12 0.41924796 645 high scalability-2009-06-30-Hot New Trend: Linking Clouds Through Cheap IP VPNs Instead of Private Lines
13 0.41921419 114 high scalability-2007-10-07-Product: Wackamole
14 0.40274799 769 high scalability-2010-02-02-Scale out your identity management
15 0.40241626 596 high scalability-2009-05-11-Facebook, Hadoop, and Hive
16 0.40178412 1056 high scalability-2011-06-09-Retrospect on recent AWS outage and Resilient Cloud-Based Architecture
17 0.40045914 1448 high scalability-2013-04-29-AWS v GCE Face-off and Why Innovation Needs Lower Cost Infrastructures
18 0.3961947 273 high scalability-2008-03-09-Best Practices for Speeding Up Your Web Site
19 0.39612028 539 high scalability-2009-03-16-Books: Web 2.0 Architectures and Cloud Application Architectures
20 0.3959111 617 high scalability-2009-06-04-New Book: Even Faster Web Sites: Performance Best Practices for Web Developers