/Architecture

How LinkedIn Adopted A GraphQL Architecture For Product Development

- Arun Sethuramalingam tl;dr: “In this blog post, we will cover how the GraphQL layer is architected for use by our internal engineers to build member and customer facing applications. Specifically, we will dive into some of the architectural choices that are unique to LinkedIn and why we chose each one of them.”

featured in #411


How To Survive Your Project's First 100,000 Lines

- Evan Ovadia tl;dr: The Vale compiler hit its 100,000th line of code - this article explains how it was kept from collapsing. “Some of these software engineering techniques came from my time at Google, though ironically most came from my work on the Vale compiler and game development so some of these might be surprising to my engineer comrades out there.” Techniques range from determinism, to testing, to type-system techniques, to general architectural best-practices.

featured in #411


How eBay Modernized The Most Important Page On Our Platform

tl;dr: “eBay’s View Item page lives at the center of our e-commerce platform. Our customers load this page over 250 million times each day, and stringent budgets on site speed and availability guarantee the quality of their experience. And yet, this page had its last intentional rewrite ten years ago.”

featured in #410


Real Time Presence Platform System Design

tl;dr: “In layman’s terms, the presence status shows whether a particular user is currently online or offline. The presence status is popular on real-time messaging applications and social networking platforms such as LinkedIn, Facebook, and Slack. The presence status represents the availability of the user for communication on a chat application or a social network.”

featured in #408


Tracing Notifications

- Suman Karumuri George Luong tl;dr: The engineering team at Slack embarked on a project to improve debugging notifications. “Debugging notification issues within our systems was difficult because each system had a different logging pipeline and data format, making it necessary to look at data with different formats and backends. This process required deep technical expertise and took several days to complete.”

featured in #407


The Inner Workings Of Distributed Databases

- Alex Pelagenko tl;dr: “We analyze how several popular time-series / OLAP databases implement high availability to highlight the pros and cons of each approach.” Alex also reviews the fundamentals of distributed databases.

featured in #407


Real-time Messaging

- Sameera Thangudu tl;dr: From the engineering team at Slack, “we’ll describe the architecture that we use to send real-time messages at scale. We’ll take a closer look at the services that send the chat messages and various events to these online users in real time.”

featured in #406


You Want Modules, Not Microservices

- Ted Neward tl;dr: Ted dissecting the concept of a microservice to “get to the real root of what's going on” arguing there's a mis-match between its promise and what it actually delivers.

featured in #402


Pull The Andon Cord

- Taylor Pearson tl;dr: The Andon Cord was a rope that hung in Toyota factories that instantly could stop all work on the assembly line, which workers were encouraged to pull when they saw an issue. Once pulled, a manager came down to look the issue but the worker who pulled the rope was the one that came up with the solution. This process had 2 benefits: (1) It made workers feel trusted and part of the company’s output. (2) It dramatically increased quality as workers had a lot of tacit knowledge that managers didn’t.

featured in #401


Automating Safe, Hands-Off Deployments

- Clare Liguori tl;dr: “In this article, we walk through the steps a code change goes through in a pipeline at Amazon on its way to production. A typical continuous delivery pipeline has four major phases - source, build, test, and production. We’ll dive into the details of what happens in each of these pipeline phases for a typical AWS service, and provide you with an example of how a typical AWS service team might set up one of their pipelines.”

featured in #401