| ▲ | pinkgolem a day ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
What was work you spend configuring those services and keeping them alive? I am genuinely curious... We have a very limited set of services, but most have been very painless to maintain. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | scott_w a day ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
A Django+Celery app behind Nginx back in the day. Most maintenance would be discovering a new failure mode: - certificates not being renewed in time - Celery eating up all RAM and having to be recycled - RabbitMQ getting blocked requiring a forced restart - random issues with Postgres that usually required a hard restart of PG (running low on RAM maybe?) - configs having issues - running out of inodes - DNS not updating when upgrading to a new server (no CDN at the time) - data centre going down, taking the provider’s email support with it (yes, really) Bear in mind I’m going back a decade now, my memory is rusty. Each issue was solvable but each would happen at random and even mitigating them was time that I (a single dev) was not spending on new features or fixing bugs. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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