| ▲ | otterley 6 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
In my experience working at AWS and with customers, you don't need billions of TPS to make an end-to-end logging infrastructure keel over. It takes much less than that. As a working example, you can host your own end-to-end infra (the LGTM stack is pretty easy to deploy in a Kubernetes cluster) and see what it takes to bring yours to a grind with a given set of resources and TPS/volume. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | Veserv 6 hours ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
I prefaced all my statements with the assumption that the chosen logging system is not poorly designed and terribly inefficient. Sounds like their logging solutions are poorly designed and terribly inefficient then. It is, in fact, a self-fulfilling prophecy to complain that logging can be a bottleneck if you then choose logging that is 100-1000x slower than it should be. What a concept. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||