cover of episode Episode 13: Serverlessly Storing my Dad Jokes in a Dadabase

Episode 13: Serverlessly Storing my Dad Jokes in a Dadabase

2018/6/6
logo of podcast Screaming in the Cloud

Screaming in the Cloud

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Shownotes Transcript

Aurora, from Amazon Web Services (AWS), is a MySQL-compatible service for complex database structures. It offers capabilities and opportunities. But with Aurora, you’re putting a lot of trust in AWS to “just work” in ways not traditional to relational database services (RDS).

David Torgerson, Principal DevOps Engineer at Lucidchart, is a mystery wrapped in an enigma and virtually impossible to Google. He shares Lucidchart’s experience with migrating away from a traditional RDS to Aurora to free up developer time.

Some of the highlights of the show include:

  • Trade off of making someone else partially responsible for keeping your site up

  • Lucidchart’s overall database costs decreased 25% after switching to Aurora

  • Aurora unknowns: What is an I/Op in Aurora? When you write one piece of data, does it count as six I/Ops?

  • Multi-master Aurora is coming for failover time and disaster recovery purposes

  • Aurora drawbacks: No dedicated DevOps, increased failover time, and misleading performance speed

  • Providers offer ways to simplify your business processes, but not ways to get out of using their products due to vendor and platform lock-in

  • Lucidchart is skeptical about Aurora Serverless; will use or not depending on performance

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