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Index
About This eBook Title Page Copyright Page Praise for The Art of Scalability, Second Edition Praise for the First Edition Dedication Page Contents Foreword Acknowledgments About the Authors Introduction
Scalability: So Much More Than Just Technology Art Versus Science Who Needs Scalability? Book Organization and Structure
Part I: Staffing a Scalable Organization
Chapter 1. The Impact of People and Leadership on Scalability
The Case Method Why People? Why Organizations? Why Management and Leadership? Conclusion
Key Points
Chapter 2. Roles for the Scalable Technology Organization
The Effects of Failure Defining Roles Executive Responsibilities
Chief Executive Officer Chief Financial Officer Business Unit Owners, General Managers, and P&L Owners Chief Technology Officer/Chief Information Officer
Individual Contributor Responsibilities
Architecture Responsibilities Engineering Responsibilities DevOps Responsibilities Infrastructure Responsibilities Quality Assurance Responsibilities Capacity Planning Responsibilities
A Tool for Defining Responsibilities Conclusion
Key Points
Chapter 3. Designing Organizations
Organizational Influences That Affect Scalability Team Size
Warning Signs Growing or Splitting Teams
Organizational Structure
Functional Organization Matrix Organization Agile Organization
Conclusion
Key Points
Chapter 4. Leadership 101
What Is Leadership? Leadership: A Conceptual Model Taking Stock of Who You Are Leading from the Front Checking Your Ego at the Door Mission First, People Always Making Timely, Sound, and Morally Correct Decisions Empowering Teams and Scalability Alignment with Shareholder Value Transformational Leadership Vision Mission Goals Putting It All Together The Causal Roadmap to Success Conclusion
Key Points
Chapter 5. Management 101
What Is Management? Project and Task Management Building Teams: A Sports Analogy Upgrading Teams: A Garden Analogy Measurement, Metrics, and Goal Evaluation The Goal Tree Paving the Path for Success Conclusion
Key Points
Chapter 6. Relationships, Mindset, and the Business Case
Understanding the Experiential Chasm
Why the Business Executive Might Be the Problem Why the Technology Executive Might Be the Problem
Defeating the IT Mindset The Business Case for Scale Conclusion
Key Points
Part II: Building Processes for Scale
Chapter 7. Why Processes Are Critical to Scale
The Purpose of Process Right Time, Right Process
A Process Maturity Framework When to Implement Processes Process Complexity
When Good Processes Go Bad Conclusion
Key Points
Chapter 8. Managing Incidents and Problems
What Is an Incident? What Is a Problem? The Components of Incident Management The Components of Problem Management Resolving Conflicts Between Incident and Problem Management Incident and Problem Life Cycles Implementing the Daily Incident Meeting Implementing the Quarterly Incident Review The Postmortem Process Putting It All Together Conclusion
Key Points
Chapter 9. Managing Crises and Escalations
What Is a Crisis? Why Differentiate a Crisis from Any Other Incident? How Crises Can Change a Company Order Out of Chaos
The Role of the Problem Manager The Role of Team Managers The Role of Engineering Leads The Role of Individual Contributors
Communications and Control The War Room Escalations Status Communications Crisis Postmortem and Communication Conclusion
Key Points
Chapter 10. Controlling Change in Production Environments
What Is a Change? Change Identification Change Management
Change Proposal Change Approval Change Scheduling Change Implementation and Logging Change Validation Change Review
The Change Control Meeting Continuous Process Improvement Conclusion
Key Points
Chapter 11. Determining Headroom for Applications
Purpose of the Process Structure of the Process Ideal Usage Percentage A Quick Example Using Spreadsheets Conclusion
Key Points
Chapter 12. Establishing Architectural Principles
Principles and Goals Principle Selection AKF’s Most Commonly Adopted Architectural Principles
N + 1 Design Design for Rollback Design to Be Disabled Design to Be Monitored Design for Multiple Live Sites Use Mature Technologies Asynchronous Design Stateless Systems Scale Out, Not Up Design for at Least Two Axes of Scale Buy When Non-Core Use Commodity Hardware Build Small, Release Small, Fail Fast Isolate Faults Automation over People
Conclusion
Key Points
Chapter 13. Joint Architecture Design and Architecture Review Board
Fixing Organizational Dysfunction Designing for Scale Cross-Functionally JAD Entry and Exit Criteria From JAD to ARB Conducting the Meeting ARB Entry and Exit Criteria Conclusion
Key Points
Chapter 14. Agile Architecture Design
Architecture in Agile Organizations Ownership of Architecture Limited Resources Standards ARB in the Agile Organization Conclusion
Key Points
Chapter 15. Focus on Core Competencies: Build Versus Buy
Building Versus Buying, and Scalability Focusing on Cost Focusing on Strategy “Not Built Here” Phenomenon Merging Cost and Strategy Does This Component Create Strategic Competitive Differentiation? Are We the Best Owners of This Component or Asset? What Is the Competition for This Component? Can We Build This Component Cost-Effectively? The Best Buy Decision Ever Anatomy of a Build-It-Yourself Failure Conclusion
Key Points
Chapter 16. Determining Risk
Importance of Risk Management to Scale Measuring Risk Managing Risk Conclusion
Key Points
Chapter 17. Performance and Stress Testing
Performing Performance Testing
Establish Success Criteria Establish the Appropriate Environment Define the Tests Execute the Tests Analyze the Data Report to Engineers Repeat the Tests and Analysis
Don’t Stress over Stress Testing
Identify the Objectives Identify the Key Services Determine the Load Establish the Appropriate Environment Identify the Monitors Create the Load Execute the Tests Analyze the Data
Performance and Stress Testing for Scalability Conclusion
Key Points
Chapter 18. Barrier Conditions and Rollback
Barrier Conditions
Barrier Conditions and Agile Development Barrier Conditions and Waterfall Development Barrier Conditions and Hybrid Models
Rollback Capabilities
Rollback Window Rollback Technology Considerations Cost Considerations of Rollback
Markdown Functionality: Design to Be Disabled Conclusion
Key Points
Chapter 19. Fast or Right?
Tradeoffs in Business Relation to Scalability How to Think About the Decision Conclusion
Key Points
Part III: Architecting Scalable Solutions
Chapter 20. Designing for Any Technology
An Implementation Is Not an Architecture Technology-Agnostic Design
TAD and Cost TAD and Risk TAD and Scalability TAD and Availability
The TAD Approach Conclusion
Key Points
Chapter 21. Creating Fault-Isolative Architectural Structures
Fault-Isolative Architecture Terms Benefits of Fault Isolation
Fault Isolation and Availability: Limiting Impact Fault Isolation and Availability: Incident Detection and Resolution Fault Isolation and Scalability Fault Isolation and Time to Market Fault Isolation and Cost
How to Approach Fault Isolation
Principle 1: Nothing Is Shared Principle 2: Nothing Crosses a Swim Lane Boundary Principle 3: Transactions Occur Along Swim Lanes
When to Implement Fault Isolation
Approach 1: Swim Lane the Money-Maker Approach 2: Swim Lane the Biggest Sources of Incidents Approach 3: Swim Lane Along Natural Barriers
How to Test Fault-Isolative Designs Conclusion
Key Points
Chapter 22. Introduction to the AKF Scale Cube
The AKF Scale Cube The x-Axis of the Cube The y-Axis of the Cube The z-Axis of the Cube Putting It All Together When and Where to Use the Cube Conclusion
Key Points
Chapter 23. Splitting Applications for Scale
The AKF Scale Cube for Applications The x-Axis of the AKF Application Scale Cube The y-Axis of the AKF Application Scale Cube The z-Axis of the AKF Application Scale Cube Putting It All Together Practical Use of the Application Cube
Observations
Conclusion
Key Points
Chapter 24. Splitting Databases for Scale
Applying the AKF Scale Cube to Databases The x-Axis of the AKF Database Scale Cube The y-Axis of the AKF Database Scale Cube The z-Axis of the AKF Database Scale Cube Putting It All Together Practical Use of the Database Cube
Ecommerce Implementation Search Implementation Business-to-Business SaaS Solution Observations Timeline Considerations
Conclusion
Key Points
Chapter 25. Caching for Performance and Scale
Caching Defined Object Caches Application Caches
Proxy Caches Reverse Proxy Caches Caching Software
Content Delivery Networks Conclusion
Key Points
Chapter 26. Asynchronous Design for Scale
Synching Up on Synchronization Synchronous Versus Asynchronous Calls
Scaling Synchronously or Asynchronously Example Asynchronous Systems
Defining State Conclusion
Key Points
Part IV: Solving Other Issues and Challenges
Chapter 27. Too Much Data
The Cost of Data The Value of Data and the Cost-Value Dilemma Making Data Profitable
Option Value Strategic Competitive Differentiation Cost-Justify the Solution (Tiered Storage Solutions) Transform the Data
Handling Large Amounts of Data
Big Data A NoSQL Primer
Conclusion
Key Points
Chapter 28. Grid Computing
History of Grid Computing Pros and Cons of Grids
Pros of Grids Cons of Grids
Different Uses for Grid Computing
Production Grid Build Grid Data Warehouse Grid Back-Office Grid
Conclusion
Key Points
Chapter 29. Soaring in the Clouds
History and Definitions
Public Versus Private Clouds
Characteristics and Architecture of Clouds
Pay by Usage Scale on Demand Multiple Tenants Virtualization
Differences Between Clouds and Grids Pros and Cons of Cloud Computing
Pros of Cloud Computing Cons of Cloud Computing
Where Clouds Fit in Different Companies
Environments Skill Sets
Decision Process Conclusion
Key Points
Chapter 30. Making Applications Cloud Ready
The Scale Cube in a Cloud
x-Axis y- and z-Axes
Overcoming Challenges
Fault Isolation in a Cloud Variability in Input/Output
Intuit Case Study Conclusion
Key Points
Chapter 31. Monitoring Applications
“Why Didn’t We Catch That Earlier?” A Framework for Monitoring
User Experience and Business Metrics Systems Monitoring Application Monitoring
Measuring Monitoring: What Is and Isn’t Valuable? Monitoring and Processes Conclusion
Key Points
Chapter 32. Planning Data Centers
Data Center Costs and Constraints Location, Location, Location Data Centers and Incremental Growth When Do I Consider IaaS? Three Magic Rules of Three
The First Rule of Three: Three Magic Drivers of Data Center Costs The Second Rule of Three: Three Is the Magic Number for Servers The Third Rule of Three: Three Is the Magic Number for Data Centers
Multiple Active Data Center Considerations Conclusion
Key Points
Chapter 33. Putting It All Together
What to Do Now? Further Resources on Scalability
Blogs Books
Part V: Appendices
Appendix A. Calculating Availability
Hardware Uptime Customer Complaints Portion of Site Down Third-Party Monitoring Service Business Graph
Appendix B. Capacity Planning Calculations Appendix C. Load and Performance Calculations
Index Code Snippets
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