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The art of capacity planning / John Allspaw.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Beijing ; London : O\'Reilly, 2008.Description: xiv, 135 p. : ill. ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 9780596518578 (pbk.)
  • 0596518579 (pbk.)
Subject(s): Summary: Success on the web is measured by usage and growth. Web-based companies live or die by the ability to scale their infrastructure to accommodate increasing demand. This is a guide to planning for such growth, with many techniques and considerations to help you plan, deploy, and manage web application infrastructure.

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

Success on the web is measured by usage and growth. Web-based companies live or die by the ability to scale their infrastructure to accommodate increasing demand. This book is a hands-on and practical guide to planning for such growth, with many techniques and considerations to help you plan, deploy, and manage web application infrastructure.

The Art of Capacity Planning is written by the manager of data operations for the world-famous photo-sharing site Flickr.com, now owned by Yahoo! John Allspaw combines personal anecdotes from many phases of Flickr's growth with insights from his colleagues in many other industries to give you solid guidelines for measuring your growth, predicting trends, and making cost-effective preparations.

Topics include:

Evaluating tools for measurement and deployment Capacity analysis and prediction for storage, database, and application servers Designing architectures to easily add and measure capacity Handling sudden spikes Predicting exponential and explosive growth How cloud services such as EC2 can fit into a capacity strategy

In this book, Allspaw draws on years of valuable experience, starting from the days when Flickr was relatively small and had to deal with the typical growth pains and cost/performance trade-offs of a typical company with a Web presence. The advice he offers in The Art of Capacity Planning will not only help you prepare for explosive growth, it will save you tons of grief.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Success on the web is measured by usage and growth. Web-based companies live or die by the ability to scale their infrastructure to accommodate increasing demand. This is a guide to planning for such growth, with many techniques and considerations to help you plan, deploy, and manage web application infrastructure.

Table of contents provided by Syndetics

  • Preface (p. ix)
  • 1 Goals, Issues, and Processes in Capacity Planning (p. 1)
  • Quick and Dirty Math (p. 3)
  • Predicting When Your Systems Will Fail (p. 3)
  • Make Your System Stats Tell Stories (p. 4)
  • Buying Stuff: Procurement Is a Process (p. 6)
  • Performance and Capacity: Two Different Animals (p. 6)
  • The Effects of Social Websites and Open APIs (p. 8)
  • 2 Setting Goals for Capacity (p. 11)
  • Different Kinds of Requirements and Measurements (p. 12)
  • Architecture Decisions (p. 15)
  • 3 Measurement: Units of Capacity (p. 23)
  • Aspects of Capacity Tracking Tools (p. 24)
  • Applications of Monitoring (p. 31)
  • API Usage and Its Effect on Capacity (p. 59)
  • Examples and Reality (p. 60)
  • Summary (p. 61)
  • 4 Predicting Trends (p. 63)
  • Riding Your Waves (p. 64)
  • Procurement (p. 80)
  • The Effects of Increasing Capacity (p. 83)
  • Long-Term Trends (p. 84)
  • Iteration and Calibration (p. 88)
  • Summary (p. 90)
  • 5 Deployment (p. 93)
  • Automated Deployment Philosophies (p. 93)
  • Automated Installation Tools (p. 96)
  • Automated Configuration (p. 98)
  • Summary (p. 103)
  • A Virtualization and Cloud Computing (p. 105)
  • B Dealing with Instantaneous Growth (p. 121)
  • C Capacity Tools (p. 127)
  • Index (p. 131)

Author notes provided by Syndetics

John Allspaw is currently Operations Engineering Manager at Flickr, the popular photo site. He has had extensive experience working with growing web sites since 1999. These include online news magazines (Salon.com, InfoWorld.com, Macworld.com) and social networking sites that experienced extreme growth (Friendster and Flickr). During his time at Friendster, traffic increased 5X. He was responsible for their transition from a couple dozen servers in a failing data center to over 400 machines across two data centers, and the complete redesign of the backing infrastructure. When he joined Flickr, they had 10 servers in a tiny data center in Vancouver; they are now located in multiple data centers across the US. Prior to his web experience, Allspaw worked in modeling and simulation as a mechanical engineer doing car crash simulations for the NHTSA.

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