InfoQ Homepage Architecture Content on InfoQ
-
Chaos Engineering: the Path to Reliability
Kolton Andrus shares examples of what works, what doesn’t, and what the future holds in using Chaos Engineering to build reliability in a system.
-
How Netflix Scales Its API with GraphQL Federation
Jennifer Shin and Stephen Spalding discuss Netflix’s API unification process using GraphQL Federation.
-
InfoQ Live Roundtable: Microservices - Are They Still Worth It?
The panelists discuss the positive and negative impact of microservices: is there an alternative middle ground, have we learned how to deal with operational complexity?
-
Stabilizing and Reinforcing H-E-B's Existing Curbside Fulfillment Systems While Reinventing Them
Justin Turner discusses using Chaos Engineering while recreating parts of their system.
-
Introducing Chaos Engineering
Abby Bangser shares how Chaos Engineering is closely aligned with her background as a test engineer and how understanding that connection made all the difference.
-
Better Resilience Adoption through UX
Randall Koutnik goes over three case studies where teams achieved success (and a few that didn't!) by focusing on the human element of engineering tooling.
-
Rethinking How the Industry Approaches Chaos Engineering
Nora Jones focuses on the Before and After phases of developing Chaos Engineering experiments and develops important questions to ask with each of these phases.
-
Modern Banking in 1500 Microservices
Matt Heath and Suhail Patel explain how the Monzo team builds, operates, observes, and maintains the banking infrastructure; and how they compose microservices to add new functionality.
-
Growing Resilience: Serving Half a Billion Users Monthly at Condé Nast
Crystal Hirschorn outlines how Condé Nast practices Chaos engineering, where this fits within the already established testing and verification ecosystem, and more.
-
Components, Patterns and Sh*t That’s Hard to Deal with
Marco Cedaro identifies some ideas they tried and discusses the way they approached componentization.
-
Designing Secure Architectures the Modern Way, Regardless of Stack
Eugene Pilyankevich shares his experience of implementing sophisticated defenses in constrained environments and explains why designing it properly is what counts.
-
Distributed Programming, Hash Tables, and Fun!
Thomas Gebert and Nick Misturak demonstrate how they built a distributed hash-table video-sharing system, the technical hurdles encountered, and the pros/cons of using functional languages to do so.