BT

Facilitating the Spread of Knowledge and Innovation in Professional Software Development

Write for InfoQ

Topics

Choose your language

InfoQ Homepage Presentations Auntie on the Couch

Auntie on the Couch

Bookmarks
57:15

Summary

Enda Farrell discusses how CouchDB is used by BBC for some of its websites, presenting the context it is deployed in, the operations performed against it, how replication and compacting works, some statistics, and how it is used at scale.

Bio

Enda Farrell is a software architects working on the new technology platform used by BBC, being employed in 2006 to lead one of BBC’s main content management systems. Previously, he worked as an engineer and architect at Sapient for 9 years.

About the conference

QCon is a conference that is organized by the community, for the community.The result is a high quality conference experience where a tremendous amount of attention and investment has gone into having the best content on the most important topics presented by the leaders in our community.QCon is designed with the technical depth and enterprise focus of interest to technical team leads, architects, and project managers.

Recorded at:

Aug 19, 2010

Hello stranger!

You need to Register an InfoQ account or or login to post comments. But there's so much more behind being registered.

Get the most out of the InfoQ experience.

Allowed html: a,b,br,blockquote,i,li,pre,u,ul,p

Community comments

  • Auntie on the Couch

    by Stephen Devonald,

    Your message is awaiting moderation. Thank you for participating in the discussion.

    Hi

    This is a very good overview on the benefits and pitfalls of implementing a cutting edge technology.

    I feel, however, that there is an implicit lack of understanding between the challenges faced by counterparts in SME companies and the luxuriously padded BBC development team. The scale of staffing, software, hardware, and data centre budgets renders almost meaningless any comparison or exemplar of technology uptake available to the 90%+ not securely under the BBC's guardianship.

    At leat two telling disconnects for me were:

    1) The presenter felt able to risk the production environment with a procedure immediately prior to his 4 week skiing holiday (what's that?) in order to ensure he didn't come back to a broken database (wow! I could never have done that)
    2) The presenter seemed proud of the single digit millisecond response on the site (even when they had to do things that halved it - lots in reserve). I am absolutely certain that I could provide similar service with the BBC data centre/hardware/network specification, regardless of whether I had made the same "intelligent" choices of software and configuration as the presenter.

    This presentation may have been interesting, but it is not the real world as most of us know it.

  • master-master-master replicator

    by Igor Kolomiets,

    Your message is awaiting moderation. Thank you for participating in the discussion.

    It would be very interesting to hear about design of their replicator (multi-threaded java app is not very descriptive :) since it seems to be a core element that made their KV store architecture around CouchDB so successful.

Allowed html: a,b,br,blockquote,i,li,pre,u,ul,p

Allowed html: a,b,br,blockquote,i,li,pre,u,ul,p

BT