Rendered at 21:32:53 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) with Cloudflare Workers.
lukax 16 hours ago [-]
It's refreshing to see a tech article that isn't about AI. It feels like 5 years ago.
__turbobrew__ 19 hours ago [-]
Anyone know if Netflix does anything for the k8s storage layer? I imagine they are at the scale where etcd starts to go kaboom? Or maybe they have enough cells where that isn’t a problem?
Given Amazon and Google have their own secret sauce for replacing etcd, I am wondering if Netflix does anything special?
scripni 17 hours ago [-]
This runs on AWS managed EKS these days, this talk goes into more detail about Netflix's special sauce around the k8s control plane: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vaTOiXR2KSM
Netflix actually has much fewer cells than you'd expect btw, their special sauce IMO is federation and using a small subset of k8s APIs.
__turbobrew__ 6 hours ago [-]
I am surprised a company at that scale is running on managed EKS, maybe I underestimate how large the clusters are.
I see Netflix pumping out tech articles but can't help but notice how much worse the UI experience is getting. Video erroring out, general slowness etc.
Did they just give up?
jamesblonde 11 hours ago [-]
It certainly feels like Netflix is now a k8s shop.
And it probably only a matter of time until they start repatriating workloads to optimize for costs. Then the world will sit up and notice.
beng-nl 9 hours ago [-]
I don’t get what you’re implying. What is repatriating; You think they will move their workloads to on-prem?
Is there something different about the world that changed the trade-off calculus for cloud vs on-prem from how it was in the last 15 years compared to now?
(I’m as anti-cloud-overspend as the next guy on hn btw. Just trying to make sense of your comment’s worldview.)
Given Amazon and Google have their own secret sauce for replacing etcd, I am wondering if Netflix does anything special?
Netflix actually has much fewer cells than you'd expect btw, their special sauce IMO is federation and using a small subset of k8s APIs.
Did they just give up?
Is there something different about the world that changed the trade-off calculus for cloud vs on-prem from how it was in the last 15 years compared to now?
(I’m as anti-cloud-overspend as the next guy on hn btw. Just trying to make sense of your comment’s worldview.)