What is the industry/production grade solutions or if you have already any experience please share it. Thanks

  • Kkmou@lemm.ee
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    6 months ago

    In AWS, you can use Aurora to scale reads access over multiple instances. It’s easy to setup and you can use scaling policies to follow your load. You need to check your billing, it’s not the cheapest service.

  • Tja@programming.dev
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    6 months ago

    Scaling horizontally is never trivial, can you share more about the requirements?

    Usually application level partitioning, but it’s hardly repeatable. Cloud providers offer solutions like Spanner, that cost quite a bit. You have new SQL DBs like yugabyte or cockroach, which are not exactly MySQL, and are not really battle tested. And noSQL like MongoDB or Cassandra, which are, well, not even SQL, but are proven technologies and scale quite effortlessly.

    • th3raid0r@tucson.social
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      6 months ago

      I work for another distributed database company. I can say that it’s much harder to convert cockroachDB customers than Yugabyte customers. Given that, I’d think that CockroachDB is likely the more vetted solution. Sure it’s new (2017), but it’s not THAT new.

  • th3raid0r@tucson.social
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    6 months ago

    IIRC, MySQL (and PosgreSQL) is pretty much limitted to a write/read-replica sort of horizontal scaling. Other SQL engines have better support for multi-master configurations.

    However, these types of configurations are usually tied to licensing - especially for Microsoft SQL server and OracleDB.

    As another commenter suggested, there is Yugabyte and CockroachDB as well - of those two I think CockroachDB is the more mature product. And they’re one of the fiercest competitors for the company I work for too.

    I cannot speak to “Battle Tested-ness” of CockroachDB, but given it’s been around for a few years now, I don’t think it’s quite as risky as other comments have indicated. Also, they’re doing something right if we haven’t been able to convert many CockroachDB customers.

  • netburnr@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    For on-prem we use a Galara cluster. It’s managed by ClusterControl because we needed something with enterprise support.