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My favorite Software Engineering resources


System Design and Architecture

Software Architecture tutorial (article)

  • Great review of different types of software architectures
    • Single process
    • Client / Server (2 processes collaborating)
    • 3 Tier systems (3 processes collaborating in chains)
    • N Tier systems (N processes collaborating in chains)
    • Service oriented architecture (lots of processes interacting with each other)
    • Peer-to-peer architecture (lots of processes interacting without a central server)
    • Hybrid architectures - combinations of the above architectures

Core Design Principles for Software Developers by Venkat Subramaniam YouTube, 2h 36 min, Nov 11, 2015

Writing code is easy. Writing good quality code is an entirely different story. How can we measure quality of design? How do we know we're doing the right set of things that will leads us to a better design? In this session we will learn about some core software design principles that help programmers everyday. Instead of talking about theory and what we could potentially do, we will take on multiple examples, discuss the solution, pros and cons, and bring out key design principles that have an impact on the outcome.

Distributed Systems

Designing Data-Intensive Applications (book) Amazon

  • Must-read, distributed systems bible
  • Extremely comprehensive

The Log: What every software engineer should know about real-time data's unifying abstraction (article)

  • Comprehensive article on distributed processing
  • History of Kafka and what need at LinkedIn it was invented to solve

Concurrent Programming for Scalable Web Architectures (document)

  • Master's thesis on web scalability principles
  • Good for review

High Scalability blog - Building bigger, faster, more reliable websites (articles)

  • Lots of links to great case studies

Scalability for Dummies (articles)

  • Series of 4 articles
  • Introduction to scalability
  • Quite basic

System Design and Scalability tutorial for interview prep (articles & videos)

  • Step by step system design interview prep with examples

Distributed Systems - Case Studies

How We Scaled Dropbox YouTube, 1h 8 min, Feb 22, 2012

Kevin Modzelewski talks about Dropbox and its History. He describes the technological issues faced by Dropbox and the actions they have to take in order to continuously improve it. Four Distributed Systems Architectural Patterns by Tim Berglund YouTube, 50 min, Aug 2, 2017

  • Focused on Kafka and Nosql

Developers and architects are increasingly called upon to solve big problems, and we are able to draw on a world-class set of open source tools with which to solve them. Problems of scale are no longer consigned to the web’s largest companies, but are increasingly a part of ordinary enterprise development. At the risk of only a little hyperbole, we are all distributed systems engineers now.

In this talk, we’ll look at four distributed systems architectural patterns based on real-world systems that you can apply to solve the problems you will face in the next few years. We’ll look at the strengths and weaknesses of each architecture and develop a set of criteria for knowing when to apply each one. You will leave knowing how to work with the leading data storage, messaging, and computation tools of the day to solve the daunting problems of scale in your near future. Building at Uber Scale by Ryan Sonnenberg YouTube, 28 min, Apr 11, 2017 Working on large scale android projects opens up issues, traditionally not seen at smaller scales. These issues stem from rapidly growing code size, expanding build times, and dissemination of configuration and coding practices. At Uber, we are able to overcome many of these problems and ship with high confidence, through moving off of traditional build systems and detecting common anti patterns, as they arise. In this talk, Ryan will showcase the improvements we have made to traditional tools like lint and checkstyle, as well as how we translated common anti patterns into codified rules that are enforced at compile time. The Verification of a Distributed System by Caitie McCaffrey YouTube, 48 min, Apr 13, 2017 Distributed Systems are difficult to build and test for two main reasons: partial failure & asynchrony. These two realities of distributed systems must be addressed to create a correct system, and often times the resulting systems have a high degree of complexity. Because of this complexity, testing and verifying these systems is critically important. In this talk we will discuss strategies for proving a system is correct, like formal methods. We will also discuss less strenuous methods of testing which will help increase our confidence that our systems are doing the right thing.

Caitie McCaffrey is a Backend Brat and Distributed Systems Diva at Twitter

"Caching at Netflix: The Hidden Microservice" by Scott Mansfield YouTube, 35 min, Sep 17, 2016

Netflix is well known for championing the microservice model, but within the complex layers of dependencies is a hidden service: the caching layer. The Netflix customer experience relies heavily on caches to provide a high-volume, low latency, globally available data layer that backs our stateless services. Throughout a typical customer experience, from sitting down on the couch through playing a movie, caches play a role in every interaction. The use cases here range from session storage to video history to subscriber status, all of which benefit from the stability and fault tolerance of EVCache, the primary caching system in use at Netflix.

The second part of the talk will peek under the hood of EVCache and its open source components: the EVCache client library, Rend, Memcached, and the not-yet-open-source Mnemonic. We will also look at sister projects that make up the rest of the EVCache ecosystem within Netflix. All of these components combined make up a high-volume, low-latency persistence system that fits many different use cases, even some where a cache might not normally be an obvious choice.

Using Redis at Scale at Twitter - Rashmi Ramesh YouTube, 40 min, Jul 5, 2017

  • Nighthawk / distributed caching with Redis

Timelines, DMs, Twitter Analytics are just some of the major services at Twitter that use Redis. A majority of our analytics services use lambda architecture and they require a highly available cache to store and read stream compute data, while their corresponding batch processing jobs catch up. Our caching solution, built on top of Redis, offers replication for such services requiring a highly available, scalable cache, serving millions of requests per second. In this session, we’ll cover the architecture, constraints and some problems of distributed caching we are trying to tackle today. We’ll also touch upon data partitioning, data movement, failure domain considerations and how we leverage Redis features to achieve the same.

Slide deck https://www.slideshare.net/RedisLabs/redisconf17-using-redis-at-scale-twitter

Data / Storage

Introduction to Apache Kafka by James Ward YouTube, 49 min, Apr 29, 2017

Apache Kafka has emerged as a next generation event streaming system to connect our distributed systems through fault tolerant and scalable event-driven architectures. Now open source through Apache, Kafka is being used by numerous large enterprises for a variety of use cases. This session will introduce the basics of Kafka and walk through some code examples that will show how to begin using it

Java

Refactor your Java EE application using Microservices and Containers by Arun Gupta YouTube, 2h 26 min, Nov 11, 2015

Microservices allow to decompose a monolithic application into cohesive and multiple decoupled services. Each service is running in its own process and communicate using lightweight mechanisms, such as HTTP API. These services are built around business capabilities or functional decomposition. Microservice also enables true polyglot architecture – both in terms of language and data. It truly allows you to employ the right tool for the right job. Each service is independently deployable and lends very well to fully automated deployment machinery.

Can you take an existing Java EE application and decompose it into microservices? What tools are required to enable CI/CD? How does it enable polyglot? What are different design patterns for microservices? What options are available for Service Discovery, distributed logging, load balancing? What tools do you need to manage such services? Is the complexity being pushed around from service implementation to orchestration?

This session will explain how to refactor an existing monolith into microservices and the complexities and benefits it introduces.

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