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stackskipton | 10 days ago

SRE here who has dealt with this before.

Everything in article is excellent point but other big point is schema changes become extremely difficult because you have unknown applications possibly relying on that schema.

It's also at certain point, the database becomes absolutely massive and you will need teams of DBAs care and feeding it.

discuss

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jghn|9 days ago

This is true. But at the same time people need to understand that most companies will never hit that certain point. It's a matter of if, not when.

Everyone tries to plan for a world where they've become one of the hyperscalers. Better to optimize for the much more likely scenarios.

stackskipton|9 days ago

We were not a hyperscaler, we were boring company that you never heard of.

Database is still 40TB with 3200 stored procedures.

x3n0ph3n3|10 days ago

Not only will you need a team of DBAs caring for it, but you'll never be able to hire them.

hobs|9 days ago

No organization I have seen prioritizes a DBA's requirements, concerns, or approach. They certainly don't pay them enough to deal with that bullshit, so I was out.