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cb22

59 karmajoined 10 yıl önce

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cb22
·evvelsi gün·discuss
What matklad said as a footnote deserves a little more attention!

A huge benefit is having to think and be explicit about the limits up front. To take your example of arbitrary sized JSON and flip it around: how would you do it normally?

Maybe, you'd allocate a buffer to hold your entire object when it comes in - but now you'll end up crashing when you get a large document that exceeds your available memory.

Maybe you can do things in a fixed amount of memory, using streaming or chunking - which would be pretty simple to turn to static allocation!

Static allocation forces understanding of those limits upfront.
cb22
·4 ay önce·discuss
We use them heavily for test boxes and running experiments. Standard off-the-shelf machines are provisioned almost instantly, and never had any problems.

More custom stuff (eg 100Gb/s NICs) takes a bit longer, but they've always been super responsive and quick to sort out any issues!

The price / performance you get from something like their AX162 is just crazy, although unfortunately with the whole RAM / NVMe shortage the setup fee has gone up quite a lot.
cb22
·8 ay önce·discuss
> I'd like to see the same stats for tigerbeetle

Actual SIGSEGVs are pretty rare, even during development. There was a pretty interesting one that affected our fuzzing infra a little bit ago: https://ziggit.dev/t/stack-probe-puzzle/10291

Almost all of the time we hit either asserts or panics or other things which trigger core dumps intentionally!