Ask HN: What’s the server architecture of Hacker News?
I am curious about the overall architecture of Hacker News. After reading the recent thread about it’s expiring certificates, and the linked comments, I searched but couldn’t find an exact answer. So, what kind of hardware and software stack does HN run? Are there any CI/CD tools, analytics, et cetera?
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[ 4.3 ms ] story [ 57.1 ms ] threadAn (early?!) version of HN source code is available on GitHub [1]. It comes with a custom LISP dialect, ARC, that is itself running under MzScheme.
This architecture looks pretty arcane. Has anyone an idea what lead Paul, et. al. to write a custom LISP dialect for building a web forum? Is that a common thing for schemer's to do to get things done? Or does the ARC language predate the HN implementation? I am not sure.
[1] https://github.com/wting/hackernews
Also a more up to date version of the Arc forum can be found at https://arclanguage.org, and there is a public fork, Anarki at https://github.com/arclanguage/anarki which is not in feature parity with the former, which itself is not in feature parity with Hacker News.
Dan himself takes an amnesia pill whenever the project needs to be modified.
Jokes asides, I'm also very interested in knowing the infra of HN. Comments take a few seconds/minutes to actually appear so I'm guessing there's some queueing involved and probably a lot of caching on the articles?
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=16076041
Number of daily requests has gone up closer to 6M
So disappointing.
Interesting.
I'm guessing the server must have a ton of RAM, but that's probably why the site is super fast.
Update: Oh damn. I took the primitive vibe as a sign the technology would be too. And well, it’s written in a language pg invented.
Other than that it does indeed seem very primitive, though (hosted on some Xeon FreeBSD server, for instance). The only (slight) magic seems to be in ranking/karma.