Thanks, love the post! Your DNS method is fine for basic redundancy, but what about actual load balancing, for when 1 of the 3 servers gets hit hard?
How do people compare this to Alpine Linux? I'm interested in both.
To elaborate, I really enjoyed reading Dennis Ritchie give some background on the evolution of Unix[1]: > As a historical curiosity, in the very first versions of Unix chdir was a normal command rather than a shell…
Thanks @gtirloni! I'm new to SQL and was working on a small internal tool. This change, an obvious one in hindsight, sped up my tool by ~2-3x. So for anyone else, check this!
Thanks, love the post! Your DNS method is fine for basic redundancy, but what about actual load balancing, for when 1 of the 3 servers gets hit hard?
How do people compare this to Alpine Linux? I'm interested in both.
To elaborate, I really enjoyed reading Dennis Ritchie give some background on the evolution of Unix[1]: > As a historical curiosity, in the very first versions of Unix chdir was a normal command rather than a shell…
Thanks @gtirloni! I'm new to SQL and was working on a small internal tool. This change, an obvious one in hindsight, sped up my tool by ~2-3x. So for anyone else, check this!