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If you run a successful SaaS platform, at some point someone is going to come to you with the question: can I run it myself? If you’re considering offering a private version of your SaaS, this post might be for you. At this point, I’ve worked for a few companies that are SaaS vendors. In most cases, we’ve also done some sort of private install. Drivers for private installsThere are a lot of reason
I figured it was about time for a followup on my systemd post. I’ve been meaning to do it for a while but time hasn’t allowed. The end of LinuxSome people wrongly characterized this as some sort of hyperbole. It was not. Systemd IS changing what we know as Linux today. It remains to be seen if this is a good or bad thing but Linux is becoming something different than it was. Linux is in for a roug
I’ve done a lot of tweeting about systemd lately. My internal conscience constantly reminds me of John Allspaw saying that twitter is just pretty much perfect for snarky comments (paraphrase). Al Tobey asked me a good question: {% blockquote %} I honestly want to know why you dislike it so much. You clearly know wtf is going on. I haven’t heard a specific technical problem. {% endblockquote %} Fir
AMQP in Logstash is one of the most complicated parts of the workflow. I’ve taken it on myself, as the person with the most AMQP experience (both RabbitMQ and Qpid) to try and explain as much as need for logstash users. Patrick DeBois hit me up with a common logstash design pattern that I felt warranted a full detailed post. Warning: This is an image heavy post. Terminal screenshots are linked to
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