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Building Scalable Web Sites: Building, scaling, and optimizing the next generation of web applications
 
 
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Building Scalable Web Sites: Building, scaling, and optimizing the next generation of web applications (Paperback)

by Cal Henderson (Author)
Key Phrases: replication lag, escaping data, dataset growth, Cal's Photos, Cluster Memory, Memory Buffered (more...)
4.6 out of 5 stars See all reviews (29 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

Review
"What this book gives, possibly uniquely, is both a look at the whole spectrum of building a service and some details of all the major stages. It's ideal to give to someone who has a tight focus or experience on a particular area, e.g. writing lines and lines of PHP code which kills the database or filer because the author has little appreciation of what happens at other levels of the system structure. This book would make an ideal guide to people who need to be given some indications of the world beyond a small area. It's also a good read for those who build web sites which may potentially get a large volume of traffic to learn from flickr and why they made the decisions they made." - Sam Smith, news@UK, September 2006

Product Description
Learn the tricks of the trade so you can build and architect applications that scale quickly--without all the high-priced headaches and service-level agreements associated with enterprise app servers and proprietary programming and database products. Culled from the experience of the Flickr.com lead developer, "Building Scalable Web Sites" offers techniques for creating fast sites that your visitors will find a pleasure to use. Creating popular sites requires much more than fast hardware with lots of memory and hard drive space. It requires thinking about how to grow over time, how to make the same resources accessible to audiences with different expectations, and how to have a team of developers work on a site without creating new problems for visitors and for each other. Presenting information to visitors from all over the world * Integrating email with your web applications * Planning hardware purchases and hosting options to have as much as you need without breaking your wallet * Partitioning and distributing databases to support large datasets and simultaneous transactions * Monitoring your applications to find and clear bottlenecks * Providing services APIs and using services from other providers to increase your site's reach and capabilities Whether you're starting a small web site with hopes of growing big or you already have a large system that needs maintenance, you'll find "Building Scalable Web Sites" to be a library of ideas for making things work.

See all Editorial Reviews

Product Details

  • Paperback: 348 pages
  • Publisher: O'Reilly Media, Inc.; illustrated edition edition (May 16, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0596102356
  • ISBN-13: 978-0596102357
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 7 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars See all reviews (29 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #33,194 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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    #38 in  Books > Computers & Internet > Graphic Design > Website Architecture & Usability

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Customer Reviews

29 Reviews
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 (20)
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 (6)
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Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (29 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
38 of 40 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Scalability -- A Hot Topic, June 12, 2006
By Brett Merkey (Palm Harbor, FL United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
When I first starting working on Web application development teams, I was a bit overwhelmed by the number of skills and range of knowledge needed to drive the project through establishing the technical foundations; design, development and testing iterations; to final staged release. Lots of things got discussed in team meetings that I had barely a clue about. Not only do I wish I had this book *then,* I wish all members of my teams could have it *now.*

Cal Henderson has a wide background in the area and is lead developer for Flickr, the photo sharing site that has gained deserved popularity and is often mentioned as the quintessential Web 2.0 application.

The author does an excellent job of spreading out before you the whole process at a high enough level so the book can be valuable for managers, designers, and all sorts of people involved in putting out the final product.

His focus is on program design and design implementation issues, not programming as such. Code is not neglected. Many points regarding design implementation are made with code examples and solutions.

I find this book so personally valuable in grounding me in a complex process, I give it the highest Amazon rating even though I found aspects of the book's organization to be completely incomprehensible. This is a book about scalable Web sites and applications but the author does not define scalability nor does he deal with the broad Web issues (like the scaling myth) until 60% into the book! Chapter 9, titled "Scaling Web Applications" should have been much closer to the beginning since it was a high-level view with no code, as the other chapters. I was also befuddled with placing the chapter on internationalization, localization, and Unicode so early in the book -- even before the chapter on data integrity and security. There is nothing like a mind-numbing Unicode glyphs and grapheme discussion to kill the pacing of a book! Skip the chapter entirely or read it last.

Organization anomalies aside, the author has a good writing style and he does not view humor as a blunt instrument. His four page analogy between layered architecture and an English trifle was worth the space he took. That's high praise from a guy who does a job that Henderson likens to whipped cream.
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18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I wish all software developers would read this, August 20, 2006
By ueberhund "ueberhund" (Salt Lake City, UT United States) - See all my reviews
Unfortunately, I'm finding that there are still some in the software industry--from "two guys in a garage" to the largest corporation--don't know, follow, or believe software best practices. Suddenly when something goes wrong (e.g. the wrong version of a file was deployed, changes can't be rolled back, the application won't scale), everyone scrambles in an effort to figure out what happened. Oftentimes, if simple software practices were followed, many of these issues would never surface.

This book does a tremendous job identifying many of these best practices, identifies how to easily implement them--in almost any situation, and discusses application scaling techniques. As the book mentions, scalability is made up of three characteristics:
* The application can accommodate an increase in users
* The application can accommodate an increase in data
* The application is maintainable

Like any good book on application scalability, this one begins discussing the tiered architecture that is common in so many modern applications, and is a fundamental step in creating any truly scalable application. This follows into a discussion on source control--another fundamental part of keeping the application maintainable.

The author briefly discusses security issues by touching on cross-site scripting (XSS), SQL injection, and the like. The discussion is well written and thorough for the amount of time spent on the topic.

Finally, the author discusses many of the issues related to deployment of web applications, including system monitoring and alerting. There is also an excellent section on load balancing, techniques to keep databases scalable, and caching. Finally, the author ties the final section together by showing how to take data from a live production environment and use that information to continually improve the application.

This is an excellent read--a must if you are in the business of creating web applications. Whether your applications expect loads of 10 users or a million users, the techniques discussed in this book will make your application perform better and be easier to maintain.
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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Starts out off-topic, and then WHAM..., June 13, 2006
By I. Code Freeley "coder" (Silicon Valley, USA) - See all my reviews
...it's all there.

Maybe it's my background, but I found the first seven chapters to be....dull, and not directly about scalability. To be honest, I almost set the book aside and considered it money NOT well-spent. Then things started to heat up in Chapter 8, and in Chapter 9 it all comes together. That one chapter (9) is the highest density of useful information about website scaling that I've ever seen. There are literally gems on every page.

Make no mistake. This book is more of an overview of the landscape, with brief asides that are clearly brain-dumps from his Flickr experience. The author manages to touch on every topic area that matters, and provide simple overviews of the options available and when they should be applied. In that sense it's more like an informal design patterns book (lots of "yeah, I knew that" and "Ah! I had a feeling there was a pattern there" moments), with just enough detail to let me do intelligent googling for deeper insights on analysis, design, and construction of scalable systems.

Chapters 8, 9, and 10 make the book worth every penny.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Very Technical - Little Fluff Here
Typically when reading a technology book they fall into two categories.
They are over your head or too general. This book probably falls into the first category. Read more
Published 3 months ago by Mark Ruzomberka

5.0 out of 5 stars nice book
I received this book in three days, which was a fast delivery. I am still working on this book, but I must say I like this book.
Published 7 months ago by Yanhua Yu

5.0 out of 5 stars This was a great book!
This was a great book! I highly recommend it! Have fun!
[..]
Merry Christmas!!!
Published 7 months ago by M. Parker

3.0 out of 5 stars good if you're new and growing your first large scale site
This book has many good sections, including some that actually touch
on the title of "scaling" web sites. Read more
Published 9 months ago by A. Chong

5.0 out of 5 stars Great book on web development, with at least one chapter ALL software developers should read!
When I first started reading this book I had certain expectations about the technical level of the content. Read more
Published 11 months ago by William Deegan

5.0 out of 5 stars Upbeat and Informative
This is a practitioner's book. Very knowledgeable, very hands-on, systematic in an expert's way, through clearly hard-won experience. Fun and irreverent too. Read more
Published 13 months ago by FondDuLac

5.0 out of 5 stars Great resource, tells you what you need to know if you are just starting in this field
The book introduces the tools, processes, and high level architectures used in building large websites like Flickr, Youtube, etc. Read more
Published 15 months ago by Alberto Vargas

4.0 out of 5 stars useful web developer guide
This book is a very useful guide for the professional web developer whose goal is to produce larger database-driven web sites in a scalable, debuggable way. Read more
Published 16 months ago by Paul Balyoz

5.0 out of 5 stars Great book for building durable web applications
Despite its small page count this book both covers the basics for building a web application (i.e. how to pick a hosting service) and advanced topics such as cutting edge... Read more
Published 18 months ago by Ulas Kirazci

5.0 out of 5 stars Very good indeed
Very good material, specially in the current world where people think that their out-of-the box Java application servers will do the job of serving tons of pages a day.
Published 21 months ago by Phillip C. V. Souza

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