 Fine, so all of us talk about scaling up growing up How many of you have heard of snap deal? show of hands good How many of you have heard about MongoDB? good How many of you have heard about problems? good How many of you have not heard about aero spike? good So yeah, you haven't heard about aero spike. You have heard about snap deal go to Google do aero spike snap deal or Do snap deal no sequel. You'll get the results that I'm talking about So snap deal was using MongoDB servers. They they were using 10 MongoDB servers I don't remember the exact configurations, but yeah, they were using 10 MongoDB servers They were hitting about 10k TPS that is 10,000 transactions per second They were having problems in growing up. I mean MongoDB. It was a pain So they started benchmarking with 20k TPS They benchmark lots of stuff lots of stuff being Say Cassandra say Redis say Any no sequel thing that you can think about they try to try them all none of them worked Then they started using or other trying out aero spike. They didn't come to us. I work for the company They just went to the website. They downloaded the free community edition The community edition supports two nodes 200 GB no restrictions on features or performance they started using it and What they found that they did not need two servers They just needed one But still they went for to why simple reason redundancy one node goes down application is fine The physical machine goes down. They need to that's a reason they went in for two They were benchmarking for 20k TPS all of a sudden. I think around New Year's Yeah, they hit about 50 to 70 K transactions per second They were worried had they been on MongoDB. They would have gone down They were on aero spike Can anyone make a guess how many nodes they added immediately? I Mean 20 K TPS two nodes. So say 70 K TPS. How many nodes quick math five seven Okay, what of hands for five? Actually, they added no servers two nodes for more than enough to handle their peak or rather the sharp rise of 50 K Okay, so Unfortunately everything is Okay, so this is like a press release that we did you can go and read up about it and Yeah, another press release somewhere snap deal and I'm sorry. I'm like trying to figure out on this low resolution where things but okay So basically, let's go to the reason why I as a DevOps love aero spike I Used to work for Yahoo before joining aero spike I mean out there things things are good things scale up for me a large scale Installation was anything between say I mean it had to be a three digit number of servers for it to count as a large digit number when I came to aero spike I was talking to the lead out here and he's he told us he told me that The biggest installation aero spike had was about 24 nodes in a cluster. I was like, okay, is that large like yes How many transactions are they handling? Uh per node about 70 to 80 K transactions per second in production So yeah, that's the kind of number But then again, these are production numbers. We went to benchmarking recently We launched aero spike three and they are the kind of numbers we are dealing with a quick guess on How many numbers we are doing in say in labs just in memory database So 50 to 70 K transactions in production in labs. How many 120 500 700 We do a million transactions per second just in memory in labs in and that's in memory Just in memory not persistent with persistent storage. We use SSD as raw devices directly. There are no added file system on top of it So if you do just hundred percent writes, we do about 120 to 170 K writes Okay, I'm running short of time. So quickly saying why I love aero spike as a DevOps guy Installation simple RPM minus I start RPM as an in the folder or DPKG, whatever works on CentOS Debbie and Ubuntu red hat blah blah blah Configuration as a base package, you just want to try it out. You don't have to do anything You just do a start service start aero spike start. It's it comes up. You need to add a note What do you do nothing you just make ensure that all your notes have the exact same configuration by default you Views multicast and they just join the cluster and they work if you're trying it out on Amazon You have to add the mesh Configuration and yeah, that's a bit of manual work, but yeah again. It works So next time your dev team is trying out a no-sequel solution Or if you are already using a no-sequel solution and have problems go to aero spike comm try out the free community edition Some of your companies might have You know they want open source. So expect some news there and coming days Sure. Thank you