I remember partitioned systems being a big thing in like the '90s '00s since those were the days you would pour $$$$ into large systems. But I thought the “cattle not pets” movement did away with that? Are we back to the days of “big iron”?
Constant back and forth. Moving things closer increases efficenicy moving them apart increases resillency.
So we are constantly shuffling between the two for different workloads to optimize for the given thing.
That said i see this as an extension too the cattle idea by making even the kernel a thing to raised and culled on demand. This matter a lot more with heavy workloads like HPC and AI stuff where a process can be measure in days or weeks and stable uptime is paramount, vs the stateless work of intended k8s stuff (i say intended because you can k8s all the things now but it needs extensions to handle the new lifecycles).
I remember partitioned systems being a big thing in like the '90s '00s since those were the days you would pour $$$$ into large systems. But I thought the “cattle not pets” movement did away with that? Are we back to the days of “big iron”?
And the wheel of reincarnation forever keeps turning.
What do you think all those cattle run on?
Just big ass servers with tons of cores and ram.
I figured it was cattle all the way down. Even if they’re big. Especially when you have thousands of them.
Though maybe these setups can be scripted/automated to be easy to replicate and reproduce?
Constant back and forth. Moving things closer increases efficenicy moving them apart increases resillency.
So we are constantly shuffling between the two for different workloads to optimize for the given thing.
That said i see this as an extension too the cattle idea by making even the kernel a thing to raised and culled on demand. This matter a lot more with heavy workloads like HPC and AI stuff where a process can be measure in days or weeks and stable uptime is paramount, vs the stateless work of intended k8s stuff (i say intended because you can k8s all the things now but it needs extensions to handle the new lifecycles).