
Meteor Cloud Is a Full Service Hosting Solution for Meteor Apps
Running in Production
Go Proxies - Do You Use a Specific Library?
We use like go standard libraries, like gocip go and we we have everything from scratch there. I believe this is also because ga didn't have a very good model system unti in version 13. It was kind of weird the way to imports like the pentaces. Maybe that's also a factor that you preferred to just write your own code. If you just delegate, you a library, it was not going to be possible to do it. But of course, in other parts of the system we use a lot of libraries. i think the proxis is a special part here. So as you really understand me, perhaps we have this advantage to try to analyze the request and
In this episode of Running in Production, Filipe Névola goes over building a hosting platform for Meteor apps. It’s hosted on AWS with ECS and has been running in production since 2015.
Filipe talks about building critical services with Go, using Meteor to build front-end web dashboards, the importance of monitoring, using Recurly for subscription payments, multi-region AWS hosting and overall providing a highly available platform for thousands of clients.
Topics Include
- 1:45 – High level overview of the hosting platform
- 7:01 – Splitting up compute resources for enterprise clients
- 8:44 – Motivation for choosing Go for a few of the back-end services
- 11:24 – Feeding data to the web dashboard with MongoDB, ECS, a load balancer and Go
- 15:53 – The Go proxy service was built using the standard library (no 3rd party libraries)
- 17:46 – Differences between the free and paid plans
- 22:49 – Displaying a custom page if your Meteor app happens to be down
- 26:28 – Going over a few services, starting with the Docker image builder
- 31:18 – The Go services are in a mono repo but they can be individually deployed
- 33:36 – The next service is the scheduler which is custom built
- 41:49 – How the web dashboard gets updated from events on the back-end
- 47:08 – The last service we’ll cover is for registering SSL certificates with Let’s Encrypt
- 50:21 – Monitoring is very important and they’re using Datadog, plus being on-call
- 54:26 – Postmark and SendGrid are both used to send emails
- 56:23 – Payments are handled through Recurly
- 1:00:28 – Loggly is used for logging and a bit of analytics
- 1:04:08 – Handling a lot of incoming notifications and making sense out of alerts
- 1:08:05 – Choosing AWS for hosting everything and using ECS over EKS
- 1:11:20 – It’s hosted across multiple AWS regions (Virginia, Ireland and Sydney)
- 1:15:55 – The open source side of Meteor is very very important
- 1:17:49 – How Terraform is being used to manage their infrastructure
- 1:20:31 – ScaleGrid is used to host their MongoDB instances
- 1:22:29 – How clients store their secrets
- 1:24:15 – How deployments are handled from development to production
- 1:32:34 – All data is backed up on a regular basis with lots of redundancy
- 1:36:01 – Handling big traffic spikes with little warning
- 1:38:38 – Best tips? Monitor everything and avoid premature optimization
- 1:41:43 – Check out Filipe on Twitter, his coding education platform and YouTube channel
Links
📄 References
- https://www.meteor.com/
- https://www.tinycapital.com/ (They acquired Meteor)
⚙️ Tech Stack
- meteor →
- node →
- golang →
- react →
- aws →
- datadog →
- docker →
- dynamodb →
- ecs →
- elasticache →
- graphql →
- lets-encrypt →
- loggly →
- memcached →
- mongodb →
- pagerduty →
- postmark →
- recurly →
- scalegrid →
- sendgrid →
- statuscake →
- terraform →
- websockets →
Support the Show
This episode does not have a sponsor and this podcast is a labor of love. If you want to support the show, the best way to do it is to purchase one of my courses or suggest one to a friend.
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