I need to code python function which will iterate through incoming requests and calculate percentile of size of body dynamically. Which lib or algo do you guy recommend?
Example: Requests are coming in batches. Let's say first batch has 50 requests, next one has 80 etc. I need to calculate percentile of size of body that each request has.
I used famous ELK stack to monitor syslog and trigger alarms. I would like to know about alternative tools maybe language specific or maybe not.
I have interest in low level systems and Distributed Systems. I want to go deep into these fields. I started reading following books
1. Linux Kernel Development by Robert Love
2. Designing data-intensive applications
Can someone recommend me more books to increase my knowledge?
I would like to ask HN community about their favorite talk. Feel free to share any tech or nontechnical conference talks.
I want to see how other companies built cost-effective logging infrastructures.
ELK is the most famous stack these days but I want to see some alternatives or the way you go beyond ELK stack.
Maintaining ELK clusters per region can be a pain and paying a huge amount to AWS Elastic Search Service is not a good idea.
Do you guys have some better suggestions? Any tools or best practices I should follow for this project?
I just started my career as an SRE. I am really passionate about this field. I do watch videos and read blogs regularly related to different architectures to increase my knowledge.
I want guidance from the HN community to become better SRE. What should I do in my free time? Which blogs, articles, books, videos you recommend me to watch? Please consider me as a beginner in this field. I am interested more in developing scalable architectures and distributed systems.
I just moved to Paris. I am having a hard time over here because I don't have any friends and family over here. I would like to ask the HN community about what is a cool thing to do in Paris? What do you do usually on weekends in Paris? Is there any techie group, club or museum?
Of course, I can google the same question or find events on meetup.com but I want to hear it from HN community.
NOTE: Definition of a "cool" word changes from person to person. You can interpret it in anyways :-)