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The future is bright Mar 30, 2025 Software Engineering is here to stay Mar 3, 2024 On luck and gumption Oct 8, 2023 Book review: Clojure for the Brave and True Oct 2, 2022 Why don’t they tell you that in the instructions? Aug 31, 2022 Monolithic repository vs a monolith Aug 23, 2022 Scripting languages are tools for tying APIs together, not building complex systems Jun 8, 2022 Good developers can pick up new programming languages Jun 3, 2022 Java is no longer relevant May 29, 2022 Automation and coding tools for pet projects on the Apple hardware May 28, 2022 There is no such thing as one grand unified full-stack programming language May 27, 2022 Best practices for building a microservice architecture Apr 25, 2022 Tools of the craft Dec 18, 2021 What programming language to use for a brand new project? Feb 18, 2020 Which AWS messaging and queuing service to use? Jan 25, 2019 The religion of JavaScript Nov 26, 2018 Let’s talk cloud neutrality Sep 17, 2018 TypeScript starts where JavaScript leaves off Aug 2, 2017 Design patterns in TypeScript: Chain of Responsibility Jul 22, 2017 Amazon Alexa is eating the retailers alive Jun 22, 2016 What can we learn from the last week's salesforce.com outage ? May 15, 2016 Why it makes perfect sense for Dropbox to leave AWS May 7, 2016 OAuth 2.0: the protocol at the center of the universe Jan 1, 2016 What Every College Computer Science Freshman Should Know Aug 14, 2015 The Three Myths About JavaScript Simplicity Jul 10, 2015 The longer the chain of responsibility the less likely there is anyone in the hierarchy who can actually accept it Jun 7, 2015 Big Data is not all about Hadoop May 30, 2015 Exploration of the Software Engineering as a Profession Apr 8, 2015 Thanking MIT Scratch Sep 14, 2013 Have computers become too complicated for teaching ? Jan 1, 2013 Scripting News: After X years programming Jun 5, 2012

Let’s talk cloud neutrality

September 17, 2018

Consider the following conversation:
Enterprise architect: As an enterprise, we should be wary of being tied to any particular public cloud provider. My application is cloud neutral because I can re-deploy it at a moment’s notice to any cloud I want.

Me: How do you accomplish that?

EA: My entire application runs as a collection of docker services. I take no advantage of any of the managed services such as queuing or NoSQL because, you know, I must be cloud neutral.

Me: So what do you do instead?

EA: I use MongoDB and Kafka (replace Mongo and Kafka with NoSQL and queuing systems of your choosing that don’t run as managed services)

Me: How do you achieve redundancy and fault tolerance?

EA: I run eight MongoDB nodes in two clusters of four; I have two six-node Kafka clusters, and I have a script that alerts me 24/7 if any of them is down. We will have quarterly disaster recovery exercises on weekends to make sure everything stays up and is ready.

Avoiding managed services, using Docker and running eight Mongo and twelve Kafka nodes does not make an application cloud neutral — it makes it costly to develop, Kafkaesque (excuse the pun) to architect, and impossible to maintain in production. While the architecture diagrams look impressive and sophisticated, you end up losing your weekends and quality time with family to DR exercises and production support.

When we choose to use MongoDB, we are making a conscious decision to tie our application to a specific NoSQL technology. Unlike SQL, there is no platform-independent standard for NoSQL. By choosing MongoDB, we are effectively linking our application to a non-standard data store.

The fact that MongoDB is open-source should not be comforting either. Commercial MongoDB startup is not yet profitable, and they lose scores of millions in revenue per year. Should they change the terms of service or go out of business all together you have only one option left: relying on open-source for continued updates and improvements to the product.

While a project the size of Mongo is unlikely to be entirely abandoned by the open-source community, it's been known to happen to open-source projects. In the end, you will be left to maintain the source code of Mongo yourself. If you need examples closer to home, consider how the Cassandra project abandoned early Thrift-protocol drivers when they moved to CQL.

Likewise, the choice to use Kafka is not what makes the application cloud neutral. It doesn't even make your application messaging platform neutral. Kafka is a proprietary messaging/streaming platform.

The reality is that developers and architects make decisions to irreversibly tie our projects to some technology every day -- programming languages, runtime platforms, databases, queues, object storage, etc. Just ask companies that bet their farms on Borland Delphi or Java Swing. The choice to build upon a managed public cloud services is no different from the choices we make every day anyway. So, why complicate our lives for the sake of a small chance that AWS may go out of business and we might need to move to Azure?

I am not saying that we should not abstract ourselves from the details of whatever managed service we are using. We should, however, build these abstractions in the application software rather than try to find platform-independent infrastructure services.