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Chaos engineering, why breaking things should be practised

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Martin L.
Chaos engineering, why breaking things should be practised

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With the rise of micro-services and large-scale distributed architectures, software systems have grow increasingly complex and hard to understand. Adding to that complexity, the velocity of software delivery has also dramatically increased, resulting in failures being harder to predict and contain.
While the cloud allows for high availability, redundancy and fault-tolerance, no single component can guarantee 100% uptime. Therefore, we have to understand availability but especially learn how to design architectures with failure in mind.
And since failures have become more and more chaotic in nature, we must turn to chaos engineering in order to identify failures before they become outages.
In this talk, I will deep dive into availability, reliability and large-scale architectures and make an introduction to chaos engineering, a discipline that promotes breaking things on purpose in order to learn how to build more resilient systems.

Do you want to share your thoughts and experience on availability, reliability, multi-region, Chaos Engineering or a related topic? Reach out to us and we will allocate some time for you.

Speaker: Adrian Hornsby from AWS - https://twitter.com/adhorn

Agenda:
17:00 Doors are open
17:15 Welcome to KeyCore
17:20 Adrian Hornsby
18:10 Break and networking
18:30 Lightning talks

  • Allan Frese
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Copenhagen AWS User Group
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KeyCore
Gammel Kongevej 60 · Frederiksberg