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this post was submitted on 03 Apr 2024
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Programming
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Great question. Short answer: yes!
Long answer: I did this on a production system about 2 years ago.
The system was using MySQL, which was served from 3 virtual machines. Nobody took responsibility for that MySQL cluster, so outages and crazy long maintenance windows were normal especially as there was no DB admin expertise. The system had been hobbling along for 3 years regardless.
One day the company contracting me asked for help migrating some applications to a new disaster recovery (DR) datacentre. One-by-one I patched codebases to make them more portable; even needing to remove hard-coded IP addresses and paths provided by NFS mounts! Finally I got to the system which used the MySQL cluster. After some digging I discovered:
My ex-colleague who I got along really well with wrote 90% of the system. They used a SQL query builder and never used any DB engine-specific features. Thank you ex-colleague! I realised I could scrap this insane not-actually-highly-available architecture and use SQLite instead, all in a single virtual machine with 512MB memory and 1vCPU. SQLite was perfect for the job. The system consisted of a single reader and writer. The DB was only used for record-keeping of other long-running jobs.
Swapping it over took about 3 days, mostly testing. No more outages, no more working around shitty network administration, no more "how does the backup work again?" when DB dumps failed, no more complex config management to bring up, down DB clusters. The ability to migrate DB engines led to a significant simplification of the overall system.
But is this general advice? Not really. Programming with portability in mind is super important. But overly-generic programs can also be a pain to work with. Hibernate, JDBC et al. don't come for free; convenience comes at the cost of complexity. Honestly I'm a relational database noob (I'm more a SRE), so my approach is to try to understand the specific system/project and go from there. For example:
Things I would want to learn more about:
Things I would want to learn more about:
My shitty conclusion: it depends.