Where database blog posts get flame-broiled to perfection
Right, so "preventing hallucinations and giving agents up-to-date context is more important than ever." You don't say? Because for a second there, I thought we were all just aiming for more creative fiction and stale data. Glad someone finally cracked that code, after... checks notes... every single other LLM company has said the exact same thing for the past two years. But sure, this time it's different.
It all starts with Tavily, a "simple but powerful idea" that "exploded" with 20,000 GitHub stars. Oh, that's the metric we're using for production readiness now? Not, you know, SLA compliance or incident reports that aren't longer than a novel? I’ve seen "viral success" projects crumble faster than my will to live on a Monday morning when the "simple" solution starts hemorrhaging memory. And now, suddenly, "developers are slowly realizing not everything is semantic, and that vector search alone cannot be the only solution for RAG." Gasp! It's almost like a single-tool solution isn't a panacea! Who could have predicted that? Oh, right, anyone who's ever deployed anything to production.
Then, the true revelation: the "new internet graph" where "AI agents act as new nodes." Because apparently, the old internet, the one where humans gasp searched for things and got answers, just wasn't cutting it. Now, agents "don't need fancy UIs." They just need a "quick, scalable system to give them answers in real time." So, a search engine, but for robots, built on the premise that robots have different needs than people. Riveting. And they're "sticking to the infrastructure layer" because "you don't know where the industry is going." Translation: We're building something that sounds foundational so we can pivot when this current hype cycle inevitably collapses.
And then the plot twist, the foundation for this marvel: MongoDB. Oh, Rotem, you "fell in love with MongoDB"? "It's amazing how flexible it is–it's so easy to implement everything!" Bless your heart, sweet summer child. That's what they all say at the beginning. It's always "flexible," "fast," "scales quickly" – right up until 3 AM when your "almost like it's in memory" hot cache decides to become a "cold, dead cache" that's taken your entire cluster down. And the "document model"? That's just code for "we don't need schemas, let's YOLO our data until we need to migrate it, then realize we have 17 different versions of the same field and it's all NullPointerException city, and half the records are corrupted because someone forgot to add {"new_field": null}
to a million existing documents." My PTSD from that last "simple" migration is flaring up just thinking about it.
They trot out the "three pillars of success," naturally:
And the trust! Oh, the trust! "You want to make sure that you're choosing companies you trust to handle things correctly and fast." And if I have feedback, "they will listen." Yes, they'll listen right up until you cancel your enterprise support contract.
So, the "multi-agent future," where we'll be "combining these one, two, three, four agents into a workflow." More complexity, more points of failure, more fun for on-call. The internet welcomed people, now AI agents join the network, and companies like Tavily are "building the infrastructure to ensure this next chapter of digital evolution is both powerful and accessible." And I’ll be the one building the rollback plan when it inevitably collapses. My money's on the first major outage involving a rogue AI agent accidentally recursively querying itself into a distributed denial of service attack on Tavily's own "internet graph." And I'll be here, clutching my pillow, because I've seen this movie before. It always ends with me, a VPN connection, and a database dump, wishing I'd just stuck with a spreadsheet.
"PostgreSQL 18 is on the way, bringing a set of improvements that many organizations will find useful." Oh, "improvements," you say? Because what our balance sheet really needs is more ways for our budget to mysteriously evaporate into the cloud-native ether. Useful for whom, exactly? The shareholders of the managed database providers, I'd wager.
This article, bless its heart, talks about performance, replication, and simplifying daily operations. Simplifying whose operations, I ask you? Certainly not mine, as I stare down another multi-page invoice from some 'strategic partner' promising us the moon on a stick made of IOPS. They always gloss over the true cost, don't they? They'll tell you PostgreSQL is "free as in speech, free as in beer." I say it's free as in puppy. Cute at first, then it eats your furniture, and costs a fortune in vet bills and specialized training.
Let's talk about this mythical reduced TCO they all parrot. You want to migrate to this new, shiny, supposedly cheaper thing? Fine.
pg_dump
and pg_restore
, is it? Try:
So, my quick back-of-napkin calculation for this "free" database, just for the first year of a moderate migration, ignoring the opportunity cost of pulling everyone off their actual jobs:
$720,000 (Migration Labor) + $25,000 (Training) + $50,000 (Consultants) + $100,000 (Annual Managed Service/Support)
= $895,000
And that's just for ONE significant database! They promise agility and innovation, but what I see is a gaping maw of recurring expenses. This isn't simplifying daily operations; it's simplifying their path to early retirement on my dime.
They talk about "PostgreSQL 18 moving things in a good direction." Good direction for their bottom line, absolutely. The vendor lock-in isn't in the database code itself, oh no. It's in the specialized tooling, the proprietary APIs of their managed services, the "deep integration" with their specific cloud flavor, and the fact that once you've poured almost a million dollars into migrating, you're effectively chained to their ecosystem. Try moving off their managed PostgreSQL service. It's like trying to pull Excalibur from the stone, only Excalibur is rusted, covered in cryptic error messages, and charges by the hour for every tug.
My prediction? We'll spend more on this "free" database than we did on our last proprietary monstrosity, and then some. Next year's earnings call will feature me explaining why our "strategic infrastructure investment" has inexplicably shrunk our EBITDA like a cheap suit in a hot wash. Don't tell me about ROI when the only thing I'm seeing return is my blood pressure.
Alright, "a clean and declarative treatment of Snapshot Isolation using dependency graphs." Fantastic. You know what else is clean and declarative? My PagerDuty log from last night, screaming that production went sideways because someone, somewhere, thought a theoretical soundness proof translated directly into a bulletproof production system.
Look, I've got a drawer full of vendor stickers from companies that promised me zero-downtime migrations and databases that were so academically sound they'd practically run themselves. The one from "QuantumDB – Eventual Consistency, Guaranteed!" is still there, right next to "SynapseSQL – Truly Atomic Sharding!" They're all gone, vanished into the ether, much like your data when these purely symbolic frameworks hit the unforgiving reality of a multi-tenant cloud environment.
This paper, it "strips away implementation details such as commit timestamps and lock management." Beautiful. Because those pesky little things like, you know, how the database actually ensures data integrity are just, what, inconvenient for your theoretical models? My systems don't care about your Theorem 10 when they're hammering away at a million transactions per second. They care about locks, they care about timestamps, and they definitely care about the network partition that just turned your declarative dependency graph into a spaghetti diagram of doom.
Then we get to "transaction chopping." Oh, splendid. "Spliceability"! This is where some bright-eyed developer, fresh out of their Advanced Graph Theory for Distributed Systems course, decides to carve up mission-critical transactions into a dozen smaller pieces, all in the name of "improved performance." The paper promises to "ensure that the interleaving of chopped pieces does not introduce new behaviors/anomalies." My seasoned gut, hardened by years of 3 AM incidents, tells me it absolutely will. You're going to get phantom reads and write skew in places you didn't even know existed, manifesting as a seemingly inexplicable discrepancy in quarterly financial reports, months down the line. And when that happens, how exactly are we supposed to trace it back to a "critical cycle in a chopping graph" that cannot be reconciled with atomicity guarantees? Is there a chopping_graph_critical_cycle_count
metric in Grafana I'm unaware of? Because my existing monitoring tools, which are always, always an afterthought in these grand theoretical designs, can barely tell me if the disk is full.
And the glorious "robustness under isolation-level weakening"? Like the difference between SI and PSI, where PSI "discards the prefix requirement on snapshots," allowing behaviors like the "long fork anomaly." Chef's kiss. This isn't theoretical elegance, folks, this is a recipe for data inconsistency that will only reveal itself weeks later when two different analytics reports show two different truths about your customer base. It's fine, says the paper, PSI just ensures visibility is transitive, not that it forms a prefix of the commit order. Yeah, it also ensures I'm going to have to explain to a furious CEO why our customer counts don't add up, and the engineers are staring blankly because their symbolic reasoning didn't account for real-world chaos.
This whole thing, from the axiomatization of abstract executions to the comparison with "Seeing is Believing (SiB)" (which, by the way, sounds like something a cult leader would write, not a database paper), it just ignores the grim realities of production. You can talk all you want about detecting structural patterns and cycles with certain edge configurations in static analysis. But the moment you deploy this on a system with network jitter, noisy neighbors, and a surprise marketing campaign hitting your peak load, those patterns become un-debuggable nightmares.
So, here's my prediction, based on a decade of pulling hair out over these "revolutionary" advancements: This beautiful, declarative, purely symbolic framework will fail spectacularl, not because of a long fork anomaly or an unexpected critical cycle you couldn't statically analyze. No, it'll be because of a simple timeout, or a runaway query that wasn't properly "chopped," or a single misconfigured network policy that nobody documented. And it won't be during business hours. It'll be at 3 AM on the Saturday of a major holiday weekend, when I'm the only poor soul within a hundred miles with PagerDuty on my phone. And all I'll have to show for it is another vendor sticker for my collection. Enjoy your academic rigor; I'll be over here keeping the lights on with bash scripts and profanity.
Ah, a communiqué from the digital trenches, attempting to clarify why their particular brand of schemaless alchemy sometimes, shall we say, falters under the merest whisper of concurrency. One might almost infer from this elaborate apology that the initial issue wasn't a "myth" but rather an inconvenient truth rearing its ugly head. To suggest that a benchmark, however flawed in its execution, created a myth about slow transactions rather than merely exposing an architectural impedance mismatch is, frankly, adorable.
The core premise, that the benchmark developers, PostgreSQL experts no less, somehow missed the fundamental tenets of their lock-free optimistic concurrency control because they were... experts in a system that adheres to established relational theory? One almost pities them. Clearly, they've never delved into Stonebraker's seminal work on database system architecture, nor, it seems, have they digested the very foundational principles of transactional integrity that have been well-understood since the 1970s.
Let's dissect this, shall we? We're told MongoDB uses OCC, which requires applications to manage transient errors differently. Ah, yes, the classic industry move: redefine a fundamental database responsibility as an "application concern." So, now the humble application developer, who merely wishes to persist a datum, must become a de facto distributed systems engineer, meticulously implementing retry logic that, as demonstrated, must incorporate exponential backoff and jitter to avoid self-inflicted denial-of-service attacks upon their own precious database. Marvelous! One can only imagine the sheer joy of debugging an issue where the database is effectively performing a DDoS on itself because the application didn't correctly implement a core concurrency strategy that the database ought to be handling internally. This isn't innovation; it's an abdication of responsibility.
The article then provides a stunningly obvious solution involving delays, as if this were some profound, newly discovered wisdom. My dear colleagues, this is Database Concurrency 101! The concept of backing off on contention is not novel; it's a staple of any distributed system designed with even a modicum of foresight. The very notion that a 'demo' from seven years ago, for a feature as critical as transactions, somehow overlooked this fundamental aspect speaks volumes, not about the benchmarkers, but about the initial design philosophy. When the "I" in ACID—Isolation—becomes a conditional feature dependent on the client's retry implementation, you're not building a robust transaction system; you're constructing a house of cards.
And then, the glorious semantic acrobatics to differentiate their "locks" from traditional SQL "locks."
What is called "lock" here is more similar to what SQL databases call "latch" or "lightweight locks", which are short duration and do not span multiple database calls.
Precious. So, when your system aborts with a "WriteConflict" because "transaction isolation (the 'I' in 'ACID') is not possible," it's not a lock, it's... a "latch." A "lightweight" failure, perhaps? This is an eloquent, if desperate, attempt to rename a persistent inconsistency into a transient inconvenience. A write conflict, when reading a stale snapshot, is precisely why one employs a serializable isolation level—which, funnily enough, proper relational databases handle directly, often with pessimistic locking or multi-version concurrency control (MVCC) that doesn't shunt the error handling onto the application layer for every single transaction.
The comparison with PostgreSQL is equally enlightening. PostgreSQL, with its quaint notion of a "single-writer instance," can simply wait because it's designed for consistency and atomicity within a well-defined transaction model. But our friends in the document-oriented paradigm must avoid this because, gasp, it "cannot scale horizontally" and would require "a distributed wait queue." This is a classic example of the CAP theorem being twisted into a justification for sacrificing the 'C' (Consistency) on the altar of unbridled 'P' (Partition Tolerance) and 'A' (Availability), only to then stumble over the very definition of consistency itself. They choose OCC for "horizontal scalability," then boast of "consistent cross shard reads," only to reveal that true transactional consistency requires the application to manually compensate for conflicts. One almost hears Codd weeping.
And finally, the advice on data modeling: "avoid hotspots," "fail fast," and the pearl of wisdom that "the data model should allow critical transactions to be single-document." In other words: don't normalize your data, avoid relational integrity, and stick to simple CRUD operations if you want your 'transactional' system to behave predictably. And the ultimate denunciation of any real-world complexity:
no real application will perform business transaction like this: reserving a flight seat, recording payment, and incrementing an audit counter all in one database transaction.
Oh, if only the world were so simple! The very essence of enterprise applications for the past four decades has revolved around the robust, atomic, and isolated handling of such multi-step business processes within a single logical unit of work. To suggest that these complex, real-world transactions should be fragmented into a series of semi-consistent, loosely coupled operations managed by external services and application-level eventual consistency is not progress; it's a regress to the dark ages of file-based systems.
One can only hope that, after another seven years of such "innovations," the industry might perhaps rediscover the quaint, old-fashioned notion of a database system that reliably manages its own data integrity without requiring its users to possess PhDs in distributed algorithms. Perhaps then, they might even find time to dust off a copy of Ullman or Date. A professor can dream, can't he?
Oh, "Clari optimized" their database performance and "reduced costs" by a whopping 50% by switching to Amazon Aurora I/O-Optimized, you say? My eyes just rolled so hard they're doing an I/O-optimized dance in my skull. Let's talk about the actual optimization. The one that happens when my pager goes off at 3 AM on Thanksgiving weekend.
"Aurora I/O-Optimized." Sounds fancy, doesn't it? Like they finally put a racing stripe on a minivan and called it a sports car. What that really means is another set of metrics I now have to learn to interpret, another custom dashboard I need to build because the built-in CloudWatch views will give me about as much insight as a broken magic eight ball. And the "switch" itself? Oh, I'm sure it was seamless. As seamless as trying to swap out an engine in a car while it’s doing 70 on the freeway.
Every single one of these "zero-downtime" migrations always involves:
You know, the kind of "zero-downtime" that still requires me to schedule a cutover at midnight on a Tuesday, just in case we have to roll back to the old, expensive, "unoptimized" database that actually worked.
"Our comprehensive suite of monitoring tools ensures unparalleled visibility."
Yeah, their suite. Not my suite, which is a collection of shell scripts duct-taped together with Grafana, specifically because your "comprehensive suite" tells me the CPU is 5% busy while the database is actively committing sepuku. They'll give you a graph of "reads" and "writes," but god forbid you try to figure out which specific query is causing that sudden spike, or why that "optimized" I/O profile suddenly looks like a cardiogram during a heart attack. You’re left playing whack-a-mole with obscure SQLSTATE
errors and frantically searching Stack Overflow.
And the 50% cost reduction? That's always the best part. For the first two months, maybe. Then someone forgets to delete the old snapshots, or a new feature pushes the I/O into a tier they didn't budget for, or a developer writes a SELECT *
on a multi-terabyte table, and suddenly your "optimized" bill is back to where it started, or even higher. It’s a shell game, people. They just moved the compute and storage costs around on the invoice.
I've got a drawer full of stickers from companies that promised similar revolutionary performance gains and cost savings. Looks down at an imaginary, half-peeled sticker with a stylized database logo Yeah, this one promised 1000x throughput with zero ops overhead. Now it's just a funny anecdote and a LinkedIn profile that says "formerly at [redacted database startup]."
So, Clari, "optimized" on Aurora I/O-Optimized, you say? Mark my words. It's not if it goes sideways, but when. And my money's on 3:17 AM, Eastern Time, the morning after Christmas Day, when some "minor patch" gets auto-applied, or a developer pushes a "small, innocent change" to a stored procedure. The I/O will spike, the connections will pool, the latency will flatline, and your "optimized" database will go belly-up faster than a politician's promise. And then, guess who gets the call? Not the guy who wrote this blog post, that's for sure. It’ll be me, staring at a screen, probably still in my pajamas, while another one of these "revolutionary" databases decides to take a holiday. Just another Tuesday, really. Just another sticker for the collection.
Alright, so I just finished reading this article about MongoDB being a "general-purpose database" with its flexible schemas and efficient indexing. Efficient indexing, they say! My eyes nearly rolled right out of my head and bounced off the conference room table. Because what I see here isn't efficiency; it's a meticulously crafted financial black hole designed to suck every last penny out of your budget under the guise of "innovation" and "agility."
Let's dissect this, shall we? They start by telling us their query planner optimizes things, but then, in the very next breath, they're explaining how their "optimizer transformations" don't work like they do in those quaint, old-fashioned SQL databases. And why? Because of this glorious flexible schema! You know, the one that lets you shove any old garbage into your database without a moment's thought about structure, performance, or, you know, basic data integrity. It's like a hoarder's attic, but for your critical business data.
The real gem, though, is when they calmly explain that if you dare to rename a JSON dotted path in a $project
stage before you filter, your precious index is magically ignored, and you get a delightful COLLSCAN. A full collection scan! On a large dataset, that's not just slow; that's the sound of our cloud bill screaming like a banshee and our customers abandoning ship! They build up this beautiful index, then tell you that if you try to make your data look halfway presentable for a query, you've just kicked the tires off your supercar and are now pushing it uphill. And their solution? "Oh, just remember to $match
first, then $project
later!" Because who needs intuitive query design when you can have a secret handshake for basic performance? This isn't flexibility; it's a semantic minefield laid specifically to trap your developers, drive up their frustration, and ultimately, drive up your operational costs.
They wax poetic about how you "do not need to decide between One-to-One or One-to-Many relationships once for all future insertions" and how it "avoids significant refactoring when business rules change." Translation: You avoid upfront design by deferring all the complexity into an inscrutable spaghetti-ball data model that will require a team of their highly-paid consultants to untangle when you inevitably need to query it efficiently. And did you see the example with the arrays of arrays? Customer C003 has emails that are arrays within arrays! Trying to query that becomes a logic puzzle worthy of a Mensa convention. This isn't "accommodating changing business requirements"; it's accommodating chaos.
So, let's talk about the true cost of embracing this kind of "flexibility." Because they'll trot out some dazzling ROI calculation, promising the moon and stars for your initial license fee or cloud consumption. But let's get real.
First, your initial investment. Let's be generous and say it's a cool $500,000 for licenses or cloud credits for a mid-sized operation. Peanuts, right?
Then, the migration costs. You think you're just moving data? Oh no, you're refactoring every single piece of code that interacts with the database. You're learning their unique syntax, their peculiar aggregation pipeline stages, and, crucially, all the ways to avoid getting a COLLSCAN. We're talking developers tearing their hair out for six months, easily. That's $250,000 in lost productivity and developer salaries, minimum.
Next, training. Every single developer, every single data analyst, needs to be retrained on this "intuitive" new way of thinking. They'll need to understand why $match
before $project
is a religious rite. That's another $100,000 in courses, certifications, and bewildered team leads trying to explain array-of-array semantics.
And then, the pièce de résistance: the inevitable consultants. Because when your queries are grinding to a halt, and your team can't figure out why their "intuitive" projections are blowing up the CPU, who do you call? Their Professional Services team, of course! They'll show up, charge you $500 an hour (because they're the only ones who truly understand their own undocumented quirks), and spend three months explaining that you just needed to reshape your data with a $unwind
stage you've never heard of. That's another $300,000 right there, just to make their "flexible" database perform basic operations.
And the ongoing operational cost? With all those COLLSCANs happening because someone forgot the secret handshake, your cloud compute costs will skyrocket. You'll scale horizontally, throw more hardware at it, and watch your margins evaporate faster than an ice cube in July. That's easily $150,000 more per year, just to run the thing inefficiently.
So, let's tally it up, shall we?
That's a grand total of $1,300,000 in the first year alone, for a solution that promises "flexibility" but delivers only hidden complexity and a license to print money for the vendor. They promise ROI, but all I see is R.O.I.P. for our budget. This isn't a database; it's a monument to technical debt wrapped in pretty JSON.
My prediction? We'll be explaining to the board why our "revolutionary" new database requires a dedicated team of alchemists and a monthly offering of first-borns to the cloud gods just to find a customer's email address. Mark my words, by next quarter, we'll be serving ramen noodles from the server room while they're off counting their Monopoly cash.
Alright, gather ‘round, you whippersnappers, and let old Rick tell you a story. Just finished reading this piece here about how we’re gonna "transform static automotive manuals into intelligent, searchable knowledge bases" using... wait for it... MongoDB Atlas. Intelligent! Searchable! Bless your cotton socks. You know what we called "intelligent and searchable" back in my day? A well-indexed B-tree and a DB2 query. That’s what.
They talk about a technician “searching frantically through multiple systems for the correct procedure” and a customer “scrolling through forums.” Oh, the horror! You know, we had these things called "microfiche" – basically tiny photographs of paper manuals, but with an index! You popped it in a reader, zoomed in, and found your info. Or, if you were really fancy, a CICS application on a mainframe that could pull up specs in, get this, less than a second. And customers? They actually spoke to people on the phone, or, heaven forbid, read a physical owner’s manual! These "massive inefficiencies" they're on about? They sound an awful lot like people not knowing how to use the tools they've got, or maybe just someone finally admitting they never bothered to properly index their PDFs in the first place.
Then they hit you with the corporate buzzword bingo: "technician shortages costing shops over $60,000 monthly per unfilled position," and "67% of customers preferring self-service options." Right, so the solution to a labor shortage is to make the customers do the work themselves. Genius! We've been talking about "self-service" since the internet was just a twinkle in Al Gore's eye, and usually, it just means you're too cheap to hire support staff.
Now, let's get to the nitty-gritty of this "solution."
"Most existing systems have fixed, unchangeable data formats designed primarily for compliance rather than usability."
Unchangeable data formats! You mean, like, a schema? The thing that gives your data integrity and structure? The very thing that prevents your database from becoming an unholy pile of bits? And "designed for compliance"? Good heavens, who needs regulations when you’ve got flexible document storage! We tried that, you know. It was called "unstructured data" and it made reporting a nightmare. Compliance isn't a bug, it's a feature, especially when you're talking about torque specs for a steering column.
They go on about "custom ingestion pipelines" to "process diverse documentation formats." Ingestion pipelines! We called that ETL – Extract, Transform, Load. We were doing that in COBOL against tape backups back when these MongoDB folks were in diapers. "Diverse formats" just means you didn't do a proper data migration and normalized your data when you had the chance. And now you want a flexible model so you don't have to define a schema?
"As your organizational needs evolve, you can add new fields and metadata structures without schema migrations or downtime, enabling documentation systems to adapt to changing business needs."
Ah, the old "no schema migrations" trick. That’s because you don’t have a schema, son. It's just a big JSON blob. It's like building a house without a blueprint and just throwing new rooms on wherever you feel like it. Sure, it's "flexible," until you try to find the bathroom and realize it’s actually a broom closet with a toilet. "No downtime" on a production system is a myth, always has been, always will be. Ask anyone who's ever run a mission-critical system.
Then they trot out the real magic: "contextualized chunk embedding models like voyage-context-3" that "generates vector embeddings that inherently capture full-document context." Vector embeddings! You're just reinventing the inverted index with more steps and fancier math words! We were doing advanced full-text search and fuzzy matching in the 90s that got pretty darn close to "understanding intent and context." It's still just matching patterns, but now with a name that sounds like it came from a sci-fi movie.
And they show off their "hybrid search with $rankFusion" and a little code snippet that looks like something straight out of a developer's fever dream. It’s a glorified query optimizer, folks! We had those. They just didn't involve combining "textSearch" and "vectorSearch" in a way that looks like a high-school algebra problem.
"The same MongoDB knowledge base serves both technicians and customers through tailored interfaces." You know what we called that? "A database." With "different front-ends." It's not a new concept, it's just good system design. We had terminals for technicians and web portals for customers accessing the same DB2 tables for years.
"MongoDB Atlas deployments can handle billions of documents while maintaining subsecond query performance."
Billions of documents! Subsecond! Let me tell you, son, DB2 on a mainframe in 1985 could process billions of transactions in a day, with subsecond response times, and it didn't need a hundred cloud servers to do it. This isn't revolutionary; it's just throwing more hardware at a problem that good data modeling and indexing could solve.
And the "real-world impact"? "Customers find answers faster and adopt apps more readily, technicians spend less time hunting for information... compliance teams rest easier." This isn't a benefit of MongoDB; it's a benefit of a well-designed information system, which you can build with any robust database if you know what you’re doing. Iron Mountain "turning mountains of unstructured physical and digital content into searchable, structured data" isn't a feat of AI; it's called data modeling and ETL, and we've been doing it since before "digital content" was even a thing, mostly with literal stacks of paper and punch cards.
So, go on, "transform your technical documentation today." But mark my words, in 10-15 years, after they've accumulated enough "flexible" unstructured data to make a sane person weep, they'll rediscover the "revolutionary" concept of schema, normalization, and relational integrity. And they'll probably call it SQL-ish DBaaS Ultra-Contextualized AI-Driven Graph Document Store or some such nonsense. But it'll just be SQL again. It always comes back to SQL. Now, if you'll excuse me, I think I hear the tape drive calling my name.
Alright, so the latest hotness is "Citus, a robust PostgreSQL extension that aids in scaling data distribution and provides a solid sharding mechanism." Pause for effect, a deep, tired sigh. Oh, bless your heart, you sweet summer child. You think an extension is going to save us from the inherent complexities of distributed systems? I've got a drawer full of vendor stickers from "robust" and "solid" database solutions that are now gathering dust right next to my Beanie Babies collection – remember those? Thought they were the future too.
"Scaling a single-host PostgreSQL," they say. That's like putting a spoiler on a bicycle and calling it a race car. You're still starting with a bicycle, and you're just adding more points of failure and configuration overhead. And "enriches features like distributed tables, reference tables, columnar storage, schema-based sharding, etc." Yeah, "etc." is right. That "etc." is where my 3 AM phone calls live.
Let's break down this masterpiece of marketing jargon, shall we?
ALTER TABLE
on that when some bright-eyed dev decides to add a new non-nullable column to a million-row table? Is your "zero-downtime migration" going to magically handle that? Because every "zero-downtime" migration I've ever lived through has involved a mandatory maintenance window, a prayer, and me bringing a sleeping bag to the office.WHERE
clause and updates every row in a large reference table.pg_dump
-ing and restoring shards over the Christmas break?And don't even get me started on the monitoring. You know how this goes. The dashboards will be green. Glorious, vibrant green. Meanwhile, half your users are getting 500
errors because one specific shard, serving one specific customer, is silently melting down due to a SELECT *
without limits. The "initial setup part" is always easy. It's the "day 2 operations" that send you spiraling into the existential void. It's the "how do I find a rogue transaction that's locking up a distributed query across 12 nodes when the application logs are useless?" It's the "oh, the extension itself has a memory leak on the coordinator node."
So, here's my prediction: Sometime around 3 AM on the Saturday of a long holiday weekend – probably Memorial Day, because that's when the universe likes to mock me – someone will push a seemingly innocuous change. It'll cause a data rebalance that deadlocks half the nodes, because an indexing operation on one shard clashes with a write on another, or some obscure citus_distribute_table
function throws an unexpected error. Or perhaps the "robust" extension will decide it needs to re-index all the distributed tables due to a minor version upgrade, locking everything up for hours. My phone will ring, I'll stumble out of bed, past my collection of "Cassandra is Web-Scale!" and "MongoDB is Document-Oriented!" stickers, and I'll spend the next eight hours trying to piece together why your "solid sharding mechanism" became a pile of broken shards. And when I'm done, I'll just be adding another vendor's sticker to the "Lessons Learned the Hard Way" collection. But hey, at least you got to write a blog post about it.
Alright, gather 'round, folks, because here we go again. MongoDB, the undisputed champion of convincing people that eventual consistency is a feature, is apparently now guaranteeing consistent and durable write operations. Oh, really? Because last I checked, that was the baseline expectation for anything calling itself a database, not some revolutionary new parlor trick. They’re doing this with... wait for it... write-ahead logging! My word, has anyone informed the relational database world, which has only been doing that since, oh, the dawn of time? And they flush the journal to disk! I'm genuinely shocked, truly. I thought Mongo just kinda, whispered data into the ether and hoped for the best.
Then, they trot out the "synchronous replication to a quorum of replicas" and the claim that "replication and failover are built-in and do not require external tools." Yes, because every other modern database system requires you to hire a team of dedicated medieval alchemists to conjure up a replica set. Imagine that, a database that replicates itself without needing a separate enterprise-grade forklift and a team of consultants for every single failover. The audacity! And to set it up, you just... start three mongod
instances. It’s almost like they're trying to make it sound complicated when it's just, you know, how these things work.
But here’s where the innovation truly blossoms. To "experiment with replication," they ran it in a lab with Docker Compose. A lab! With Docker Compose! Groundbreaking. But the networks were too perfect, you see. So, they had to bring out the big guns: tc
and strace
. Yes, the tools every seasoned sysadmin has had in their kit since forever are now being wielded like enchanted artifacts to "inject some artificial latencies." Because simulating reality is apparently a Herculean task when your core product struggles with it natively. They’re manually adding network delays and disk sync delays just to prove a point about... well, about how slow things can get when you force them to be slow. Who knew? It's like rigging a race so your slowest runner looks like they're trying really hard to finish last.
They write to the primary and read from each node to "explain the write concern and its consequences for latency." You mean, if I write something and don't wait for it to be replicated, I might read an old value? Stop the presses! The fundamental trade-off between consistency and availability, re-discovered in a Docker container with tc
and strace
! And bless their hearts, they even provided the Dockerfile
and docker-compose.yml
because setting up a basic three-node replica set in containers is apparently rocket science that requires bespoke NET_ADMIN
and SYS_PTRACE
capabilities. I particularly enjoyed the part where they inject a 50 millisecond fdatasync
delay. Oh, the horror! My goodness, who would have thought that writing to disk takes time?
Then they discover that if you set w=0
—that's "write to no one, tell no one"—your writes are fast, but your reads are "stale." Imagine! If you tell a system not to wait for acknowledgement, it, get this, doesn't wait for acknowledgement, and then other nodes might not have the data yet. This isn't just an introduction, it's a profound, spiritual journey into the heart of distributed systems. And the pièce de résistance: "the client driver is part of the consensus protocol." My sides. So, my Node.js driver running on some budget server in Ohio is actively participating in a Raft election? I thought it just sent requests. What a multi-talented piece of software.
Finally, they switch to w=1, journal=false
and proudly announce that this "reduces write latency to just the network time," but with the caveat that "up to 100 milliseconds of acknowledged transactions could be lost" if the Linux instance crashes. But if the MongoDB instance fails, "there is no data loss, as the filesystem buffers remain intact." Oh, good, so as long as your kernel doesn't panic, your data's safe. It's a "feature," they say, for "IoT scenarios" where "prioritizing throughput is crucial, even if it means accepting potential data loss during failures." Sounds like a fantastic business requirement to build upon. "Sure, we're losing customer orders, but boy, are we losing them fast!"
In summary, after all this groundbreaking lab work, what do we learn? MongoDB allows you to balance performance and durability. You mean, like every single database ever built? They’ve essentially reinvented the wheel, added some shiny Docker paint, and called it a masterclass in distributed systems. My prediction? Someone, somewhere, will read this, excitedly deploy w=1, journal=false
to "prioritize throughput," and then come crying to Stack Overflow when their "IoT" data vanishes into the digital ether. But hey, at least they’ll have the docker compose up --build
command handy for the next time they want to watch their data disappear.
Alright, gather 'round, folks, because the titans of database research have dropped another bombshell! We're talking about the earth-shattering revelations from Postgres 18 beta2 performance! And let me tell you, when your main takeaway is 'up to 2% less throughput' on a benchmark step you had to run for 10 times longer because you apparently still can't figure out how long to run your 'work in progress' steps, well, that's just riveting stuff, isn't it? It’s not a benchmark, it’s a never-ending science fair project.
And this 'tl;dr' summary? Oh, it's a masterpiece of understatement. We've got our thrilling 2% decline in one corner, dutifully mimicking previous reports – consistency, at least, in mediocrity! Then, in the other corner, a whopping 12% gain on a single, specific benchmark step that probably only exists in this particular lab's fever dreams. They call it 'much better,' I call it grasping at straws to justify the whole exercise.
The 'details' are even more glorious. A single client, cached database – because that's exactly how your high-traffic, real-world systems are configured, right? No contention, no network latency, just pure, unadulterated synthetic bliss. We load 50 million rows, then do 160 million writes, 40 million more, then create three secondary indexes – all very specific, very meaningful operations, I'm sure. And let's not forget the thrilling suspense of 'waiting for N seconds after the step finishes to reduce variance.' Because nothing says 'robust methodology' like manually injecting idle time to smooth out the bumps.
Then we get to the alphabet soup of benchmarks: l.i0, l.x, qr100, qp500, qr1000. It's like they're just mashing the keyboard and calling it a workload. My personal favorite is the 'SLA failure' if the target insert rate isn't sustained during a synthetic test. News flash: an SLA failure that only exists in your test harness isn't a failure, it's a toy. No actual customer is calling you at 3 AM because your qr100
benchmark couldn't hit its imaginary insert rate.
And finally, the crowning achievement: relative QPS, meticulously color-coded like a preschooler's art project. Red for less than 0.97, green for greater than 1.03. So, if your performance changes by, say, 1.5% in either direction, it's just 'grey' – which, translated from corporate-speak, means "don't look at this, it's statistically insignificant noise we're desperately trying to spin." Oh, and let's not forget the glorious pronouncement: "Normally I summarize the summary but I don't do that here to save space." Because after pages of highly specific, utterly meaningless numerical gymnastics, that's where we decide to be concise.
So, what does this groundbreaking research mean for you, the actual developer or DBA out there? Absolutely nothing. Your production Postgres instance will continue to operate exactly as it did before, blissfully unaware of the thrilling 2% regression on a synthetic query in a cached environment. My prediction? In the next beta, they'll discover a 0.5% gain on a different, equally irrelevant metric, and we'll have to sit through this whole song and dance again. Just deploy the damn thing and hope for the best, because these 'insights' certainly aren't going to save your bacon.