You gotta push if you wanna pull

(morling.dev)

27 points | by ingve 7 days ago ago

8 comments

  • idk_edwin 4 days ago ago

    It's funny how "push vs pull" always sounds like a technical choice, yet it usually exposes the social wiring of a team more than anything else. When every system expects to be pulled from, you start to see who actually depends on whom, and where the real bottlenecks live. The post captures that quiet truth that architecture isn't just code, it's how people negotiate responsibility.

  • darth_avocado 4 days ago ago

    The biggest driver for push vs pull in my experience is “who does the work”. If I need data and I have to ask 7 different teams to “push”, it ain’t happening.

  • cognomano 4 days ago ago

    So… caches. The unfortunate reality of high used systems.

    • cwillu 3 days ago ago

      Or indexes, which are after all a structured way of duplicating data for performance, sometimes so much so that they entirely replace the actual table row lookup.

      • gunnarmorling 3 days ago ago

        Yepp, making exactly that same point in the post:

        > This is why we have indexes in databases, which, if you squint a little, are just another kind of materialized view, at least in their covering form.

    • samdoesnothing 4 days ago ago

      Yeah that was a lot of words to say caching is needed sometimes.

      As always it's an engineering decision full of tradeoffs. You should never duplicate your data, except when you need to...etc etc.

  • tedyoung 4 days ago ago
  • mawadev 4 days ago ago

    ... and don't forget to flush!