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System Design Guide for Software Professionals

You're reading from   System Design Guide for Software Professionals Build scalable solutions – from fundamental concepts to cracking top tech company interviews

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781805124993
Length 384 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Dhirendra Sinha Dhirendra Sinha
Author Profile Icon Dhirendra Sinha
Dhirendra Sinha
Tejas Chopra Tejas Chopra
Author Profile Icon Tejas Chopra
Tejas Chopra
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Toc

Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Foundations of System Design
2. Chapter 1: Basics of System Design FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Distributed System Attributes 4. Chapter 3: Distributed Systems Theorems and Data Structures 5. Part 2: Core Components of Distributed Systems
6. Chapter 4: Distributed Systems Building Blocks: DNS, Load Balancers, and Application Gateways 7. Chapter 5: Design and Implementation of System Components –Databases and Storage 8. Chapter 6: Distributed Cache 9. Chapter 7: Pub/Sub and Distributed Queues 10. Part 3: System Design in Practice
11. Chapter 8: Design and Implementation of System Components: API, Security, and Metrics 12. Chapter 9: System Design – URL Shortener 13. Chapter 10: System Design – Proximity Service 14. Chapter 11: Designing a Service Like Twitter 15. Chapter 12: Designing a Service Like Instagram 16. Chapter 13: Designing a Service Like Google Docs 17. Chapter 14: Designing a Service Like Netflix 18. Chapter 15: Tips for Interviewees 19. Chapter 16: System Design Cheat Sheet 20. Index

A hotel room booking example

Before we jump into the different attributes of a distributed system, let’s set some context in terms of how reads and writes happen.

Let’s consider an example of a hotel room booking application (Figure 2.1). A high-level design diagram helps us understand how writes and reads happen:

Figure 2.1 – Hotel room booking request flow

Figure 2.1 – Hotel room booking request flow

As shown in Figure 2.1, a user (u1) is booking a room (r1) in a hotel and another user is trying to see the availability of the same room (r1) in that hotel. Let’s say we have three replicas of the reservations database (db1, db2, and db3). There can be two ways the writes get replicated to the other replicas: The app server itself writes to all replicas or the database has replication support and the writes get replicated without explicit writes by the app server.

Let’s look at the write and the read flows:

Write flow:

User (u1) books a room (r1). The...

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