| At some point you have too, you will never control 100% of the system between your servers and whoever or whatever will be interacting with it, and between your servers and whatever other services you have to work with. There might be smaller parts of your system you could say this, but unless your system is 100% airgapped, and all of the wiring, servers, etc are all put down by you and you are working with a LAN. There are not many systems that fall within that definition. As soon as you hit using the internet for communication you are reliant on your ISP working. Maybe you can have a redundant connection, but then you have to assume both of those will do their job and that they don't have a dependency that could bring them both down. So no, it's not absurd unless you are never going to the internet. You have to make the decisions on what your system relies on and what it can handle. I fully understand what this brought down, but again there are plenty of other instances where you assume an outside company is going to do their job. Looking back and saying, well maybe this was a bad idea because its an external dependency isn't helpful when we can point to any number of other external dependencies that may not have brought down as many systems but can just as easily bring down critical systems. |
- You need more than one ISP
- You need diverse Operating Systems and Databases
- You deploy in phases with canary releases
- You don't deploy on Fridays....
How difficult can it be?