This year at Sensu Summit, Fletcher Nichol and I gave a talk on systems architecture entitled "Pull, don't push: Architectures for monitoring and configuration in a microservices era." In this post, I'd like to reiterate and expand on some of the concepts in that presentation and make some more concrete recommendations for systems design in an era of complex distributed systems. In order to talk about good systems architecture, I first thought it would be instructive to examine good physical architecture – that is, buildings. When I think about enduring architectural innovations that resemble today's distributed computer systems, I can't help coming back to Montréal's Habitat 67 residential complex, designed by the Canadian architect Moshe Safdie for Expo 67.


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microservices,monitoring,software architecture,chef,sensu