Well, I probably bring up a duplicate question here, but I'm working on a chat system on a big social network. I'm wondering whether Node.js + Socket.IO bundle would handle the load, or I should stick to XMPP instead.
I personally have not, and without 100% of the userbase saturating it at one time on one server, it will scale fairly well.
However, you need to understand more about how node works before I can equitably say "yes, that will scale fine" because right now it's one process running on one CPU, and scheduling IO- eventing with the callbacks that rely on those events. So you're still upper bound at some point without doing something else in the backend. So in other words, the short answer is: Just use XMPP for now.
If you were integrating it into an existing node stack, then yes, I would encourage the use of node for a chat server.
If the other apps are written on XMPP versus Node, sure.
Every question that you have you should make a T chart and list the advantages on each side, or weigh the advantages of each against the disadvantages of each.
Kind of like how a scientist would evaluate two things ....
If I know the advantages of both sides, sure :) However, both XMPP and Node.js are new to me. Therefore, I would like some insights of people like you, who have experience on node to evaluate for me.
Another reason is that, building a simple application is... simple. But building a big application with thousands to millions of users is not something I could decide over night
Write your code well. Write it to be as simple as need be, but no simpler. Write it to be well read by other developers. Do not attempt to be fancy, do not attempt to make it complex or complicated. Be explicit where you should be explicit. In other words, write your app to be as right as it can be. When you have done that, and it works for one user, and two users, and five users, and ten users, then when you get to 10,000 users you will have the ability and the knowledge to help it scale.
4
But in all things, even if you should need a consultancy to help the application scale, so long as it is well written, and is able to be easily read by any other programmer, it will always be scalable.
Those are my words, but the thought is not mine. It comes from those with more experience than myself. It has no bearing on the language used, the underlying platform, or your choice of bedspread color. It is true.
No, it means, write the code to be as simple as it may, and no simpler.
Then it will scale
I promise you this. And when it comes time to scale to a million users, and the code is written well, and as simply as it may be written but no simpler, and it does not scale, then come back and find me, and I shall show you why it didn't scale.
@jcolebrand All the parts of node would involve "real-time" and "concurrent input/output", I doesn't really cover the latter
@SonTranNguyen It scales pretty well. Really depends how much scaling you need. If we're talking about 100k+ concurrent users at any time then go use erlang instead. If were talking about 20 concurrent users write it in whatever you feel comfortable with since everything scales that far (apart from maybe ASP.NET webforms)
Isnt XMPP a protocol?
as for node knockout I've been thinking about games and visual representations based on stackoverflow data.
1. A visual representation of the fastest gun in the west problem, some form of shooter populated with live stackexchange data in terms of questions.
2. A game that teaches about stackoverflow. This is limited by requiring advance text based pattern recognisition to determine whether questions and answers "match". However you can easily do something along the lines of "Teaching to recognise what a question is about" which is the first step to answering it by having some form of SO tag and question matching.
3. Visual representation of stackoverflow users answering questions. Basically playing a period of time for a user and all related questions/answers / other users.
Representing the act of answering questions as some kind of fight or flow. with questions (enemies) morphing over time based on votes and bounties and users "answering" the question in some graphical representation based on upvotes of answers. This should also show combined efforts of other users and also work in realtime rather then history
@yojimbo87 and any other system build around displaying the gamification of SO.
and sending messages attached with conversation topic tags
then listening on those tags to join into arbitary conversations
It would require powerful indexing / searching to find the conversation you want to talk about
and it would also require a solid system to reduce non-conversation topic related noise on a particular tag based channel
Tools such as easy conversation migration to a more topic specific channel along with taking conversation participants into that channel and self moderation are key
Do we want to bring in a 4th more senior developer for guidance / mentoring / consulting? I dont expect the seniors to put in most of the 48 hours, but some high level guidance could be useful
My assumption would be voice meetings followed by agreed periods of radio silence for constrated development followed by further voice meetings - repeat.
1. Do we want to win? 2. Do we want something fun / awesome / cool ? 3. Do we want something with further expansion possibility ? 4. Do we want something with monetizing possibility ?
So, um ... yeah. Work seems to intervene too often :p
Lemme sum up:
I saw that there was a lengthy discussion about what may be done.
I have not had time to read it yet
My skype id should be lunabyte or luna.byte. You can correlate it with the leftmost name here and if you can't do that, I certainly don't want to talk to you.
1. meh. First year, I'ld be just as happy to place or show instead.
2. yes. The code needs to be fun, although the application can just be "useful" instead.
3. Not really
4. No
@Raynos I feel like I keep compelling you to do that ;) It is the weakness of our generation.
so they have to be there when the game launches to get the full effect, but then if they come in at any point they see the same thing on all computers (to within a few seconds of correlation due to network lag)