LinkedIn, SoundCloud, Roblox and Bedrock join HAProxy open source and enterprise users to share real case studies of web performance, observability, and security at scaleWALTHAM, Mass., Nov. 02, 2022,
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This incredible milestone was achieved while maintaining sub-millisecond latency for the 99.99 percentiles
WALTHAM, Mass., April 21, 2021, today announced that HAProxy 2.3 tested on a single Arm Neoverse-based AWS Graviton2 instance scales and achieves 2.04 million requests per second. While the tests demonstrate that the load balancer can scale to an incredible level if run on very powerful servers with significant network bandwidth, it s also possible to run on much more modest hardware while still achieving excellent results.
To learn more, read the HAProxy blog post:
HAProxy Forwards Over 2 Million HTTP Requests per Second on a Single Arm-based AWS Graviton2 Instance This proves that the radical move to multithreading engaged four years ago and the determination to progressively attack all the remaining bottlenecks was the right strategic move for the project at an era dominated by multi-core CPUs: it now performs better than ever without all the functional limitations
HAProxy Reaches Over 2 Million Requests per Second on a Single Arm-based AWS Graviton2 Instance
This incredible milestone was achieved while maintaining sub-millisecond latency for the 99.99 percentiles
WALTHAM, Mass., April 21, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) HAProxy Technologies,
provider of the world s fastest and most widely used software load balancer, today announced that HAProxy 2.3 tested on a single Arm® Neoverse™-based AWS Graviton2 instance scales and achieves 2.04 million requests per second. While the tests demonstrate that the load balancer can scale to an incredible level if run on very powerful servers with significant network bandwidth, it’s also possible to run on much more modest hardware while still achieving excellent results.
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Blazing a trail for safely integrating drones into the national airspace, a team from NASAâs Ames Research Center on Oct. 19 flew four uncrewed aircraft commonly called drones at Reno-Stead Airport in Reno, Nev.
The âout of sightâ tests, led by NASA in coordination with the Federal Aviation Administration and several partners, were the latest waypoint in solving the challenge of drones flying beyond the visual line of sight of their human operators without endangering other aircraft. They were part of  NASAâs Unmanned Aircraft Systems traffic management research platform, led by Parimal Kopardekar, manager of NASAâs Safe Autonomous Systems Operations project.