Testing AI-Infused Apps: A Dual-Layer Framework for AI Quality Assurance
Why Round-Robin Won't Save You: Load Balancing Challenges in Data Streaming Services With Heterogeneous Traffic
Platform Engineering and DevOps
Platform engineering and DevOps are merging as organizations scale, modernize, and push to reduce cognitive load across increasingly complex systems. What began as fragmented internal tooling has evolved into Platform-as-a-Product thinking, where internal developer platforms (IDPs), automation pipelines, and golden paths provide the backbone of modern DevOps workflows. Platform teams, DevOps engineers, security teams, and SREs are now working together to deliver consistent, secure, and self-service experiences that improve developer productivity and satisfaction and reinforce operational reliability.This report examines how platform engineering is reshaping DevOps by standardizing environments, unifying toolchains, and shifting repetitive tasks into automated workflows. We explore how teams are implementing developer experience (DevEx) metrics, rethinking CI/CD pipelines, and leveraging AI-driven automation to optimize infrastructure performance and enhance delivery velocity. As enterprises link platform health to business outcomes, measuring ROI and platform adoption is becoming a core initiative.
Shipping Production-Grade AI Agents
Threat Modeling Core Practices
A dashboard can look completely correct, while the reporting it shows is wrong, and that makes it one of the most difficult failures to detect in analytics engineering because nothing visibly breaks. The pipeline runs on time, the warehouse table loads without errors, the scheduled checks pass, and the dashboard opens as expected, but the metric on the screen can still be wrong enough to trigger a long investigation. In many cases, the data itself is not the problem, because the issue sits inside the metric logic, where a filter may have been removed, a join may have changed the grain, a date field may have shifted from order_date to created_at, or a refund rule may have been missed. This is the testing gap many analytics teams still carry. We test tables, schemas, uniqueness, relationships, accepted values, row counts, and source availability, and those checks matter, but a business metric is more than a table. It is a calculation wrapped in assumptions, and when those assumptions change quietly, the pipeline can stay green while the number becomes misleading. Good Data Does Not Guarantee a Good Metric Take a simple monthly revenue metric. SQL SELECT date_trunc('month', order_date) AS revenue_month, sum(order_amount) AS gross_revenue FROM orders WHERE order_status = 'completed' GROUP BY 1; This query looks safe because it is short, readable, and common, but it depends on several assumptions that are easy to overlook during normal development. Metric componentHidden assumptionorder_dateRevenue belongs to the business event datesum(order_amount)Revenue is measured as money, not order countorder_status = 'completed'Pending, cancelled, and failed orders should not countMonthly groupingReporting uses calendar month boundariesSource grainOne row in orders represents one orderNo additional joinThe calculation is not multiplied by another table A standard test suite might check that order_id is unique, order_amount is not null, order_date exists, and the source table arrived within the expected load window, but those checks do not prove the revenue metric still means what the team agreed it should mean. Now change the date field. SQL SELECT date_trunc('month', created_at) AS revenue_month, sum(order_amount) AS gross_revenue FROM orders WHERE order_status = 'completed' GROUP BY 1; The query still runs, the output still contains a month and a number, the dashboard still refreshes, and the schema still matches expectations, but the metric has changed. It now reports revenue by record creation date instead of order date, and while that difference may be small in some domains, it can distort reporting in systems where orders are delayed, imported, amended, or backfilled. Table tests can confirm that the ingredients exist, but they cannot always confirm that the recipe is still correct. What Is Metric Mutation Testing? Mutation testing is a known software testing technique where code is deliberately changed, and the test suite is expected to catch the change. If the modified version survives, the test suite may be too weak. Metric mutation testing applies the same idea to analytics engineering, but instead of mutating application code, we create deliberately wrong versions of business metrics and then run our checks to see whether those wrong versions fail. The question becomes: Would our test suite catch this believable but incorrect metric? A metric mutation should not be random damage, because the useful mutations are the realistic ones that engineers, analysts, or modeling layers could introduce during normal development. MutationWhat changesWhy it mattersRemove a business filterIncludes cancelled, pending, or failed recordsThe number increases but still looks plausibleSwap the date fieldUses created_at instead of order_dateReporting shifts between periodsAdd a one-to-many joinMultiplies rows before aggregationRevenue or counts become inflatedRemove distinctCounts duplicate users or ordersEngagement metrics become overstatedChange a time windowIncludes incomplete or future periodsTrend analysis becomes unreliableAlter null handlingConverts missing values to zeroUnknown data becomes treated as real behaviour The purpose is to test the strength of the analytics testing layer, because if a wrong metric survives, the team has found a blind spot before users find it. Example: Mutating a Revenue Metric Start with the intended version. SQL with revenue as (select date_trunc('month', order_date) as revenue_month, sum(order_amount) as gross_revenue from orders where order_status = 'completed' group by 1) select * from revenue; Now, create a mutation by removing the status filter. SQL with revenue as (select date_trunc('month', order_date) as revenue_month, sum(order_amount) as gross_revenue from orders group by 1) select * from revenue; This version includes all order statuses, and if canceled or failed orders still have an amount, the metric increases. Even though the query does not fail, the model still builds, and the dashboard still works. A metric behavior test should detect the issue. SQL with expected as (select date_trunc('month', order_date) as revenue_month, sum(order_amount) as expected_revenue from orders where order_status = 'completed' group by 1), reported as (select revenue_month, gross_revenue from metric_revenue_monthly) select r.revenue_month, r.gross_revenue, e.expected_revenue, abs(r.gross_revenue - e.expected_revenue) as difference from reported r join expected e on r.revenue_month = e.revenue_month where abs(r.gross_revenue - e.expected_revenue) > 0.01; This test is not asking whether the table is loaded or whether a column exists, because it is checking whether the reported number still matches the intended business definition. Now consider a grain mutation. SQL SELECT date_trunc('month', o.order_date) AS revenue_month, sum(o.order_amount) AS gross_revenue FROM orders o JOIN order_items i ON o.order_id = i.order_id WHERE o.order_status = 'completed' GROUP BY 1; This query can multiply order values when one order has multiple items, and the result may still look reasonable, especially if the increase is not extreme. A grain preservation test can expose this. SQL WITH metric_base AS ( SELECT o.order_id, o.order_amount FROM orders o JOIN order_items i ON o.order_id = i.order_id WHERE o.order_status = 'completed' ) SELECT order_id, count(*) AS rows_after_join FROM metric_base GROUP BY order_id HAVING count(*) > 1; If this returns rows, the metric base no longer has one row per order, and while that may be intentional in some models, it should not happen accidentally. Metric Mutation Matrix A practical way to start is to build a mutation matrix for each important metric, so the team can connect realistic failure modes with the tests that should detect them. Metric areaMutation to introduceTest that should failFilter logicRemove completed status conditionReconciliation against completed-order revenueEvent timeReplace order_date with created_atPeriod boundary comparisonGrainJoin order-level data to item-level rowsGrain preservation testAggregationReplace sum() with count()Expected range or reconciliation checkDistinct logicRemove distinct from user countDuplicate sensitivity testExclusionsInclude test or internal accountsControl-record exclusion testBoundaryInclude current incomplete monthClosed-period validationNull handlingConvert missing values to zeroNull behaviour check This matrix gives the testing strategy structure, because instead of adding random checks, each test is tied to a known failure mode. For example, an active user metric has a different risk profile. SQL SELECT date_trunc('week', event_time) AS activity_week, count(distinct user_id) AS weekly_active_users FROM product_events WHERE event_name IN ('login', 'purchase', 'create_project') AND is_internal_user = false GROUP BY 1; Potential mutations include changing count(distinct user_id) to count(user_id), removing the internal-user exclusion, replacing event_time with loaded_at, or expanding the event filter to include every event type. A simple upper-bound test could catch some bad variants. SQL SELECT activity_week, weekly_active_users FROM metric_weekly_active_users WHERE weekly_active_users > ( SELECT count(distinct user_id) FROM users WHERE is_internal_user = false ); This test will not catch every possible mistake, but that is fine, because metric mutation testing is not about one perfect check. It is about making hidden failure modes visible enough that the team can improve the test layer deliberately. Measuring Mutation Detection Rate The strongest part of this pattern is that it creates a measurable signal. Instead of reporting how many tests exist, teams can report how many realistic wrong versions those tests catch. Mutation Detection Rate = Mutations caught by tests / Total mutations introduced A report might look like this. StageMutations introducedMutations caughtDetection rateExisting table tests only20840%Added reconciliation checks201470%Added grain and boundary tests201890%Added metric behaviour tests201995% This is more useful than saying the project has 80 tests, because a large test suite can still miss the one logic change that matters. Mutation detection rate focuses on whether the tests catch realistic metric defects. The survived mutations are especially useful because they show exactly where the metric remains under-protected. Survived mutationWhat it revealscreated_at used instead of order_dateEvent-time logic is not protectedRefunded orders includedExclusion rules are not testeddistinct removed from user countDuplicate sensitivity is weakCurrent incomplete month includedTime boundary checks are missing Each survived mutation becomes a new test requirement, which turns the exercise into a practical feedback loop rather than a testing vanity metric. A Lightweight Implementation Pattern This pattern does not need a full platform at the start, because a small implementation can use structured metric definitions, a mutation catalog, temporary models, and CI checks. A metric definition might look like this. YAML metric: gross_revenue model: metric_revenue_monthly grain: month source: orders event_date: order_date aggregation: sum(order_amount) filters: - order_status = 'completed' exclusions: - test orders - refunded orders expected_behaviour: - must reconcile to completed-order total - must not include future periods - must preserve order grain before aggregation A mutation catalog can describe the failure modes. YAML mutations: - name: remove_completed_filter type: filter expected_result: fail_reconciliation - name: use_created_at_instead_of_order_date type: event_time expected_result: fail_period_boundary_check - name: duplicate_orders_with_item_join type: grain expected_result: fail_grain_check - name: include_refunded_orders type: exclusion expected_result: fail_control_record_check This can run outside production, while mutated models can be created in a temporary schema, tested, reported, and then discarded. Running Metric Mutation Tests in CI For a dbt-style workflow, the CI process could look like this. StepAction1Build the normal metric model2Run standard dbt tests3Generate mutated metric SQL into a temporary schema4Run metric behaviour tests against each mutated version5Expect each mutated version to fail at least one relevant test6Record caught and survived mutations7Fail or warn the build depending on policy In early adoption, it may be better to warn rather than block, while critical metrics can move to stricter enforcement once the team understands the pattern and has tuned the mutation catalog. Tiny Python Mutation Runner A basic mutation generator can be small. This example mutates SQL strings directly, and although a production version would need safer parsing, templating, and warehouse execution, it shows the core idea. Python from dataclasses import dataclass from typing import Callable @dataclass class Mutation: name: str description: str apply: Callable[[str], str] def remove_completed_filter(sql: str) -> str: return sql.replace("where order_status = 'completed'", "") def use_created_at(sql: str) -> str: return sql.replace("order_date", "created_at") def change_sum_to_count(sql: str) -> str: return sql.replace("sum(order_amount)", "count(order_amount)") base_sql = """ select date_trunc('month', order_date) as revenue_month, sum(order_amount) as gross_revenue from orders where order_status = 'completed' group by 1 """ mutations = [ Mutation( name="remove_completed_filter", description="Includes non-completed orders", apply=remove_completed_filter, ), Mutation( name="use_created_at", description="Uses record creation date instead of order date", apply=use_created_at, ), Mutation( name="change_sum_to_count", description="Counts orders instead of summing revenue", apply=change_sum_to_count, ), ] for mutation in mutations: print(f"\n-- mutation: {mutation.name}") print(f"-- reason: {mutation.description}") print(mutation.apply(base_sql)) A simple report could look like this. Plain Text Metric: gross_revenue remove_completed_filter caught use_created_at survived change_sum_to_count caught duplicate_order_join caught include_refunded_orders survived Detection rate: 3/5 = 60% The survived mutations are not a failure of the idea, because they are the reason to run it in the first place. They show where the metric is under-protected and where the next test should be added. Where This Fits in the Analytics Stack Metric mutation testing does not replace existing checks, because it sits above them and tests whether the existing validation layer can catch believable logic mistakes. LayerMain purposeSource testsCheck raw input reliabilityModel testsValidate transformed structuresRelationship testsCheck entity integritySemantic definitionsCentralise metric meaningMetric behaviour testsValidate expected calculation behaviourMetric mutation testsTest whether the testing layer catches realistic logic errors This is especially useful when metrics are reused through dashboards, semantic layers, notebooks, reverse ETL jobs, APIs, or AI-assisted workflows. The more widely a metric is reused, the more important its definition becomes. A semantic layer can make a metric consistent everywhere, but if the metric logic is wrong, it also makes the wrong number consistent everywhere. When Not to Use This Metric mutation testing should not be applied blindly to every field and every dashboard card, because that would create noise and slow the team down without adding much protection. It is most useful for metrics that influence important reporting, operational decisions, compliance workflows, financial analysis, product measurement, or machine learning features. Good candidatePoor candidateRevenueLow-usage vanity metricChurnTemporary exploration queryActive usersOne-off analysisConversion rateInternal debug countSLA breach rateNon-critical dashboard decorationRetentionDraft metric still being defined This pattern also works best when the metric has a clear definition, because if nobody can agree on the grain, filters, date logic, or exclusions, mutation testing will expose the ambiguity but cannot resolve it alone. Final Thoughts A healthy pipeline tells you that data moved, a normal test suite tells you that the structure looks valid, and a stronger analytics testing layer tells you that the number still behaves like the metric it claims to be. Metric mutation testing adds one more question: If someone introduced a realistic logic mistake tomorrow, would our system catch it? That question matters because many analytics failures do not look like failures at first. They look like ordinary numbers. While the dashboard refreshes, the chart renders, and the table has rows. The issue only appears when someone realizes the calculation no longer means what everyone thought it meant. Good data can still produce a bad metric, and the next step for analytics engineering is not simply more tests, but better tests that protect the meaning of business numbers.
AI agents have a memory problem. Not the kind that we all hear daily — hallucination, wrong answers, but a much quieter and fundamental problem. When you start a new conversation with the agent, it forgets who you are. It doesn't know what you have already worked on, what you have clarified multiple times across sessions, or what is common across all the sessions. You start from scratch every single time. While this does sound good in a way, in case you weren't getting what you wanted out of the agent, it does pose some challenges. LLMs are capable of maintaining a rich context of a conversation. The problem is more architectural: most of the agents designed the scope to include all state files, memory, and history into a single thread. When that thread ends, so does the state. This results in an intelligent agent but amnesiac across sessions. LangChain's deepagents have a solution with three components that work together: StoreBackend – stores files outside the conversation thread in LangGraph's BaseStoreCompositeBackend – routes specific file paths to persistent storage while also keeping everything else ephemeralMemoryMiddleware – loads memory into the agent's context automatically before any run. By the end of this article, you will learn how to create a working personal assistant remembering your preferences, provides feedback across sessions, has per-user isolation, and a clear path from local SQLite to production Postgres. Why Persistent Memory Matters for AI Agents Consider a case of a customer support agent. A customer chats with the agent, and just like how they converse with a normal human, they try to bring up something that they brought up during the last conversation, but the agent has no idea about this. This creates friction and a poor user experience. There are other such scenarios, like a coding assistant that does not remember your team's conventions and coding patterns and gives generic answers, or a personal assistant that asks for your timezone every time the agent is asked to schedule a meeting. LangChain's deepagents approach is notable because it doesn't require a vector database, an embeddings pipeline, or any kind of retrieval step at query time. Memory is a pure file. Loading memory means reading a file. Agent updates it the same way it edits any file, just like a human. The complexity comes in the routing and persistence layer, which CompositeBackend and Storebackend handle independently of the agentic loop. The Problem Conversations are stateless by default. In deep agents, every file that the agent reads or writes goes through a backend. The default is StateBackend. This stores files inside the LangGraph conversation state, which is scoped to a thread_id. Starting a new conversation? new thread_id. New state. Files gone. The fix requires separating two distinct storage concerns: Working files, scratch notes -> scope is usually session -> this shouldn't be in the memory.User profile, preferences -> this is scoped at the user level -> this should survive in the memory. Deepagents handles this with three cooperating primitives: StoreBackend, CompositeBackend, and MemoryMiddleware, and there are two storage primitives -> conversation thread, which is scoped to thread_id, and BaseStore, which is a key-value store that exists independently of threads. StateBackend reads and writes from the conversation state. StoreBackend reads and writes from BaseStore. The key difference is where the agent reads from. Setting Up the Persistent Memory Assistant Installation uv add deepagents langchain-anthropic langgraph Backend Wiring Python from deepagents.backends.composite import CompositeBackend from deepagents.backends.state import StateBackend from deepagents.backends.store import StoreBackend from langgraph.store.memory import InMemoryStore store = InMemoryStore() store_backend = StoreBackend( store=store, namespace=lambda rt: (f"user:{user_id}", "memories"), ) backend = CompositeBackend( default=StateBackend(), routes={"/memories/": store_backend}, ) The namespace lambda is what can isolate users. Consider a case where there are two users: Alice and Bob. Alice's memory lives at ("user:alice", "memories") and Bob's at ("user:bob", "memories"). Agent Creation Python from deepagents import create_deep_agent from langchain_anthropic import ChatAnthropic from langgraph.checkpoint.memory import InMemorySaver agent = create_deep_agent( model=ChatAnthropic(model="claude-sonnet-4-6"), system_prompt=SYSTEM_PROMPT, memory=["/memories/profile.md"], backend=backend, checkpointer=InMemorySaver(), ) The memory parameter is all MemoryMiddleware needs. It reads that path along with the configured backend. At the start of the session, the content is cached in state and is then injected into the system prompt before model calls within the session. If the file does not exist, then it injects "(no memory loaded)" so the agent knows to create a new one. Architecture The System Prompt Contract The agent needs to know when to update the memory and how to update this memory. The system prompt decides this contract: Python SYSTEM_PROMPT = """You are a personal assistant with persistent memory. Your persistent memory file lives at /memories/profile.md and survives across all conversations. When to update memory: - User shares name, role, or background - User mentions ongoing projects or goals - User states a preference (language, tools, response format) - User corrects you or gives explicit feedback How to update: - First conversation: write_file to create /memories/profile.md - Later conversations: edit_file to update it Keep the file concise — bullet points, not prose. Never store credentials. """ MemoryMiddleware also appends its own guidelines, which include heuristics for what not to save. Multi-User Isolation Now you might be wondering. Having this agent sounds amazing, but how to scale it for multiple people? Do we need to create separate instances for each user? The answer is no!. The namespace lambda is the only thing that separates users: namespace=lambda rt: (f"user:{user_id}", "memories") In the CLI, user_id is a flag. In LangGraph deployment, this can be derived from the request context. namespace=lambda rt: (rt.server_info.user.identity, "memories") Different Storing Backends In this example, I experimented with in-memory store, SQLite, and PostgreSQL. Python #In-memory (demos): from langgraph.store.memory import InMemoryStore store = InMemoryStore() #Resets when the process exits. Good for demo runs. #SQLite (local development, survives restarts): import sqlite3 from langgraph.store.sqlite import SqliteStore conn = sqlite3.connect("assistant_memory.db", isolation_level=None) store = SqliteStore(conn) store.setup() #Note: isolation_level=None (autocommit) is required by SqliteStore. #PostgreSQL (production, multi-instance): import os from langgraph.store.postgres import PostgresStore with PostgresStore.from_conn_string(os.environ["DATABASE_URL"]) as store: store.setup() #Set DATABASE_URL to a standard Postgres connection string. Advantages LangChain's deepagents framework provides several advantages, such as: Cross-session continuity – memory injected into the system prompt directly - no search, no embedding lookup, no extra latency.Per-user isolation – easier namespacing using StoreBackend.Explicit, inspectable memory – it's a plain markdown file. You can read it, edit it, and audit it without any special tooling.Adaptable with existing middleware – MemoryMiddleware is part of the middleware stack along with permission checks and logging. Adding persistent memory is additive and not a total rewrite. Disadvantages While there are several advantages to using LangChain's deepagents, it does come with some limitations: Context window consumption – Since the memory files are injected into the system prompt every time, it could become really large, and it could exceed the context budget. The system prompt needs to be clear and concise on what to save and what not to save. Agent manages its own memory – A poorly prompted agent may over-save, under-save, or save the wrong things. The system prompt contract is very important.Not suitable for large-scale memory – For a compact user-profile, this sounds perfect — a few hundred words. But applications that need to remember several past interactions, a RAG-based approach with a vector store makes much more sense. It doesn't scale to large memory corpora. Extending the Pattern Multiple memory files — separate concerns: Python memory=[ "/memories/profile.md", # identity and background "/memories/projects.md", # active work "/memories/preferences.md", # style and tool preferences ] Write-scoped permissions — prevent the agent from writing outside /memories/: Python from deepagents import FilesystemPermission permissions=[ FilesystemPermission(operations=["write"], paths=["/memories/**"]), FilesystemPermission(operations=["write"], paths=["/**"], mode="deny"), ] Shared team context alongside per-user memory: Python backend = CompositeBackend( default=StateBackend(), routes={ "/memories/": StoreBackend(store=store, namespace=lambda rt: (f"user:{user_id}", "memories")), "/shared/": StoreBackend(store=store, namespace=("team:engineering", "shared")), }, ) Running the Example Shell git clone -b feat/permissions-execute-task https://github.com/NinaadRao/deepagents cd examples/persistent-memory-assistant uv venv && source .venv/bin/activate uv pip install -e . export ANTHROPIC_API_KEY=your_key # Built-in two-session demo python assistant.py --demo # Interactive with SQLite persistence python assistant.py --store sqlite --user alice "I prefer Python and FastAPI" python assistant.py --store sqlite --user alice "What do you know about me?" # Different user — isolated memory python assistant.py --store sqlite --user bob "I build data pipelines in Spark" python assistant.py --store sqlite --user alice "What do you know about me?" # Alice only Conclusion Most agent memory problems trace back to two things: conversation and the user's context. Keeping them separate in the storage layer and not the application code is what makes the solution clean. The three-component design in deep agents, i.e., StoreBackend + CompositeBackend + MemoryMiddleware, handles this without coupling any layer to the others. You can change the model, store, or routing rules independently of each other, which makes it a good use case for abstraction.
It has been one of those weeks where the diff is bigger than the headline. The headline is short — Codename One now ships modern native themes: an iOS "liquid glass" look and an Android Material 3 look, bundled into the iOS and Android ports, on by default in the Playground, and selectable from a brand new menu in the simulator. The diff behind that headline is several thousand lines across the platform ports, the simulator, the GUI plumbing, and a small army of screenshot tests. What is Codename One? Codename One is an open-source framework for building native iOS, Android, desktop, and web apps from a single Java or Kotlin codebase. Learn more at codenameone.com. The theme behind the work is simple: Codename One should look modern out of the box on every platform we ship to, and it should feel fast. Almost everything in the past week of commits is in service of one of those two goals. Try It Right Now in the Playground The easiest way to see any of this is the Playground. The Playground now defaults to iOS Modern when the device toggle is set to iPhone and Android Material 3 when it is set to Android, in both light and dark mode. No setup, no pom.xml, no build hints — just open the page, drop in any of the standard components, and the modern look is what you get. If the past releases of Codename One looked dated to you, the Playground is where to start. The simulator is the second-easiest place. We will get to that. The New Native Themes For most of Codename One's life, the iOS native theme has been the venerable iOS 7 flat theme, and the Android native theme has been Holo Light. Both still ship — backward compatibility has always been one of our most important goals — but they are no longer where we want a brand new app to start. We spent the bulk of this week building two new themes that target current platform aesthetics: iOS Modern – Apple system colors (accent #007aff light / #0a84ff dark, grouped-form surfaces, the system separator palette), pill borders for tabs, an iOS-Settings-style MultiButton, CHECK_CIRCLE-style checkbox glyphs, and translucent surfaces for Dialog and TabsContainer so they read as glass-frosted on top of whatever is behind them. It is not a real UIVisualEffectView backdrop — that is a port-side primitive we have not built yet — but the look is much closer to the iOS 26 vibe than anything we have shipped before.Android Material 3 – the Material 3 baseline tonal palette (primary #6750a4 light / #d0bcff dark, surface-container tiers, elevated containers approximated tonally because real elevation drop-shadows are still on the to-do list), plus all the Material density and padding choices — Roboto-ish proportions, a top-tab bar with the underline-by-color treatment, the standard square checkbox glyph. Each theme covers the usual ~25 UIIDs: base (Component, Form, ContentPane, Container), typography (Label, SecondaryLabel, TertiaryLabel, SpanLabel*), buttons (Button, RaisedButton, FlatButton with .pressed and .disabled), text input, selection controls, toolbar, tabs, side menu, list, MultiButton, dialog/sheet, FAB, and all the supporting separator and popup pieces. Both themes have full light and dark coverage. The shipping CSS sources sit in the repo at native-themes/ios-modern/theme.css and native-themes/android-material/theme.css for anyone who wants to read what each UIID is doing. iOS Modern This is the ShowcaseTheme capture from the new screenshot suite, run on iOS in light and dark. Same Form, same components, swap Display.setDarkMode(...) and re-resolve. The form is built like this: Java Container row = new Container(BoxLayout.x()); row.add(new Button("Default")); Button raised = new Button("Raised"); raised.setUIID("RaisedButton"); row.add(raised); form.add(row); TextField tf = new TextField("[email protected]"); form.add(tf); Container toggles = new Container(BoxLayout.x()); CheckBox cb = new CheckBox("Remember me"); cb.setSelected(true); toggles.add(cb); RadioButton rb = new RadioButton("Agree"); rb.setSelected(true); toggles.add(rb); form.add(toggles); SpanLabel body = new SpanLabel("Body copy …"); That gives you the full picture on one screen: The Default button uses the stock Button UIID. The Raised button uses RaisedButton, which cn1-derives from Button and adds a tinted pill on top of the iOS system blue — that is the iOS Modern accent in both modes.The TextField is a single rounded-rect surface with the iOS system gray fill, the same shape Apple uses in Settings.CheckBox and RadioButton use the new optional @checkBoxCheckedIconInt / @radioCheckedIconInt theme constants to swap to CHECK_CIRCLE / CHECK_CIRCLE_OUTLINE glyphs — Reminders-app aesthetic on iOS, while Android keeps the standard square check.The SpanLabel body uses the theme's base font and inherits transparent backgrounds, so it never paints over a translucent parent. The full-screen source is DarkLightShowcaseThemeScreenshotTest.java. Android Material 3 Same ShowcaseTheme source on Android. The Material 3 baseline palette gives Default the primary container color and Raised the elevated-surface tone, with the dark variant flipping the relationship correctly via the dark color-role mapping. Padding and font sizing follow Material density, which you can see in how compact the same Form lays out compared to iOS. Translucent Surfaces This is the DialogTheme capture against the screenshot suite's textured diagonal-stripe backdrop. The backdrop is intentional — it lets reviewers see whether anything that is supposed to be translucent actually is. The iOS Modern Dialog uses an rgba surface fill (0.78 alpha in light, 0.95 in dark — dark needs more opacity because bright stripes bleed through) and its DialogBody, DialogTitle, ContentPane, CommandArea sub-UIIDs are transparent, so the rounded corners read cleanly. The same trick is applied to TabsContainer and the iOS MultiButton. Runtime Palette Overrides The native theme is meant to be a starting point — you can layer your own palette on top without forking the theme. Above is the PaletteOverrideTheme capture: the base is iOS Modern, but the test layers a magenta palette on top at runtime via UIManager.addThemeProps(...). RaisedButton, FlatButton, the disabled tone, and the body-copy span all pick up the override in both light and dark — the override seam works at the resource-bundle layer, exactly the same mechanism a user theme uses to override the native theme on a real app. In the Simulator Three pieces, all live: Themes are bundled. The simulator jar-with-dependencies includes both modern themes alongside the four legacy themes (iPhoneTheme, iOS7Theme, androidTheme, android_holo_light) at the root of the jar. The simulator can pick any one of them at runtime without touching the skin repo.A new "Native Theme" menu. Right next to the Skins menu, there is now a Native Theme menu with a radio group for the six themes, plus "Auto" and "Use skin's embedded theme". Selecting one writes the simulatorNativeTheme Preference, flips the simulator-reload flag, and disposes the current window so the skin reloader kicks in with the new theme. You can sit on a single skin and flip through every native theme in seconds.Build hints know about it. The new nativeTheme, ios.themeMode, and and.themeMode build hints are registered with the simulator's Build Hints UI on launch — labels, types, value lists, descriptions, the lot. (The legacy keys cn1.nativeTheme and cn1.androidTheme are still honored for back-compat.) Set them in the Build Hints dialog, in codenameone_settings.properties, or via -D system properties; they flow through to the device build and the simulator, both. The "Auto" choice in the Native Theme menu defers to those build hints — set ios.themeMode=modern in your project's settings and "Auto" previews iOS Modern; flip the same project to ios.themeMode=ios7 and "Auto" previews iOS 7. The explicit menu entries (iOS Modern, iOS 7, etc.) override the hints regardless. -Dcn1.forceSimulatorTheme is still honored as the highest-priority override; pick "Use skin's embedded theme" to bypass the framework theme entirely and get whatever the skin shipped with. On Devices The opt-in is the same on iOS and Android. The platform knobs follow a single naming pattern — ios.themeMode and and.themeMode — and accept modern / liquid / auto / ios7 / flat on iOS, modern / material / auto / hololight / legacy on Android. There is a single cross-platform shortcut, nativeTheme=modern, which the iOS builder consults when ios.themeMode is unset and which the Android port reads at runtime as a default for and.themeMode. The legacy aliases cn1.androidTheme and cn1.nativeTheme are still honored for back-compat, as is and.hololight=true. The default for an existing app stays on legacy on every platform. We do not flip a 15-year-old app's look without an opt-in. New apps generated from the initializr ship with nativeTheme=modern, ios.themeMode=modern, and and.themeMode=modern already set in codenameone_settings.properties, so a brand new project starts with the modern themes preselected. The Playground does the same, and Playground project downloads carry the same defaults into the generated codenameone_settings.properties. The HTML5 port has the runtime support for the modern themes, but does not bundle them with user apps yet — that is one of the loose ends we want to close in the next round. Sticky Headers The other piece of look-and-feel that we want to highlight is StickyHeaderContainer, which finally has a proper home in the framework. It is the iOS-contacts-list / sectioned-material-list component: scroll past a section boundary, and the previous header is replaced by the next one. New this week, the swap is animated. A directional slide moves the outgoing header up on a forward scroll and down on a reverse scroll, or you can pick a cross-fade. Above is a six-frame sweep from the screenshot test — the user scrolls through sections A, B, C, D, E, and the pinned header recolors to whichever section is currently active at the top of the viewport. The API is small. Build the container, register sections with addSection(header, content), configure the transition style and duration, and add it to a Form: Java StickyHeaderContainer sticky = new StickyHeaderContainer(); sticky.setTransitionStyle(StickyHeaderContainer.TRANSITION_SLIDE); sticky.setTransitionDurationMillis(250); for (char c = 'A'; c <= 'Z'; c++) { Label header = new Label("" + c, "StickyHeader"); Container items = new Container(BoxLayout.y()); for (int i = 0; i < 5; i++) { items.add(new Label(c + " entry " + i)); } sticky.addSection(header, items); } TRANSITION_SLIDE is the default. TRANSITION_FADE cross-fades the outgoing header on top of the incoming one. TRANSITION_NONE keeps the prior instantaneous swap if you want it. Issue #4807 for the original request. How We Test This Every screenshot in this post is captured by a test that runs the app on a real iOS device, an Android emulator, and headless Chrome, then diffs each capture against a stored golden image. The diff is the test — if the rendered pixels drift, the run fails. For animations, the test grabs a series of frames over a fixed-duration transition, then composites them into a single index image. That is how the dual-appearance shots end up as one side-by-side picture per test: … and how the sticky-header animation ends up as a six-frame strip stitched into a GIF: If you want to read the source, the suite lives at scripts/hellocodenameone/common/src/main/java/com/codenameone/examples/hellocodenameone/tests/. Bugs and Misc Features From This Week The theme work was the loudest thing this week, but plenty of other commits landed alongside it: SIMD large-allocation fallback. The SIMD path on iOS allocates its working buffers on the stack via alloca for speed. Past a certain buffer size, the stack allocation simply fails — there is not enough stack to give, and the request crashes the process. The fix detects that case and falls back to a regular heap allocation when the request is too large to live on the stack. Small SIMD ops keep the fast alloca path; large ones no longer crash.Pluggable AnimationTime clock. Motion, Timeline, MorphAnimation, Image.animate, and Label tickers now all route through a new AnimationTime class that defaults to System.currentTimeMillis() but can be overridden. Tests can drive animations deterministically frame by frame; demos can run in slow motion or fast forward; Motion.slowMotion is no longer the only lever.POSIX character classes for non-ASCII letters. [[:alpha:]], [[:alnum:]], [[:lower:]], and [[:upper:]] silently failed to match anything outside the basic ASCII range — Greek, Cyrillic, CJK ideographs, accented letters, vulgar fractions, currency symbols. They now match the way you would expect, with five regression tests covering the failing cases from the issue.Fail-fast on JDK < 11. The simulator and "Run as desktop app" goals fork the JVM with --add-exports=java.desktop/com.apple.eawt=ALL-UNNAMED, which JDK 8 rejects with the unhelpful "Could not create the Java Virtual Machine". Now the Maven plugin checks the runtime JDK version on entry to cn1:run and cn1:debug and aborts with a friendly message naming the detected version, JAVA_HOME, and a pointer to Adoptium. JDK 11 through 25 is the supported runtime range for the simulator, JDK 8 stays the build-time requirement for the core framework, and JDK 8 is still fully supported at runtime for shipped desktop apps — only the simulator / "Run as desktop app" Maven goals require JDK 11+.Sheet scrolling, swipe, and animation. Sheet finally drags from the bottom with a real animation instead of snapping in. Issue #4825.Picker positioning. Picker got additional button-positioning options and a small batch of coverage tests.Playground polish. The Playground moved every Dialog.show(...) to InteractionDialog mode so user code calling Dialog.show does not blow away the editor chrome — it renders into the layered pane instead. Error messages got a substantial overhaul. The preview-resolution syntax expanded so the Playground can pick previews from a much wider set of expressions, with a new harness keeping it honest in CI.Deeper refreshTheme(). Form.refreshTheme() has been around forever — it re-resolves the styles on a single Form. The new thing this week is UIManager.getInstance().refreshTheme(), which snapshots the current theme props and theme constants, clears the resolved-style caches, and re-applies the lot. This is what lets the screenshot suite flip dark mode mid-suite and see fresh styles, and what lets a runtime palette override take effect immediately. Most apps will never need to call it directly — palettes typically don't change at runtime, and a Display.setDarkMode(...) call already triggers the right invalidation. It is there if you do change the palette and want the change to stick on the next paint without reloading the theme from disk. Where This Is Going — and a Thank-You Last week's post was about Codename One feeling faster: corrected pixel densities, principled scroll physics, SIMD on iOS, and accessibility text scaling. This week is the symbiotic other half — Codename One, looking like it belongs on a 2026 phone. Both halves are the same project. There is not much point in shipping a SIMD-accelerated Base64 if the surrounding UI looks like a 2014 app, and there is not much point in shipping a glass-frosted Dialog if the scroll underneath it judders. Neither half is finished. They are both ongoing, and they both depend on community help — bug reports, RFEs, the patient back-and-forth on issue threads where somebody describes a layout problem on an iPhone you do not own. A specific thank you to the people who drove the issues that turned into this week's commits: Thomas (@ThomasH99) filed #4781 (the original "build a liquid glass example" RFE that started this whole effort), #4807 (sticky headers), #4838 (sideways tab swipe), #4841 (the POSIX regex fix), #4819 (picker buttons), and several others; Francesco Galgani (@jsfan3) filed #4825 (sheet swipe animation) and #4824 (light + dark theme by default in initializr); @ddyer0 caught #4811 (the EDT stack overflow) and #4767 (iPad restart Form size); Lucca Biagi (@LuccaPrado) filed #4817 (form creation in IntelliJ). Several of those are RFEs you would not file unless you actually use the framework day-to-day, and that is the kind of feedback that turns into shippable work. We are sitting at 496 open issues as of this post. That is slow but steady progress — the number is moving in the right direction week over week, and the issues that close tend to ship as features or fixes you can see, not as silent triage. If you have a problem, file it. If you have an RFE, file that too. The themes you saw above started as an RFE. You can try the new themes today by opening the Playground by setting nativeTheme=modern (or ios.themeMode=modern / and.themeMode=modern for finer control) in your project's codenameone_settings.properties, or by picking them from the simulator's new Native Theme menu. New projects from the initializr already have them on. The shipping resources are bundled in the iOS and Android ports as of this week.
XML is still everywhere: supplier feeds, marketplace catalogs, partner exports, legacy APIs, SOAP-ish payloads, ETL jobs. None of that is glamorous, but plenty of production systems still depend on it. The real problem starts when the file is no longer small. At that point, the question is not really "How do I parse XML in PHP?" It becomes:How do I process a large XML document safely, extract only the records I care about, and keep the rest of my application working with normal PHP data structures? That is a very different problem. In many real-world integrations, you do not need the whole XML document in memory. You do not need to traverse every branch of the tree. You do not need a rich DOM-style model. You usually need something much simpler: Scan the file efficientlyFind repeated business records such as `product`, `offer`, or `item`Extract those recordsTurn them into arraysPass them to the rest of your pipeline That is the approach I use in modern PHP projects, and it is the one I recommend for large XML workloads. Why Naive XML Parsing Stops Working For small files, the usual PHP XML tools are perfectly fine. A typical first solution looks like this: PHP $xml = simplexml_load_file('feed.xml'); foreach ($xml->products->product as $product) { // process product } There is nothing wrong with that when the file is small, and the document structure is simple. The trouble is that this style of code implicitly treats the XML file as something you want to load and work with as a whole. For large feeds, that is often the wrong tradeoff. If you only need repeated business records from a large XML file, materializing the entire document in memory is unnecessary work. It also makes your pipeline more fragile as feeds grow over time. This is why large-XML handling should start with a different mental model: Do not load the document. Stream through it and extract only what matters. The Real Task Is Usually Extraction, Not XML Manipulation In practice, most XML processing jobs in application code look like this: The file contains many repeated recordsYou only need a subset of themYou only need some fields from each recordThe result will end up in arrays, JSON, a database, or a queue That means the business task is usually not "work with XML as a document." It is: Find the repeated records I care about and turn them into application-friendly data. That distinction matters because it leads directly to the right low-memory approach. The Memory-Safe Foundation: XMLReader In PHP, the standard low-level tool for memory-safe XML traversal is `XMLReader`. Instead of loading the entire document, it lets you move through the XML cursor-style, node by node. That is exactly what you want when the file is large. Here is a minimal baseline example: PHP $reader = new XMLReader(); if (! $reader->open('feed.xml')) { throw new RuntimeException('Cannot open XML file.'); } while ($reader->read()) { if ( $reader->nodeType === XMLReader::ELEMENT && $reader->name === 'product' ) { $nodeXml = $reader->readOuterXML(); $product = simplexml_load_string($nodeXml); $data = [ 'id' => (string) $product->id, 'name' => (string) $product->name, 'price' => (float) $product->price, 'available' => (string) $product->available, ]; // process $data immediately } } $reader->close(); This is already much better than loading the full file up front. It gives you the right execution model: Sequential readingLow memory pressureImmediate processing of extracted records If your XML task is simple and one-off, this may be enough. But once you do this in more than one project, the weak points show up quickly. Where Raw XMLReader Starts to Hurt XMLReader is powerful, but it is also low-level. The moment your extraction task becomes slightly more realistic, you start accumulating glue code: Repeated node-selection logicConversion of XML fragments into arraysNested element handlingAttributes versus valuesOptional nodesRepeated fields like multiple `<picture>` tagsSerialization to JSON-friendly structuresDuplicated extraction code across projects At that point, memory is no longer the only concern. Maintainability becomes the real cost. This is the line I care about most in application code: not just "can I stream it," but "can I keep the extraction logic readable after the third similar integration?" A More Practical Extraction-First Approach This is exactly why I built XmlExtractKit for PHP, published as `sbwerewolf/xml-navigator`. The goal is not to replace `XMLReader`, but to keep its streaming model while moving application code closer to the actual business task. Instead of managing the cursor manually and assembling records by hand, I want code that says: Open a large XML stream Match the elements I care aboutGet plain PHP arrays back Here is a streaming example using the library: PHP use SbWereWolf\XmlNavigator\Parsing\FastXmlParser; require_once __DIR__ . '/vendor/autoload.php'; $uri = tempnam(sys_get_temp_dir(), 'xml-extract-kit-'); file_put_contents($uri, <<<'XML' <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <catalog> <offer id="1001" available="true"> <name>Keyboard</name> <price currency="USD">49.90</price> </offer> <service id="s-1"> <name>Warranty</name> </service> <offer id="1002" available="false"> <name>Mouse</name> <price currency="USD">19.90</price> </offer> </catalog> XML); $reader = XMLReader::open($uri); if ($reader === false) { throw new RuntimeException('Cannot open XML file.'); } $offers = FastXmlParser::extractPrettyPrint( $reader, static fn (XMLReader $cursor): bool => $cursor->nodeType === XMLReader::ELEMENT && $cursor->name === 'offer' ); foreach ($offers as $offer) { echo json_encode( $offer, JSON_PRETTY_PRINT | JSON_UNESCAPED_SLASHES ) . PHP_EOL; } $reader->close(); unlink($uri); The output is application-friendly: JSON { "offer": { "@attributes": { "id": "1001", "available": "true" }, "name": "Keyboard", "price": { "@value": "49.90", "@attributes": { "currency": "USD" } } } } JSON { "offer": { "@attributes": { "id": "1002", "available": "false" }, "name": "Mouse", "price": { "@value": "19.90", "@attributes": { "currency": "USD" } } } } This is still a streaming workflow. The difference is that the code is now centered on the extraction task instead of low-level cursor management. That becomes more valuable when the XML structure is nested, partially optional, or reused across multiple integrations. Why Plain Arrays Are Often the Right Output A lot of application code does not really want XML. It wants data. Once the relevant record has been extracted, the rest of the system usually prefers: Plain arraysNormalized valuesJSON-ready structuresData that can be validated, transformed, and persisted That is why I think "XML extraction" is a more useful framing than "XML handling." Most business systems do not want to live inside an XML tree. They want to move past it as quickly as possible. If the XML document is just a transport format, then the best workflow is usually: XML stream -> selected nodes -> PHP arrays That is the design center of my library. When This Approach Makes Sense This style of XML processing works especially well when: The XML file is largeThe document contains many repeated recordsYou only need part of the documentThe extracted data should be processed immediatelyThe rest of the application works with arrays, not DOM objects Typical examples include: Supplier and marketplace feedsProduct catalogsPartner imports and exportsETL jobsQueue payload preparationLegacy integration endpoints that still speak XML When You Probably Do Not Need It There are also cases where this is the wrong tool. You probably do not need a streaming extraction approach when: The XML is smallLoading the whole file is acceptableYou need full-document manipulationYour task is closer to DOM transformation than record extractionThe XML structure is simple enough that a tiny one-off script is enough That is important to say explicitly. Not every XML task needs an extraction-first workflow. But the ones that do usually benefit from it immediately. A Useful Rule of Thumb Here is the simplest practical rule I know: If the XML is small and you need the whole document, convenience APIs are fine.If the XML is large and you only need repeated records, stream it.If you keep solving the same streaming extraction problem in multiple projects, stop writing the same glue code over and over. That is the point where a focused library becomes worth it. Conclusion Large XML files are not primarily a parsing problem. They are an extraction problem. If you treat them like full in-memory documents, you often pay too much in memory and complexity. If you treat them like streams of repeated business records, the solution becomes safer, simpler, and much easier to fit into modern PHP pipelines. XMLReader gives you the right low-level foundation for that model. And if your real task is not "load XML," but "extract matching records and turn them into plain PHP arrays," then XmlExtractKit (`sbwerewolf/xml-navigator`) was built exactly for that workflow. Try It Shell composer require sbwerewolf/xml-navigator Explore the demo project: Shell git clone https://github.com/SbWereWolf/xml-extract-kit-demo-repo.git cd xml-extract-kit-demo-repo composer install Please discuss this on dev.to.
Enterprise REST integrations rarely fail in a clean, binary way. The dominant failure modes are usually partial and ambiguous: a socket closes after a downstream system commits, a gateway returns a timeout while the target service is still processing, a throttling layer asks for a pause, or a dependency becomes slow enough that waiting callers begin to exhaust threads, connections, and ports. In that environment, simplistic catch-and-retry logic is not resilience. It is uncontrolled traffic generation. Mature error handling starts by accepting that not every failure is retryable, that the HTTP protocol already exposes useful semantics for temporary overload and replay safety, and that retry logic has to cooperate with circuit breaking, fallback paths, and telemetry rather than act on its own. Failure Semantics Before Retry A robust retry policy begins with failure classification, not with a retry counter. Temporary transport failures, selected timeout conditions, and explicit server-side signals such as 503 Service Unavailable and 429 Too Many Requests are fundamentally different from validation, authorization, or contract violations. 503 is explicitly defined as a temporary inability to handle the request, potentially accompanied by Retry-After, while 429 represents rate limiting and may also carry a Retry-After value. By contrast, retrying an invalid request usually only repeats the same defect. Microsoft’s retry guidance makes the same distinction: transient faults are worth retrying after a delay, while non-transient faults should be surfaced and handled as errors. HTTP method semantics also matter more than most retry interceptors admit. RFC 9110 defines safe methods as read-only and idempotent methods as those whose intended effect is the same whether one request arrives or many. It explicitly permits automatic retries for idempotent methods after a communication failure, but advises against automatic retries for non-idempotent methods unless the client has another way to know the action is safe to replay or to prove that the original request was never applied. That is the reason payment capture, shipment reservation, and account mutation flows need business idempotency keys or conditional requests, not just a library annotation. For update-heavy integrations, 428 Precondition Required, If-Match, and 412 Precondition Failed provide a standards-based path to prevent lost updates and make recovery from ambiguous failures safer. Timeouts belong in the same discussion because a retry without a timeout is effectively an admission that the caller is willing to hold scarce resources indefinitely. The AWS Builders’ Library notes that long waits tie up memory, threads, connections, ephemeral ports, and other limited resources, and that timeouts set too low can also create cascading retry traffic. In practice, the retry policy and the timeout budget are the same control surface viewed from different angles. If the timeout is unbounded, retries arrive too late to be useful. If retries are unbounded, a timeout only delays the storm. Making HTTP Responses Actionable Once the retry boundary is defined, error payloads need to become machine-actionable. RFC 9457 standardizes the fields that matter: type, title, status, detail, and instance. The specification is especially useful because it separates a human-readable explanation from a machine-readable classification. The detail field is intended to help explain the specific occurrence and is not meant to be parsed for program logic; machine consumers should rely on type and well-defined extension members instead. Spring’s ProblemDetail maps directly to this model and supports non-standard properties through an extension map that can be rendered as top-level JSON. That gives upstream services a clean way to expose retry hints, domain error codes, and correlation information without forcing clients to scrape message strings. That structure belongs at the client boundary, where HTTP details are translated once into domain-specific exceptions. Spring’s synchronous RestClient is well-suited to this because it allows custom status handlers rather than forcing every 4xx into the same exception path. Java private ShipmentResponse reserveShipment(ShipmentCommand command) { return restClient.post() .uri("/shipments/reservations") .header("Idempotency-Key", command.requestId()) .body(command) .retrieve() .onStatus(status -> status.value() == 429 || status.value() == 503 || status.value() == 504, (request, response) -> { var retryAfter = response.getHeaders().getFirst("Retry-After"); throw new TransientUpstreamException("shipping-api", retryAfter); }) .onStatus(HttpStatusCode::is4xxClientError, (request, response) -> { throw new NonRetryableUpstreamException("shipping-api"); }) .body(ShipmentResponse.class); } This boundary keeps the retry policy honest. Throttling and temporary unavailability become explicit transient exceptions that can carry backoff hints, while semantic client errors become immediately terminal. The idempotency key on the outbound write does not make every POST automatically safe, but it creates the contract required for the upstream side to deduplicate repeated attempts when replay becomes necessary after a timeout or dropped connection. That is substantially safer than retrying blindly after any exception because the classification is now based on protocol semantics and upstream intent rather than on a generic catch block. Backoff That Respects the Protocol After classification comes timing. Fixed-delay retry loops are attractive because they are easy to read, but they are a poor fit for overloaded distributed systems. Both AWS and Azure recommend pausing between attempts and increasing the delay because immediate retries often land while the dependency is still unhealthy. AWS adds the deeper operational point: when many clients retry in lockstep, recovery traffic becomes a synchronized burst, which is exactly why jitter matters. Azure’s retry-storm guidance makes the operational rule even more direct: retry attempts and total duration have to be limited, and the retry-after header must be honored when it is sent. Retry-After can be either a relative number of seconds or an absolute HTTP date, so treating it as a magic integer is incomplete protocol handling. Resilience4j is useful here because its retry model is more expressive than a simple fixed wait. The library supports maxAttempts, waitDuration, retryOnResultPredicate, exception-based selection, and an intervalBiFunction that can compute the next delay from the attempt count and either a result or an exception. Java RetryConfig retryConfig = RetryConfig.custom() .maxAttempts(4) .retryOnException(ex -> ex instanceof ResourceAccessException || ex instanceof TransientUpstreamException) .ignoreExceptions(NonRetryableUpstreamException.class, ValidationException.class) .intervalBiFunction((attempt, either) -> { var ex = either.getLeft(); if (ex instanceof TransientUpstreamException t && t.retryAfter() != null) { return t.retryAfterDuration(); } var base = Math.min(200L * (1L << (attempt - 1)), 3000L); var jitter = ThreadLocalRandom.current().nextLong(0, 250); return Duration.ofMillis(base + jitter); }) .failAfterMaxAttempts(true) .build(); This pattern does two things that enterprise integrations often miss. First, it respects protocol hints when the server provides them. Second, when the server does not provide them, it falls back to bounded exponential delay with jitter instead of immediate replay. That preserves throughput during brief faults without turning one failed request into a tight loop. It also keeps business semantics intact by excluding validation failures and other known terminal conditions from the retry path entirely. Retry With Circuit Breaking and Fallbacks Retry should never be the only protection layer around a dependency. Azure’s circuit breaker guidance draws the distinction clearly: retry assumes the operation may succeed soon, while a circuit breaker stops calls that are likely to fail and allows the system to probe for recovery later. Resilience4j implements this with count-based or time-based sliding windows and explicit breaker states, which makes the breaker a statistical decision point rather than a hardcoded timeout reaction. In practice, retries belong inside a bounded window, and the circuit breaker decides when that window should close early because the failure is no longer transient. For annotation-driven Spring services, that composition stays concise as long as the fallback preserves business truth. A fallback should not fabricate success merely to keep the API green. A degraded but truthful state is a better contract than a false positive. Java @CircuitBreaker(name = "paymentGateway", fallbackMethod = "deferCapture") @Retry(name = "paymentGateway") public PaymentResult capture(PaymentCommand command) { return paymentGateway.capture(command); } private PaymentResult deferCapture(PaymentCommand command, Exception ex) { outbox.save(new PendingCapture(command.paymentId(), command.requestId(), ex.getMessage())); return PaymentResult.pending(command.paymentId()); } The important detail is not the annotation pair itself, but the semantics of the fallback. Writing an outbox record or reconciliation task acknowledges that the payment state is uncertain and that recovery will continue asynchronously. Returning pending instead of captured prevents downstream systems from treating a degraded path as a confirmed business success. That is the difference between fault tolerance and silent data corruption. Reactive Flows and the Hidden Cost of Convenience Reactive clients make retry composition even easier, which is precisely why strict filtering matters. Spring’s WebClient maps responses with status codes of 400 and above to exceptions by default, and onStatus allows those responses to be reclassified. Reactor then adds a retry DSL where Retry.backoff is preconfigured for exponential backoff with jitter. The result is elegant, but elegance is dangerous when it hides accidental replay of all failures instead of only transient ones. Java public Mono<InventorySnapshot> fetchInventory(String sku) { return webClient.get() .uri("/inventory/{sku}", sku) .retrieve() .onStatus(status -> status.value() == 429 || status.value() == 503, response -> response.bodyToMono(ProblemDetail.class) .defaultIfEmpty(ProblemDetail.forStatus(response.statusCode())) .map(problem -> new TransientUpstreamException(problem.getDetail()))) .bodyToMono(InventorySnapshot.class) .retryWhen(Retry.backoff(3, Duration.ofMillis(250)) .filter(TransientUpstreamException.class::isInstance)); } The critical move in this style is the filter. Without it, every WebClientResponseException becomes retryable, which means malformed requests, unauthorized access, and contract defects start looping through the same pipeline as a temporary overload. With the filter in place, the reactive chain remains expressive without becoming indiscriminate. The same principle applies to result-based retries as well: only states that are explicitly modeled as transient should flow back into the retry companion. Visibility as Part of the Contract An enterprise retry policy that cannot be observed is effectively untestable in production. Spring’s observability support is built around Micrometer observations, and Resilience4j provides a Micrometer module for its fault-tolerance primitives. That combination makes it possible to expose retry counts, breaker state, final outcome, and request timing in the same telemetry fabric. At the protocol level, RFC 9457’s instance field provides a stable error occurrence identifier that can also be propagated into logs and traces. Once those signals exist, a slow integration no longer appears as a single long call; it becomes visible as one business request that triggered multiple upstream attempts before succeeding or degrading. Conclusion Advanced error handling in enterprise REST integrations is not built from retries alone. It is built from protocol-aware classification, explicit replay safety, structured error payloads, bounded backoff with jitter, circuit breaking for persistent faults, truthful fallbacks, and telemetry that exposes every extra attempt. HTTP already provides essential semantics for temporary overload, rate limiting, and conditional updates, while Spring, Reactor, and Resilience4j provide the implementation hooks needed to preserve those semantics in code. When those layers are combined deliberately, retries stop being a reflex and become a controlled recovery strategy that protects both correctness and system stability.
Most systems describe updates from the outside, where a client sends data, the backend receives it, and the system applies the changes. From that perspective, an update appears simple and almost mechanical. But from inside the system, the situation looks very different. The system is not receiving instructions that can be executed directly; it is receiving input that must first be understood. Before anything can be changed, the system has to determine what that input actually means. The System as a Gatekeeper Inside the system, there is always a boundary between incoming data and stored state, and that boundary is not passive. It acts as a gatekeeper whose responsibility is not to apply changes as they arrive, but to decide what is allowed to change and what must be rejected. That decision cannot be made from data alone. Data does not carry meaning. It depends on whether the system understands the request it has received. But understanding is not enough on its own. The gatekeeper must also handle that understanding in a consistent way. To be able to protect the data, the system needs a clear structure for how changes are processed. It must first establish what is being requested, then interpret that request, and only after that apply any constraints. Finally, it must verify that the resulting state is still valid. If this structure is missing, the role of the gatekeeper becomes unclear. The same input may be handled differently depending on where and how it is processed, and decisions that should be explicit become implicit. In that situation, the system is no longer acting as a gatekeeper. It is simply passing data through. The Missing Layer Most discussions about updates focus on validation, on whether values are correct and whether they follow the rules of the system. But validation assumes that the system already understands what is being requested, and that assumption is often false. Before any constraints can be applied, the system must first understand the input it is given. Without that understanding, validation has nothing to act on and no reliable basis for a decision. This understanding must be resolved before any constraints can be applied. When it is missing, updates become mechanical rather than controlled. Data is applied because it is present, and changes occur because they are technically possible. The system may still function, but its behavior becomes harder to reason about. Responsibility becomes implicit, and the ability to protect the data becomes unreliable. Understanding Before Constraints Constraints are often seen as the mechanism that protects a system, but they depend on something more fundamental. They depend on the system understanding what is being requested. If the system does not understand the change, it cannot apply its constraints in a meaningful way. This must be resolved before the system’s constraints can be applied, and it is independent of what those constraints are. What the System Needs to Know For a change to be understood, certain information must be explicit. The system must know: What parts of the data are includedWhat kind of change is intendedA consistent way of handling that change If any of this is missing, the system cannot decide what should happen. It does not know what to change, what to leave untouched, or how to interpret the structure it has received. Consider an update where only part of the data is sent, where some fields are included while others are not. For example: JSON { "name": "Anna" } The system already has more data stored: JSON { "name": "Anna", "email": "[email protected]" } From the outside, this looks straightforward. Only the name is included, so only the name should be considered. But from inside the system, the situation is less clear. Was the email intentionally left unchanged, or was it simply omitted? The system has no way of knowing. It must either guess or ignore the missing information, and neither option provides a reliable way to protect the data. In both cases, the decision is not based on understanding, but on assumption, and a system that relies on assumptions cannot reliably protect its data. When the System Is Forced to Guess The problem is not that the system cannot apply its constraints. The problem is that it has not been given enough information to decide what those constraints should apply to. For that decision to be possible, the system must know what is included and what kind of change is intended. Without that, it cannot understand the request, and without understanding, it cannot protect anything. The system cannot guess what is included or what is intended. The request must make it explicit.
Generating sequential numeric IDs sounds like one of those problems that should have been solved decades ago. And in a monolithic application, it mostly was. You create a database sequence, use an auto-increment column, and move on. Every new record gets a unique number, the ordering is preserved, and nobody on the engineering team loses sleep over it. That simplicity disappears the moment the system becomes distributed. Once your application is running across multiple services, multiple instances, or multiple Kubernetes pods, generating ordered numeric identifiers turns into a very different problem. What used to be a harmless database feature suddenly becomes a scalability bottleneck. Every request that depends on “the next number” now has to coordinate through shared state, and shared state is exactly where distributed systems become expensive. We ran into this problem while building a service that needed globally unique, monotonically increasing numeric identifiers at very high throughput. UUIDs were not a good fit because the business wanted readable, ordered numbers. At the same time, we could not afford to make a database round trip on every request. The pattern that solved it cleanly was the Hi-Lo algorithm, backed by Azure Cosmos DB for coordination. It gave us a practical way to preserve uniqueness and ordering while dramatically reducing database contention and keeping request latency extremely low. Why This Problem Gets Hard So Quickly The most obvious solution is also the one that fails first under scale. Store the current sequence value in a database record. For each request, increment it atomically and return the new value. From a correctness perspective, it works. From a scalability perspective, it is painful. The issue is not that databases cannot increment counters. They can. The issue is that when every service instance depends on the same counter, you create a write hotspot. All traffic funnels through a single piece of mutable state. As request volume grows, latency increases, write contention rises, and horizontal scaling stops helping as much as it should. You can add more pods, but they are all still lining up to talk to the same centralized counter. That is the point where teams discover that sequential ID generation is not really an ID problem. It is a coordination problem. And in distributed systems, coordination is usually the thing you want to minimize. Architecture Diagram The Idea Behind Hi-Lo The Hi-Lo algorithm works by separating identifier generation into two layers: A high value, reserved centrallyA low value, generated locally in memory Instead of asking the database for the next number every time, a service instance reserves an entire block of numbers in one operation. After that, it generates values locally from that reserved range until the block is exhausted. For example, if the current global boundary is 1000 and the configured lot size is 1000, one pod can reserve the next block: 1001 to 2000. From that point on, it does not need the database for every request. It can serve identifiers from memory until it reaches 2000. That changes the coordination model completely. Instead of one database write per ID, the system performs one database write per batch of IDs. If the batch size is 1000, the database pressure drops by roughly a factor of 1000. That is the core advantage of Hi-Lo. It does not make centralized coordination faster. It makes it far less frequent. Using Cosmos DB as the Source of Truth In our implementation, Azure Cosmos DB maintains the global upper boundary of allocated ranges. The coordination model is simple: A pod reads the current boundary, calculates the next range it wants, and tries to update the stored value to reflect the newly reserved upper limit. If the write succeeds, the range belongs to that pod. If it fails because another pod updated the value first, the pod retries. The important detail is that this is done using optimistic concurrency control through ETag validation. That gives us atomic range reservation without introducing heavyweight locks or a custom coordination service. Two pods may try to reserve a range at nearly the same time, but only one can successfully update the shared document. The others detect the conflict and try again. This is exactly the kind of pattern Cosmos DB handles well, as long as the design acknowledges that the shared document is a coordination point and treats it carefully. We also made a few deliberate configuration choices: Session consistency was used to preserve read-your-own-write behaviorDirect TCP mode helped minimize reservation latencyMulti-write regions were disabled because monotonic ordering mattered more than geographically distributed writes That last point is easy to underestimate. If strict ordering is a requirement, you cannot casually spread writes across regions and still assume the sequence semantics will behave the way the business expects. The Fast Path Is Purely In Memory Once a pod owns a range, the hot path becomes extremely lightweight. The service keeps the current range in memory, along with the current pointer and the maximum value of the reserved block. Every request simply increments the local counter and returns the next number. No network call. No shared lock. No database hit. No cross-pod communication. That means steady-state performance is not tied to remote I/O. It is essentially the cost of incrementing a number and returning it. This is where the architecture starts to feel elegant. The database is still the source of truth for range allocation, but it is no longer involved in day-to-day ID generation. The expensive coordination step has been pushed out of the critical request path. In practice, that made a major difference not just for throughput, but also for latency consistency. Preventing Pauses With Pre-Fetching One subtle issue with batch allocation is what happens when the current range runs out. If the service waits until the final value has been consumed before reserving the next block, some request will eventually have to pay the cost of going back to the database. That creates latency spikes right at the boundary between ranges. The fix is straightforward: pre-fetch the next range before the current one is exhausted. In our case, once the service had consumed around 80 percent of the current lot, a background process started reserving the next block from Cosmos DB. That block was stored as a standby range. When the active range reached its end, the generator simply switched to the pre-fetched range and continued without interruption. That small design choice helped keep the request path smooth even during transitions. Under stable conditions, callers never noticed when one block ended, and another began. It also made the system feel much more production-ready. Without pre-fetching, the architecture still works, but the boundary behavior becomes a lot noisier under load. Handling Contention Without Making It Worse Even with batched reservation, multiple pods can still collide when they try to reserve ranges around the same time. That is normal. The key is making sure those collisions stay localized and do not turn into synchronized retry storms. When a reservation fails because the ETag has changed, the pod retries with: A bounded retry countRandomized backoffJitter between attempts The jitter matters more than it might seem. Without it, competing instances can become accidentally synchronized, failing and retrying in lockstep. That creates more contention than the original conflict ever did. With randomized retry timing, the contention spreads out naturally, and one of the pods usually succeeds quickly. Most importantly, this contention only occurs during range reservation. It does not happen for every generated ID. That is a huge shift from the naive design, where every request competes for the same shared state. What the Performance Profile Looks Like The performance difference between the two approaches is dramatic. In a centralized per-request counter design, generating 20,000 IDs per second means 20,000 coordinated database operations per second. With Hi-Lo and a lot size of 1000, the same throughput requires roughly 20 database reservations per second per pod. That is not a small optimization. It is a different scaling model. The practical benefits include: Much lower write pressure on the databaseBetter request latencyMore predictable tail latencyReduced risk of hot partition behaviorBetter horizontal scalability as pods increase The architecture still has a centralized coordination point, but the frequency of access is reduced so much that it stops being the dominant constraint. That is often the real win in distributed systems: not eliminating coordination entirely, but moving it off the hot path and amortizing its cost. The Tradeoff You Have to Accept Like most scalable designs, this one is not free. The biggest tradeoff is that the sequence is not gap-free. If a pod reserves a range and crashes before consuming all of it, the unused numbers in that block are lost forever. The system still guarantees uniqueness and monotonic increase across allocated values, but it does not guarantee perfect continuity with no missing numbers. For many business cases, that is completely acceptable. For some financial, legal, or regulatory workflows, it may not be. That tradeoff has to be explicit. There is also a startup dependency on Cosmos DB. A pod cannot safely generate values until it has reserved its first range. In our design, if Cosmos DB is unavailable during initialization, the service fails fast rather than generating inconsistent identifiers. That is the safer operational choice, even if it is less forgiving. Where This Pattern Fits Best The Hi-Lo pattern makes sense when you need all of the following at once: Numeric IDs rather than UUIDsGlobal uniquenessMonotonic orderingHigh throughputDistributed deployment across multiple service instances It is especially useful in cloud-native systems where a simple database counter becomes a scaling liability. On the other hand, if your system is low-volume or does not truly need ordered numeric identifiers, this pattern may be unnecessary. Sometimes the better solution is to stop insisting on sequences and use UUIDs or another coordination-free identifier format. But when the business requirement is real, Hi-Lo is one of the cleanest ways to satisfy it without punishing the system on every request. Conclusion One of the most useful lessons in distributed architecture is that performance often improves not when coordination gets faster, but when coordination happens less often. That is exactly why the Hi-Lo algorithm works so well. By reserving ranges instead of individual values, we turned a centralized bottleneck into an occasional coordination step. Cosmos DB remained the source of truth, but it was no longer involved in every ID request. The hot path stayed local, fast, and predictable. With in-memory generation, optimistic concurrency, proactive pre-fetching, and jitter-based retries, this approach gave us a sequence generator that was both scalable and operationally practical. For teams building high-throughput distributed systems that still need ordered numeric IDs, Hi-Lo is one of those patterns that feels almost too simple at first.
Last March, our VP of Engineering asked me a deceptively simple question during our quarterly review: "How much CO2 does our AI platform emit?" I had no idea. We'd been obsessing over token costs — tracking every cent spent on OpenAI and Anthropic — but we'd never connected those tokens to their environmental impact. We were processing 42 million tokens daily. The finance team knew exactly what that cost in dollars: $127K monthly. But carbon? Nobody had asked. That question kicked off a four-month deep dive that fundamentally changed how we architect AI systems. We didn't just bolt carbon metrics onto existing dashboards. We rebuilt our entire token management strategy around efficiency as a first-class design constraint. The results surprised us: 89% reduction in token consumption, $113K monthly savings, and 19.7 tons of CO2 avoided over the program's life. What really surprised us? Being green and being lean turned out to be the same engineering problem. This article shares the specific techniques that got us there. Not abstract principles — battle-tested patterns with code examples, hard numbers, and the honest failures that taught us what actually works in production. Understanding the Real Cost of Tokens Before we optimized anything, we needed to understand what we were actually optimizing for. Token pricing is straightforward: GPT-4 costs $0.03 per 1K input tokens, $0.06 per 1K output tokens. Simple math. The environmental cost? Not so obvious. Here's what nobody tells you: every 1 million tokens processed generates approximately 0.47 kg of CO2. That number comes from energy consumption data for GPU inference (roughly 2.4 kWh per million tokens) combined with average US grid carbon intensity (0.195 kg CO2 per kWh). Your mileage will vary based on provider and data center location, but this gives a working baseline. Our initial audit painted a stark picture: That last row was the killer. We were flying blind. No breakdown by feature, no per-user attribution, no way to identify wasteful patterns. We needed observability before we could optimize. Pattern 1: Ruthless Prompt Optimization Our first discovery was embarrassing. We were using prompts that looked like they'd been written by committee — verbose, redundant, stuffed with unnecessary context-setting. Our document summarization prompt was 1,247 tokens. The actual content being summarized averaged 892 tokens. We were spending more on instructions than on the work itself. Here's the original prompt for our contract analysis feature — and what we replaced it with: We ran A/B tests on 10,000 requests per template to validate no accuracy loss. The results held across all 37 prompt templates. Key principles: Average request tokens dropped from 2,847 to 312. But here's what I didn't expect: response quality improved. Shorter prompts meant clearer instructions. The models had less noise to navigate. Less is genuinely more. Pattern 2: Streaming With Early Termination Most developers use streaming APIs for perceived performance — users see text appear progressively. We found a different benefit: streaming lets you stop generation early when you already have enough information. Think about a customer support feature. When a user asks "How do I reset my password?", the first 2–3 sentences usually contain the complete answer. Without streaming, you pay for 500 words and discard 80% of it. With early termination, you stop the moment the response is sufficient. We built a satisfaction scoring system that evaluates streaming chunks in real-time. The logic: Python def stream_with_early_stop(prompt, query_type): buffer = "" tokens_generated = 0 for chunk in client.stream(prompt): buffer += chunk tokens_generated += count_tokens(chunk) if tokens_generated >= 50: # grace period score = satisfaction_score(buffer, query_type) if score > 0.85: return buffer, tokens_generated return buffer, tokens_generated # fallback: full response Pattern 3: Context Pruning With Relevance Ranking Our RAG system was the biggest token sink. Every query triggered a vector search returning the top 10 document chunks. We embedded all 10 into the prompt context. Average context size: 8,200 tokens. Embedding cost for 42M daily tokens: $1,260 per day. Here's the uncomfortable truth: 7 of those 10 chunks were noise. The model would focus on 2–3 highly relevant passages and ignore the rest. We were paying to confuse it. We implemented two-stage relevance ranking. First, vector search returns the top 20 candidates (expanding the pool). Then, for each candidate, we compute a combined score: The counterintuitive finding still surprises me when I explain it to teams: better quality with fewer resources. More context isn't better. Relevance is better. Pattern 4: Token Budgeting by Request Type Even with all those optimizations, we still had runaway requests. A user would upload a 50-page PDF and ask for "detailed analysis." The model would generate 8,000 tokens of output — $0.48 per request. Multiply that across careless enterprise users, and you've got budget chaos. We implemented token budgets at two levels. Request-type limits are set at the 95th percentile of actual useful output length, based on 100,000 historical requests per feature: Three months after implementation: zero runaway requests consuming more than 5,000 tokens. Monthly cost standard deviation dropped from $18K to $1.1K. And here's the counterintuitive part — only a negligible number of users complained about the limits. Because limits set at the 95th percentile feel invisible to normal usage. The Carbon Calculus: Making Sustainability Visible All these optimizations saved us money. We also wanted to track the environmental impact — partly for our VP's original question, partly because it turned out to be a useful forcing function for engineering discipline. We built this into our monitoring dashboard. Every request now shows token count, API cost, and carbon footprint. We also integrated the Electricity Maps API for real-time grid carbon intensity. That last bit mattered more than we expected. Grid carbon intensity varies wildly by time of day. In California, it drops 60% at 2 PM (peak solar) compared to 8 PM. For batch workloads with no latency requirements, we schedule them during low-carbon hours. That single change reduced our carbon footprint by 23% for nightly document processing jobs — with zero accuracy or cost impact. Is 6.3 tons of CO2 annually going to save the planet? No. But multiply this by thousands of companies running AI workloads at scale, and the impact compounds. More practically, these optimizations made our system faster, cheaper, and more accurate. Sustainability was the bonus, not the trade-off. What Didn't Work: Honest Failures Three Dead Ends — So You Don't Have to Revisit Them 1. Aggressive Response Caching We thought caching responses for similar queries would save enormous tokens. In practice, cache hit rate was 4%. User queries are too diverse and too contextual. The overhead of maintaining the cache exceeded the savings. We killed it after two weeks. 2. Routing Everything to Smaller Models We tried sending all requests to GPT-3.5 instead of GPT-4. Token costs dropped 90%. Retry rate increased 340% — because users weren't satisfied with initial responses. Paying for quality upfront is cheaper than paying for retries. Every time. 3. Blanket Token Limits Without Classification Before per-request-type budgets, we tried a flat 500-token limit on everything. Users revolted. Code generation got cut off mid-function. Contract analysis was unusable. Intelligent limits beat arbitrary ones. Always classify first. Implementation Roadmap: Where to Start 8-Week Rollout Plan WEEK 1 Baseline audit. Measure current token consumption by feature, user tier, and request type. You cannot optimize what you don't measure. Add per-feature attribution to your existing observability stack first. WEEK 2 Prompt optimization. Highest ROI of any pattern. Audit your 10 most-used prompts, cut ruthlessly, A/B test on 5K+ requests to confirm no quality loss. Expect 50–80% token reduction from prompts alone. WEEK 3 Token budgets. Set max_tokens per request type based on P95 of historical output length. Stops runaway costs immediately with minimal user impact. WEEKS 4–6 Context pruning (RAG only). Implement two-stage relevance ranking. Add BM25 scoring alongside your existing vector search. Expect 60–80% context reduction and measurable accuracy gains. WEEKS 6–8 Streaming early termination. Build satisfaction scoring for factual and procedural queries. Start conservatively (threshold: 0.90) and tune down as you gather production data. ONGOING Carbon monitoring. Add CO₂ metrics to dashboards. Consider scheduling batch jobs during low-carbon grid hours via the Electricity Maps API. Free wins on an already-optimized system. Efficiency as an Engineering Discipline Token optimization isn't about being cheap. It's about being intentional. Every token you generate costs money, burns carbon, and adds latency. When you treat tokens as a constrained resource — like CPU cycles or memory — you build better systems. These patterns aren't novel. Ruthless efficiency has been a software engineering principle since resources were measured in kilobytes. What's new is applying that discipline to AI systems where token costs are invisible until suddenly they're not — usually when your finance team asks an embarrassing question during a quarterly review. Our results — 89% reduction in consumption, $1.35M annual savings, 6.3 tons of CO2 avoided — came from treating token efficiency as a first-class architectural concern. Not an afterthought. We measured, experimented, failed, and iterated. The environmental impact is real but secondary. Fast, predictable, cost-effective AI systems are the primary goal. Sustainability follows naturally from good engineering. If you're processing millions of tokens daily and haven't optimized your prompts, you're leaving money and carbon on the table. Start with the baseline audit. You'll be shocked at the waste. Then chip away systematically. Every million tokens saved is roughly $40 in your pocket and half a kilogram of CO2 out of the atmosphere. That's the hidden cost of AI tokens. The good news? It's entirely within your control to fix.
Manual annotation is a massive bottleneck for multimodal inference systems in high-velocity production environments. If you want to survive catastrophic distribution shifts, you have to automate your labeling pipeline. I want to walk through a pseudo-labeling architecture we built that filters out extreme pipeline noise to hit a 0.93 F1 score using XGBoost. Semi-supervised strategies like pseudo-labeling look great on paper but often fail in practice. They suffer from confirmation bias. The model just repeatedly overfits to its own bad predictions because it is overly confident in them. This triggers catastrophic pipeline noise and runaway concept drift (where the underlying statistical properties of your target variable change over time and destroy your predictive accuracy). Let's tear down the architectural requirements for a resilient pseudo-labeling pipeline. We will look at stateful ingestion, Matryoshka-based feature extraction, and the algorithmic framework you need to survive the 0.8 probability noise floor. The Labeling Bottleneck and the MLOps Mandate Most production models do not fail gracefully. They break hard due to episodic regime changes. These are sudden, fundamental shifts in the operating environment or attack vectors rather than gradual wear and tear. A new fraud vector can emerge overnight and render a static model completely useless. The hard part of fixing this is not automating the data flow itself. The real engineering challenge is preventing self-poisoning during the iterative self-training loop. The goal here is to architect a system that treats unlabeled data as a first-class citizen while enforcing a strict "State Gate" to prevent algorithmic collapse. System Architecture Pipeline Ingestion Resilience: Stateful API Key Rotation Your labeling pipeline is only as reliable as your raw data source. Ingesting multimodal metadata at scale means you are going to hit API quotas and Web Application Firewall (WAF) errors like HTTP 403 or 429. Naive retry logic usually just triggers retry storms that make the lockout worse. A production-grade system needs to externalize the state of your API keys to a centralized store like Redis. This lets the system track cooldown periods and usage statistics atomically across all your distributed workers. Python import redis import time import hashlib from typing import Optional, Tuple # Context: Assumes a valid REDIS_URL accessible by your worker nodes # redis_url = "redis://localhost:6379/0" class RedisKeyManager: """Manages API key state and cooldowns to prevent 403/429 lockouts.""" def __init__(self, redis_url: str): self.r = redis.Redis.from_url(redis_url, decode_responses=True) self.COOLDOWN_SEC = 3600 # 1 hour backoff for auth/rate errors def get_healthy_key(self) -> Tuple[Optional[str], Optional[str]]: """Returns the healthiest key based on error counts and cooldown status.""" for key_name in self.r.scan_iter("apikey:meta:*"): state = self.r.hgetall(key_name) # Ensure the key is active and not currently in a cooldown window if state.get('active') == '1' and float(state.get('cooldown_until', 0)) < time.time(): key_hash = key_name.split(":")[-1] raw_key = self.r.get(f"apikey:raw:{key_hash}") return raw_key, key_hash return None, None def handle_api_response(self, key_hash: str, status_code: int): """Statefully updates key health based on HTTP response codes.""" if status_code in {403, 429}: # Apply stateful cooldown and increment failure metrics [9, 10] self.r.hset(f"apikey:meta:{key_hash}", "cooldown_until", time.time() + self.COOLDOWN_SEC) self.r.hincrby(f"apikey:meta:{key_hash}", "failure_count", 1) elif status_code == 401: # Immediate deactivation for unauthorized or invalid keys self.r.hset(f"apikey:meta:{key_hash}", "active", "0") Multimodal Extraction and Matryoshka Embeddings The ingestion layer pushes data into a feature extraction system. We process visual thumbnails using EfficientNet-B0 and text strings with Sent2Vec. EfficientNet typically spits out a 1280D vector. Sent2Vec gives you a 768D embedding. If you just naively concatenate them, you end up with a massive 2048D space. That is computationally expensive for large-scale retrieval and highly prone to overfitting. We implemented Matryoshka Representation Learning (MRL) to fix this. MRL structures the embedding so that core semantics are concentrated in the first m dimensions. This lets the pipeline do low-latency shortlisting with a 128D prefix before executing high-precision reranking with the full 512D projected vector. Python import torch import torch.nn as nn # Context: Simulating a batch of 32 concatenated multimodal inputs (2048D each) # sample_batch = torch.randn(32, 2048) class MatryoshkaProjection(nn.Module): """ Fused Multimodal Projector (2048 -> 512) with MRL support. Encodes core semantics into the early dimensions of the latent space. """ def __init__(self, input_dim: int = 2048, max_output_dim: int = 512): super().__init__() self.projector = nn.Linear(input_dim, max_output_dim) # Define nested dimensions for MRL loss [14] self.nesting_list = [128, 256, 512] def forward(self, x: torch.Tensor): full_latent = self.projector(x) # Return a dictionary of nested representations for multi-scale loss return {dim: full_latent[:, :dim] for dim in self.nesting_list} # Example execution: # model = MatryoshkaProjection() # output = model(sample_batch) The State Gate: Calibrating for Resilience Once the MRL projector efficiently extracts and ranks those high-fidelity multimodal embeddings, the pipeline has to decide which of these new inferences are actually trustworthy enough to learn from. This brings us to the State Gate. This is the architectural pivot point where raw predictions become pseudo-labels. We implement a strict 0.8 probability threshold for re-ingestion into the training pool. The problem is that raw model outputs are almost always mis-calibrated. You cannot trust raw softmax scores. We use Mixup Regularization and Platt Scaling to guarantee that a 0.8 confidence score genuinely reflects an 80% likelihood of correctness. Mixup trains the model on convex combinations of sample pairs. It forces the model to learn smoother decision boundaries and strips away the overconfidence that fuels confirmation bias. The self-training flow follows these steps: Inference (V_n): Predict on 100k unlabeled multimodal samples.Calibration: Apply Platt Scaling or Beta calibration to raw scores.Selection (The Gate): Quarantine samples where calibrated P < 0.8.Augmentation: Apply Mixup to selected pseudo-labels to improve generalization.Retrain (V_n+1): Combine ground-truth and pseudo-labels for a new epoch with a hard cap of 10 iterations to prevent runaway drift. Algorithmic Resilience: XGBoost vs. Random Forest The most critical architectural finding we had was the performance delta between bagging and boosting when you subject them to the noise of the 0.8 threshold. Random Forest is usually robust to outliers, but its bagging architecture completely fails during iterative self-training. RF averages independent trees trained on random subsets. In pseudo-labeling, the noise is systematic because of confirmation bias. Bagging gives equal weight to every tree, which smooths the noise instead of correcting it. Eventually, the model just overfits the injected errors, and accuracy drops to around 0.80. XGBoost handles this completely differently. It builds trees sequentially. Each subsequent tree targets the residuals or errors of the previous ensemble. That sequential nature combined with L2 regularization and shrinkage (a low learning rate) creates a natural buffer. It allows the model to learn around the pseudo-label noise and hit a 0.93 F1 score. Python import xgboost as xgb from sklearn.datasets import make_classification from sklearn.model_selection import train_test_split # Context: Generating a synthetic dataset to represent our extracted embeddings # Features: [Feature_0 (increases risk), Feature_1 (decreases risk), Feature_2 (neutral)] X, y = make_classification(n_samples=1000, n_features=3, n_informative=3, n_redundant=0, random_state=42) X_train, X_val, y_train, y_val = train_test_split(X, y, test_size=0.2) dtrain = xgb.DMatrix(X_train, label=y_train) dval = xgb.DMatrix(X_val, label=y_val) # Configuration optimized for noisy pseudo-labeling environments xgb_params = { 'objective': 'binary:logistic', 'eta': 0.05, # Low learning rate (shrinkage) is critical to buffer noise 'max_depth': 6, 'lambda': 1.5, # L2 regularization on leaf weights 'alpha': 0.5, # L1 regularization for feature sparsity 'subsample': 0.8, # Monotone constraints map to our 3 features: (1=increasing, -1=decreasing, 0=unconstrained) 'monotone_constraints': (1, -1, 0), # Enforces business logic 'eval_metric': 'aucpr' # PR-AUC handles imbalanced drift effectively } # Runnable training loop bst = xgb.train(xgb_params, dtrain, num_boost_round=100, evals=[(dval, 'validation')]) Conclusion: Designing for Drift Elite MLOps comes down to how a system handles the episodic regime. You have to survive environments where performance shifts abruptly due to external shocks instead of smooth decay. A resilient automated labeling pipeline demands defense in depth. Stateful key management at the ingestion layer keeps data flowing even under aggressive WAF rate limiting. Matryoshka Representation Learning gives you the flexibility to balance retrieval latency with semantic precision in the feature space. Finally, picking a boosting architecture like XGBoost acts as a mathematical buffer against the systematically noisy labels you inevitably get in self-training loops. You still need to know when to avoid this pattern entirely. Do not use pseudo-labeling if your ground-truth seed is less than 5% of your total volume. The risk of the model drifting away from reality is too high when the initial truth is sparse. Also, avoid this approach if the cost of a False Positive is existential (like in medical diagnostics). In high-stakes environments, you cannot risk confirmation bias fitting a false negative or positive inside a fully automated loop. Designing for drift is a massive advantage, but only when you have a solid ground-truth foundation and clear domain boundaries. Looking ahead, the next step for this design space is baking active learning heuristics directly into the State Gate. That will let the system automatically flag only the most mathematically uncertain, high-value boundary cases for human review.
The Pipeline Did Not Fail Cleanly Most pipeline failures don't look like "the job failed." Consider a common scenario. A Glue job reads overnight event files, applies business rules, and writes to an Iceberg curated table. The job runs at its scheduled time and errors out partway through. The control table shows SUCCESS for the previous batch and FAILED for the current one, which is what you'd expect. The problem is what happened between those two states: the job wrote nine of the day's twelve partitions to the staging table before failing. A downstream report ran on its own schedule, picked up the partial data, and the discrepancy didn't surface until a downstream consumer noticed records were missing. By the time someone looks at the failure, the question is no longer "Why did the job fail?" It's "Is it safe to rerun, and what's already corrupted downstream?" That's where debugging gets messy. CloudWatch logs, Glue run metadata, the source S3 path, record counts, data quality results, target table state, and Iceberg snapshots. An experienced engineer can connect those signals, but it takes time, and a less experienced engineer often misses one. In a busy production environment that delay leads to blind reruns, duplicate records, overwritten partitions, or worse. The frustrating part is that the evidence existed. The pipeline just had no structured way to explain itself. That's the gap a triage layer can fill. Not by fixing the pipeline. Not by changing schemas. Not by restarting jobs. By observing the evidence already produced, classifying the failure, explaining what likely happened, and recommending what to do next. What Agentic Observability Means The word "agentic" gets misused a lot right now, especially in data engineering. It's worth being precise. An agentic observability layer is not an LLM with permission to control production. It's a controlled workflow that collects pipeline evidence, builds incident context, classifies the failure against known categories, and produces a structured recommendation. The loop is observe, classify, explain, recommend, and that's where it stops. Everything past "recommend" stays with engineers, deterministic rules, or approval workflows. The difference from normal alerting is the depth of the output. A normal alert says "Glue job daily_customer_interactions failed." An agentic observability layer should produce something closer to: "The job failed because the input contains a new column not present in the curated schema. The staging write started before the failure, so a blind retry will create duplicate records. Quarantine the batch, review the schema contract, and rerun with the same batch_id after validation." That difference is what saves time during an incident. The goal isn't replacing engineers. It's reducing the manual triage work needed before someone can make a real decision. Reference Architecture This does not need to start as a new platform. The triage layer can sit beside existing Glue pipelines and consume signals that already exist. Figure 1. Agentic observability flow for AWS Glue pipelines. Pipeline evidence is collected, converted into structured context, analyzed by an LLM triage layer, and returned as a structured incident output. The component that matters most here is the incident context builder. The LLM should never receive a raw dump of ten thousand log lines. That produces noisy, low-confidence output and burns tokens. The collector should pull a curated set of signals: Glue job name and run ID, status and duration, batch ID, source path, target table, the last fifty error log lines, data quality results, record counts, attempt count, recent deployment version, table snapshot or commit ID, and control table status. That's enough context to analyze the failure without guessing from disconnected log lines. Where This Fits Before going further, one thing worth being honest about: this pattern depends on the platform already having its house in order. The agent can only work with the observability that the platform already has. It is not a substitute for basic pipeline hygiene. It works when the platform tracks batch IDs, clear source paths, data quality results, structured logs, table commits, deployment versions, and ownership mapping. Without those signals, the agent has very little to reason over. If a pipeline doesn't track batch IDs, the agent can't reliably tell whether a run is a retry or a new batch. If quality results aren't stored, it can't reason about input validity. If table commits aren't tracked, it can't tell whether the failure happened before or after a write. LLMs don't create observability. They summarize and reason over the observability that already exists. The teams that get the most out of this pattern are the ones with disciplined data engineering underneath. Failure Categories Manual debugging takes time, partly because every failure looks unique at first glance. Most don't stay unique once you classify them. A small fixed set of categories makes the output easier to review, compare, and route. Failure categoryCommon signalsRecommended actionSchema driftNew column, missing column, cast failure, contract mismatchQuarantine the batch and review the schema contractData skewLong-running tasks, shuffle spill, uneven partitionsRepartition or isolate skewed keysSmall file pressureHigh file count, slow planning, frequent commitsCompact affected partitionsSource delayMissing input path, low record count, late file arrivalWait, retry later, or mark the batch delayedCode regressionRecent deployment plus transformation errorRoll back or compare with the previous runPermission issueAccess denied, catalog failure, IAM or Lake Formation errorFix access policy before retryingPartial write riskFailure after write startedCheck staging and control tables before rerunUnknownWeak or conflicting evidenceEscalate to an engineer with summarized context The category list isn't only documentation. It's part of the system contract. The agent picks from this list rather than inventing categories on each run, which makes downstream routing tractable. Schema drift can go to the data contract owner. Permission issues route to the platform team. Source delays go to the ingestion owner. Partial write risk triggers a manual review workflow rather than auto-retry. This is what makes the system more useful than a chatbot that summarizes logs. Structured Incident Output The output should also be structured. Free-form summaries help humans skim, but they're hard to store, compare, or evaluate over time. JSON works better because it can be written to an incident table and consumed by Slack, Teams, Jira, or ServiceNow without parsing prose. JSON { "pipeline_name": "daily_customer_interactions", "job_run_id": "jr_2026_05_02_001", "status": "FAILED", "failure_category": "SCHEMA_DRIFT", "likely_root_cause": "Input file contains a new column named device_type that is not defined in the curated table schema.", "affected_source_path": "s3://raw/events/date=2026-05-02/", "affected_table": "curated.customer_interactions", "safe_to_retry": false, "recommended_action": "Quarantine the batch, update the schema contract, and rerun with the same batch_id after validation.", "confidence": 0.87 } A structured output gives engineers a quick summary, and it gives downstream tools something reliable to use. If safe_to_retry is false, the orchestrator blocks automatic retry. If failure_category is PERMISSION_ERROR, the issue routes to the platform queue. If confidence is low, the system asks for human review. If the same failure category recurs across runs, dashboards can track it over time. One important framing point: the LLM is not the system of record. The control table, logs, table metadata, and quality checks remain the source of truth. The agent is a reasoning layer that produces structured evidence on top of that. Implementation Sketch A simple implementation starts with assembling the incident context. The example below is intentionally simplified. In production, the LLM call should use structured outputs or schema-validated responses rather than free-form text parsing. Python def build_incident_context(job_run, control_record, dq_results, recent_logs): return { "job_name": job_run["JobName"], "job_run_id": job_run["Id"], "status": job_run["JobRunState"], "started_on": str(job_run["StartedOn"]), "completed_on": str(job_run.get("CompletedOn")), "batch_id": control_record.get("batch_id"), "source_path": control_record.get("source_path"), "target_table": control_record.get("target_table"), "attempt_count": control_record.get("attempt_count"), "control_status": control_record.get("status"), "data_quality_results": dq_results, "recent_error_logs": recent_logs[-50:] } The classifier receives a fixed category list and explicit rules about what it shouldn't recommend. Python def classify_failure(llm_client, incident_context): prompt = f""" You are analyzing a failed data pipeline run. Classify the failure into one of these categories: SCHEMA_DRIFT, DATA_SKEW, SOURCE_DELAY, PERMISSION_ERROR, CODE_REGRESSION, PARTIAL_WRITE_RISK, SMALL_FILE_PRESSURE, UNKNOWN. Return only valid JSON with: failure_category, likely_root_cause, safe_to_retry, recommended_action, confidence. Rules: - Do not recommend a retry if there is partial write risk. - Do not recommend schema changes without human review. - Do not recommend permission changes without platform approval. - Use UNKNOWN when evidence is weak or conflicting. Incident context: {incident_context} """ return llm_client.invoke(prompt) In a real implementation, this prompt should be paired with a strict response schema (failure_category as an enum, likely_root_cause as a string, safe_to_retry as a boolean, recommended_action as a string, confidence as a float between 0 and 1), and the system should reject any output that doesn't match. In production, structured outputs are the better choice when the API supports them. The free-form prompt above is illustrative. The result gets stored, not acted on: Python def store_incident_summary(summary, incident_table): incident_table.put_item( Item={ "pipeline_name": summary["pipeline_name"], "job_run_id": summary["job_run_id"], "failure_category": summary["failure_category"], "safe_to_retry": summary["safe_to_retry"], "recommended_action": summary["recommended_action"], "confidence": summary["confidence"], "created_at": current_timestamp() } ) The agent writes an explanation. Other systems decide what to do with it. What the Agent Should Never Decide This boundary is the most important design choice in the whole pattern, and it's worth being explicit about. An observability agent helps engineers understand a failure. It does not control production data systems. Even at high confidence, certain actions stay out of scope: Changing table schemasGranting IAM or Lake Formation permissionsDeleting dataMarking a partially written batch as successfulOverriding data quality failuresPromoting quarantined dataRewriting production tablesTriggering cross-pipeline backfillsCompacting or expiring table snapshots without approval These actions move from observability into production control, and that line should stay clear. In regulated or business-critical environments, the safest design lets the agent produce structured evidence and recommendations while deterministic rules, approval workflows, or engineers decide whether anything actually executes. An agent saying "this looks like schema drift, the batch is not safe to retry" is useful. The same agent updating the curated table schema on its own is not. It's a future incident waiting to happen. Same with permissions: the agent flagging an IAM issue is useful; the agent granting itself access is a security violation. The trade-off here is real. Letting the agent take action would reduce the mean time to recovery. But the cost of a confident wrong action (silently corrupted data, an unauthorized permission grant, a dropped partition) is much higher than the cost of a few extra minutes of human review. In a regulated data environment, that trade-off is usually easy to justify. This matters as teams move toward self-healing pipelines. Before a pipeline can safely fix itself, it has to first explain itself reliably, at scale, with measurable accuracy. That bar isn't met yet in most production environments. Evaluating the Triage Layer A triage layer should be evaluated like any other production component. "The summary looks good" is not an evaluation. To check whether the pattern behaves reasonably, a small synthetic evaluation can be assembled across common Glue failure modes. Each scenario includes a short set of log lines, control-table state, data quality results, and table metadata, and the agent is scored on two things: whether it picks the correct failure category, and whether the safe_to_retry decision is appropriate. This is a starter evaluation, not a benchmark. Ten synthetic scenarios are enough to sanity-check the design. A real production rollout needs hundreds of labeled historical incidents, edge cases, and human-reviewed outcomes. Anything less should be treated as an early prototype, not production validation. ScenarioExpected categoryAgent categorySafe-to-retry decisionMissing source pathSOURCE_DELAYSOURCE_DELAYCorrectNew column in inputSCHEMA_DRIFTSCHEMA_DRIFTCorrectAccess denied on catalog tablePERMISSION_ERRORPERMISSION_ERRORCorrectShuffle spill and one long taskDATA_SKEWDATA_SKEWCorrectFailure after staging writePARTIAL_WRITE_RISKPARTIAL_WRITE_RISKCorrectToo many small filesSMALL_FILE_PRESSURESMALL_FILE_PRESSURECorrectRecent code deployment plus null pointerCODE_REGRESSIONCODE_REGRESSIONCorrectLow record count, no hard errorSOURCE_DELAYUNKNOWNConservative escalationCast failure due to bad input valueSCHEMA_DRIFTSCHEMA_DRIFTWrong, recommended retryConflicting log signalsUNKNOWNUNKNOWNCorrect escalation In a small evaluation like this one, a well-designed classifier should pick the expected category in most scenarios and, more importantly, get the safe-to-retry decision right in nearly all of them. The illustrative results above show eight correct retry decisions, one conservative escalation (the agent returns UNKNOWN rather than guessing), and one wrong call. That wrong call is the most instructive. On the cast failure, the agent classifies the issue correctly as schema drift but recommends cleanup-and-retry instead of quarantine-and-contract-review. A wrong root cause is inconvenient. A wrong retry recommendation can corrupt data. Safe-retry precision should be weighted higher than classification accuracy when evaluating this kind of system, and that weighting should be reflected in the prompt rules and in the validation rubric. The metrics worth tracking in production: MetricWhy it mattersClassification accuracyWhether the agent identifies the right failure typeSafe-retry precisionWhether retry recommendations are actually safeFalse confidence rateConfident-but-wrong recommendationsMean triage timeReduction in manual debugging timeHuman override rateHow often engineers reject the recommendationCost per incidentLLM and log-processing cost per failed run False confidence rate deserves attention. A low-confidence wrong answer is manageable because engineers know to scrutinize it. A high-confidence wrong answer is dangerous because teams stop scrutinizing. Confidence belongs in the output, but it should never be treated as truth. It's one signal among several in the routing decision. Closing Glue job failures aren't hard because the logs are long. They're hard because the evidence is scattered across logs, run metadata, data quality results, control tables, and table commits, and an engineer has to assemble it before deciding what to do next. An agentic observability layer turns that scattered evidence into a structured incident summary. The safest version of this pattern is controlled triage, not autonomous repair: observe, classify, explain, recommend, and stop there. Deterministic rules, approval workflows, and engineers decide what happens next. Before pipelines can fix themselves, they need to explain themselves. That's the work worth doing first.
June 3, 2026 by
Getting Started With Agentic Workflows in Java and Quarkus
June 3, 2026 by
Persistent Memory for AI Agents Using LangChain's Deep Agents
June 4, 2026 by
A System Cannot Protect What It Does Not Understand
June 4, 2026 by
Liquid Glass, Material 3, and a Lot of Plumbing
June 4, 2026
by
CORE
Build a GitHub Slack Bot With AWS Bedrock and MCP, Part 2
June 4, 2026 by
Persistent Memory for AI Agents Using LangChain's Deep Agents
June 4, 2026 by
Liquid Glass, Material 3, and a Lot of Plumbing
June 4, 2026
by
CORE