At DockYard, our goal is to build the fastest and most robust applications for our clients both on the front-end and back-end. When it comes to the server, Elixir and Phoenix give us the fastest platform with the highest productivity. And it just keeps getting better. New features like the much anticipated Phoenix Presence have us extremely excited about treading new ground on what a Web framework can accomplish.

Here’s a sneak peek of the new features in action that show how we’re putting cutting edge CS research into practice and how you can try it out for yourself. Jump below for full details:

Phoenix Presence

Phoenix Presence is an upcoming feature in Phoenix 1.2 which brings support for registering process information on a topic and replicating this information transparently across a cluster. Its simplest use-case would be showing which users are currently online in an application, but we’re excited about other lower-level uses such as service discovery. This feature at first seems simple and mundane, but most libraries fail to properly tackle it and those that do introduce extra dependencies without solving edge-cases. Not so with Phoenix.

What makes it special?

What’s special about Phoenix’s implementation is we have a system that applies cutting edge CS research to tackle day-to-day problems in the applications we all write. Phoenix Presence:

has no single point of failure

has no single source of truth

relies entirely on the standard library with no operational dependencies

self heals

Unlike most libraries and web frameworks in various languages, Phoenix does not require a central datastore to hold presence information. While having to deploy Redis or similar datastores increases your operational overhead, it also introduces a couple severe penalties – a single point of failure, and central bottleneck. Worse still, if one of your servers goes down, you’ll have orphaned data stuck permanently in your database. With Phoenix, we’ve developed a system based on a distributed heartbeat/gossip protocol which uses a CRDT to replicate data in a conflict-free way. This gives you high availability and performance because we don’t have to send all data through a central server. It also gives you resilience to failure because the system automatically recovers from failures. This includes other nodes going up or down or spotty networks causing netsplits and missed data replication.

Great platforms yield great solutions

None of this would be possible without the innovations from Elixir and Erlang which gives us a distributed runtime that’s unmatched by other languages. When we sat down to design Phoenix Presence, instead of immediately asking “which database would be best to hold presences?”, we could ask “how can we best replicate data in a distributed system without the user having to worry about it?”. The platforms you build on top of drive the design decisions you make in your products. With Elixir, you are empowered to tackle problems that in other platforms would feel impossible to solve without tradeoffs with heavy dependencies. Overtime these decisions play out to more reliable products and services, and better user experiences.