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PlanetScale Metal

PlanetScale Metal

Update: 2025-06-27
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Description

In this episode, I chat with Richard Crowley from PlanetScale about their new offering: PlanetScale Metal.

We dive deep into the performance and reliability trade-offs of EBS vs. locally attached NVMe storage,

and how Metal delivers game-changing speed for MySQL workloads.


Links:

  • Database School: https://databaseschool.com
  • PlanetScale: https://planetscale.com
  • PlanetScale Metal: https://planetscale.com/blog/announcing-metal


Follow Richard:

  • Twitter: https://twitter.com/rcrowley
  • Website: https://rcrowley.org


Follow Aaron:

  • Twitter: https://twitter.com/aarondfrancis
  • LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/aarondfrancis
  • Website: https://aaronfrancis.com — find articles, podcasts, courses, and more.


Chapters:

00:00 - Intro: What is PlanetScale Metal?

00:39 - Meet Richard Crowley

01:33 - What is Vitess and how does it work?

03:00 - Where PlanetScale fits into the picture

09:03 - Why EBS is the default and its trade-offs

13:03 - How PlanetScale handles durability without EBS

16:03 - The engineering work behind PlanetScale Metal

22:00 - Deep dive into backups, restores, and availability math

25:03 - How PlanetScale replaces instances safely

27:11 - Performance gains with Metal: Latency and IOPS explained

32:03 - Database workloads that truly benefit from Metal

39:10 - The myth of the infinite cloud

41:08 - How PlanetScale plans for capacity

43:02 - Multi-tenant vs. PlanetScale Managed

44:02 - Who should use Metal and when?

46:05 - Pricing trade-offs and when Metal becomes cheaper

48:27 - Scaling vertically vs. sharding

49:57 - What’s next for PlanetScale Metal?

53:32 - Where to learn more

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PlanetScale Metal

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