Systems fail without warning. That’s why a High Availability Quarterly Check-In is non-negotiable.
Every quarter, you need evidence your architecture can survive outages and spikes. Scheduled check-ins force you to confirm redundancy, verify failover paths, and validate monitoring alerts. Without this discipline, “high availability” is just a line in a slide deck.
Start with infrastructure status. Audit your load balancers, failover clusters, and replication setups. Confirm that every fallback route actually works, not just in theory. Run drills to simulate node loss, zone failures, and network partitions. Record exact recovery times. Compare them to your SLAs.
Inspect your monitoring stack. Are alerts firing for the right events? Check thresholds, ensure log aggregation is complete, and confirm dashboards reflect reality. A High Availability Quarterly Check-In is about certainty, not assumption.
Review dependencies. Third-party APIs, managed databases, and cloud services can all fail. Document their uptime commitments. Verify your system can degrade gracefully when they do.
Evaluate capacity. Usage patterns shift over months. Re-run load tests, measure latency under stress, and adjust scaling rules. Growth without tuning erodes availability.
Close with incident retros. Analyze the last quarter’s downtime or near misses. Are fixes permanent? Did they reduce mean time to recovery? Feed these answers back into your process.
A High Availability Quarterly Check-In hardens your system against chaos. Do it, document it, improve it. Then see it live in minutes with hoop.dev.