Zero-Downtime Deployments: Blue-Green, Canary, and Rolling Updates Explained
Every minute of downtime has a price tag. Gartner's oft-cited figure of $5,600 per minute is from 2014 — adjusted for today's always-on expectations, the real number for mid-market SaaS sits betwee...

Source: DEV Community
Every minute of downtime has a price tag. Gartner's oft-cited figure of $5,600 per minute is from 2014 — adjusted for today's always-on expectations, the real number for mid-market SaaS sits between $8,000 and $15,000. But the cost that never makes a spreadsheet is user trust. A customer who hits a 502 during checkout doesn't file a support ticket. They leave. The good news is that zero-downtime deployments are no longer the exclusive domain of teams with dedicated platform engineering. The tooling has matured. The bad news is that "zero-downtime" has become marketing language — the trade-offs, failure modes, and edge cases rarely get covered alongside the pretty diagrams. The Three Strategies at a Glance Blue-Green is the oldest and most intuitive. Two identical production environments: one (blue) serves live traffic while the other (green) runs the new version. Flip the load balancer. Instant switchover, instant rollback. The trade-off is infrastructure cost — you need double the com