What if the system you rely on every day is still running-but quietly holding everything back? You didn't build it yesterday. It grew over years. PHP or Java monoliths patched again and again, each change adding more complexity than clarity. Now even small updates feel risky, deployments take longer, and no one fully trusts the "core" anymore. So the real question is simple: Do you keep maintaining it... or do you finally replace it safely? The Legacy Killswitch: The Strangler Fig Pattern is about answering that without breaking everything in production. Instead of risky rewrites or disruptive shutdowns, it shows how to gradually replace legacy systems using the Strangler Fig approach-where new services take over step by step until the old system quietly fades out. You'll see how teams move from tightly coupled monoliths to serverless Rust services, not by rewriting everything, but by controlling traffic, isolating domains, and replacing functionality in layers. No big-bang migration. No downtime panic. But the deeper idea is this: A system should never be something you're afraid to change-or afraid to turn off. So you'll also learn how to design with the end in mind: killswitch patterns, safe decommissioning strategies, and architectures that don't trap you in long-term maintenance debt. This isn't just about modernization. It's about control, clarity, and removing systems that no longer deserve to dominate your infrastructure. If you've ever looked at your backend and thought, "This still works, but I don't trust it anymore," then this book is for you. Stop extending legacy systems. Start designing their exit.
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