Skip to main content
  1. Blog
  2. Article

Canonical
on 11 December 2017

Silph Road embraces cloud and containers with Canonical


The Silph Road is the premier grassroots network for Pokémon GO players around the world offering research, tools, and resources to the largest Pokémon GO community worldwide, with up to 400,000 visitors per day

Operating a volunteer-run, community network with up to 400,000 daily visitors is no easy task especially in the face of massive and unpredictable demand spikes, and with developers spread all over the world. With massive user demand and with volunteer developers located all over the world, The Silph Road’s operations must be cost-effective, flexible, and scalable.

This led the Pokémon GO network first to cloud, and then to containers and in both cases Canonical ’s technology was the answer.

Highlights

  • Containerisation with Canonical’s Distribution of Kubernetes helped reduce cloud build by 40%
  • Autoscaling makes coping with spikes in user demand easy and cost-effective
  • Juju enables The Silph Road to migrate between public clouds with less than 2 minutes downtime

For more information and to view the case study please visit Silph Road Case Study

Related posts


Kola Ojoodide
26 June 2026

Challenges designers face in open source (and how to fix them)

Design open source

Open source powers up to 90% of modern software, yet many projects lack usability. Canonical’s Design team surveyed 115 cross-functional professionals to uncover the 4 core challenges UI/UX designers face when contributing, and how maintainers can solve them. ...


Alberto Carretero
25 June 2026

Hunting a 16-year-old SQLite bug with TLA+: is dqlite affected?

DevOps Article

This article was written by Marco Manino and Alberto Carretero, dqlite team at Canonical. 1. Anatomy of a SQLite bug Recently SQLite published a new version with a fix to a long-standing bug in the way that the Write Ahead Log (WAL) is checkpointed that leads to the corruption of the database. The important aspect ...


Bertrand Boisseau
24 June 2026

Anbox Cloud on C4A metal: Android, at scale, without friction

Ubuntu Article

Why C4A metal is a great place to run Android and why Anbox Cloud makes that practical. If you’ve spent even a small portion of time working with Android development at scale, you’ve likely encountered some pinch points. The platform was built for Arm-based devices, mobile physical hardware, and tightly controlled system environments. Clo ...