this post was submitted on 19 Nov 2025
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So I work in the IT department of a pretty large company. One of the things that we do on a regular basis is staged updates, so we'll get a small number of computers and we'll update the software on them to the latest version or whatever. Then we leave it for about a week, and if the world doesn't end we update the software onto the next group and then the next and then the next until everything is upgraded. We don't just slap it onto production infrastructure and then go to the pub.
But apparently our standards are slightly higher than that of an international organisation who's whole purpose is cyber security.
My assumption is that the pattern you describe is possible/doable on certain scales and in certain combinations of technologies. But doing this across a distributed system with as many nodes and as many different nodes as CloudFlare has, and still have a system that can be updated quickly (responding to DDOS attacks for example) is a lot harder.
If you really feel like you have a better solution please contact them and consult for them, the internet would thank you for it.
They know this, it's not like any of this is a revelation. But the company has been lazy and would rather just test in production because that's cheaper and most of the time perfectly fine.
It looks like you have never read their blog. They do a lot of research and upstream contributions to improve their stack