How to approach a system design interview question
How to tackle a system design interview question.
The system design interview is an open-ended conversation. You are expected to lead it.
You can use the following steps to guide the discussion. To help solidify this process, work through the System design interview questions with solutions section using the following steps.
Step 1: Outline use cases, constraints, and assumptions
Gather requirements and scope the problem. Ask questions to clarify use cases and constraints. Discuss assumptions.
- Who is going to use it?
- How are they going to use it?
- How many users are there?
- What does the system do?
- What are the inputs and outputs of the system?
- How much data do we expect to handle?
- How many requests per second do we expect?
- What is the expected read to write ratio?
Step 2: Create a high level design
Outline a high level design with all important components.
- Sketch the main components and connections
- Justify your ideas
Step 3: Design core components
Dive into details for each core component. For example, if you were asked to design a url shortening service, discuss:
- Generating and storing a hash of the full url
- Translating a hashed url to the full url
- Database lookup
- API and object-oriented design
Step 4: Scale the design
Identify and address bottlenecks, given the constraints. For example, do you need the following to address scalability issues?
- Load balancer
- Horizontal scaling
- Caching
- Database sharding
Discuss potential solutions and trade-offs. Everything is a trade-off. Address bottlenecks using principles of scalable system design.
Back-of-the-envelope calculations
You might be asked to do some estimates by hand. Refer to the Appendix for the following resources:
- Use back of the envelope calculations
- Powers of two table
- Latency numbers every programmer should know
Source(s) and further reading
Check out the following links to get a better idea of what to expect: