William MacDonald

Psa Interface Checker Scary Mistake Fix Now

Psa Interface Checker Scary Mistake Fix Now

You build tools to catch mistakes. You add an interface checker to validate inputs, enforce types, and stop regressions. It’s supposed to be a safety net. Then one day the “safety net” turns into a guillotine.

The setup: a PSA (public service announcement) interface checker—an automated gatekeeper that inspects incoming data to an application programming interface, flags protocol violations, sanitizes payloads, and either permits or rejects requests. It runs at the edge, before business logic, and everybody breathes easier: malformed requests don’t reach fragile subsystems, data shape is guaranteed, and logs show neat successes. psa interface checker scary mistake fix

The problem: a small change in the checker’s validation rules. An innocuous refactor renamed a field, tightened a regex, or reinterpreted a truthy value. The checker began to treat certain valid requests as invalid. Worse, instead of returning clean, debuggable errors, it normalized rejected payloads in a way that silently dropped critical fields. Some consumers received success responses with degraded behavior; others saw weird partial processing; downstream systems received corrupted events. The result: cascading failures, lost messages, and a production incident that looked like a distributed puzzle. You build tools to catch mistakes

Denn so hat Gott die Welt geliebt, dass er seinen einzigen Sohn gab, damit jeder, der an ihn glaubt, nicht verloren geht, sondern ewiges Leben hat.
— Evangelium nach Johannes, Kapitel 3, Vers 16

© 2011 - 2022 CGEF - Christliche Gemeinde Eferding. Alle Rechte vorbehalten.
Verein zur Verbreitung des Evangeliums und Förderung des christlichen Glaubens.