How to Use Git Rebase Step by Step: A Practical Guide for Developers

How to Use Git Rebase Step by Step: A Practical Guide for Developers

If you’ve been using Git for a while, you probably feel comfortable with git merge. It’s safe, it’s predictable, and it gets the job done. But there’s another tool in your Git toolkit that can keep your project history cleaner and easier to read: git rebase.

For a long time, I avoided rebase entirely. I’d heard the warnings — “don’t rebase shared branches,” “you’ll rewrite history” — and honestly, the command-line interface intimidated me. But once I actually sat down and learned how to use git rebase step by step, it changed how I manage my branches.

In this tutorial, I’ll walk you through everything you need to know, from the basic concepts to interactive rebasing, conflict resolution, and real-world scenarios where rebase shines over merge.


What Is Git Rebase, Exactly?

Before we dive into commands, let’s make sure we understand what rebase actually does under the hood.

In simple terms, rebase reapplies your commits on top of a different base commit. Imagine you branched off main to work on a feature. While you were heads-down coding, someone else merged their work into main. Your branch is now behind.

You have two choices:

  • Merge: Creates a new “merge commit” that ties your branch and main together. Your branch’s history stays as-is, but you get an extra commit and a less linear history.
  • Rebase: Rewinds your branch commits, moves your branch pointer to the latest main, then replays your commits one by one on top. The result looks like you just branched yesterday — a clean, linear history.

Here’s a visual way to think about it:

Before rebase:

    A---B---C  (main)
         \
          D---E  (feature)

After rebase:

    A---B---C---D'---E'  (feature now based on C)

Your commits D and E are replayed as D’ and E’ on top of C. Same changes, new commit hashes.


Prerequisites

Before you follow along with this tutorial, make sure you have:

  1. Git installed (version 2.40 or later recommended — I’m using Git 2.47 as I write this in 2026). You can check with:
git --version
  1. A basic understanding of Git fundamentals — commits, branches, staging area, and merging. If you know how to git add, git commit, and git merge, you’re ready.

  2. A practice repository. I strongly recommend creating a throwaway repo so you can experiment freely:

mkdir rebase-practice && cd rebase-practice
git init
  1. A configured default editor. Interactive rebase opens your terminal editor. If you haven’t set one:
# For VS Code
git config --global core.editor "code --wait"

# For Nano
git config --global core.editor "nano"

# For Vim
git config --global core.editor "vim"

One more thing: I’ll use a sample repository throughout this tutorial. You can create it yourself by following the setup steps, or apply the concepts directly to your own project.


Setting Up a Practice Repository

Let’s build a realistic scenario. We’ll create a main branch with a few commits, then a feature branch with its own commits.

# Initialize
mkdir rebase-practice && cd rebase-practice
git init

# Create initial file and commit
echo "Hello World" > index.html
git add index.html
git commit -m "Initial commit: add index.html"

# Add more commits to main
echo "<h1>My Website</h1>" >> index.html
git add index.html
git commit -m "Add heading to index.html"

echo "<p>Welcome to my site.</p>" >> index.html
git add index.html
git commit -m "Add paragraph to index.html"

Now create and switch to a feature branch:

git checkout -b feature/newsletter

Add some commits on the feature branch:

echo "<form>Newsletter signup</form>" > newsletter.html
git add newsletter.html
git commit -m "Add newsletter signup form"

echo "<input type='email'>" >> newsletter.html
git add newsletter.html
git commit -m "Add email input to newsletter form"

Now go back to main and add commits there (simulating teammate work):

git checkout main

echo "<footer>Copyright 2026</footer>" >> index.html
git add index.html
git commit -m "Add footer to index.html"

Your repository now looks like this:

A---B---C---F  (main)
         \
          D---E  (feature/newsletter)

Where:
– A = Initial commit
– B = Add heading
– C = Add paragraph
– D = Add newsletter signup form
– E = Add email input
– F = Add footer

The feature branch is now one commit behind main. This is the perfect scenario for a rebase.


How to Use Git Rebase Step by Step

Step 1: Switch to the Branch You Want to Rebase

Always make sure you’re on the branch that needs updating — not on main, not on some other branch:

git checkout feature/newsletter

This is one of the most common beginner mistakes: running rebase from the wrong branch. I’ve done it myself, and it creates a mess you then have to undo. Double-check with:

git branch

You should see * feature/newsletter.

Step 2: Run the Rebase Command

Now tell Git to rebase your current branch onto the latest main:

git rebase main

You’ll see output like this:

Rebasing (1/2)
Rebasing (2/2)
Successfully rebased and updated "feature/newsletter".

Git rewound your two feature commits (D and E), moved your branch pointer to commit F (the latest on main), then replayed your commits on top.

Your history now looks like:

A---B---C---F---D'---E'  (feature/newsletter)

Step 3: Verify the Result

Check your commit log to see the new linear history:

git log --oneline --graph --all

You should see something like:

* e3a7f2c Add email input to newsletter form
* 8b1d4a0 Add newsletter signup form
* 2c9f1e0 Add footer to index.html
* a4b5c6d Add paragraph to index.html
* f1e2d3c Add heading to index.html
* 1a2b3c4 Initial commit: add index.html

No merge commit. No branching graph. Just a clean, straight line.

Verify your files are still intact:

cat index.html
cat newsletter.html

All your changes should be there — both the main branch changes (footer) and your feature branch changes (newsletter form).


Handling Rebase Conflicts

In the ideal case, rebase goes smoothly. But in the real world, conflicts happen — especially when your feature branch modifies the same lines that were changed on main.

Let’s create a conflict on purpose so you know exactly how to handle it.

Creating a Conflict Scenario

# Start fresh
cd ..
rm -rf rebase-practice
mkdir rebase-practice && cd rebase-practice
git init

# Create a file with one line
echo "Color: blue" > config.txt
git add config.txt
git commit -m "Set color to blue"

# Create feature branch
git checkout -b feature/dark-mode

# Change the same line on the feature branch
echo "Color: dark" > config.txt
git add config.txt
git commit -m "Change color to dark for dark mode"

Now go back to main and change that same line:

git checkout main
echo "Color: green" > config.txt
git add config.txt
git commit -m "Change color to green"

Running the Rebase and Seeing the Conflict

git checkout feature/dark-mode
git rebase main

This time, Git will stop and tell you there’s a conflict:

Auto-merging config.txt
CONFLICT (content): Merge conflict in config.txt
error: could not apply a1b2c3d... Change color to dark for dark mode
hint: Resolve all conflicts manually and mark them as resolved
hint: with "git add <file>..." and then run "git rebase --continue".

Resolving the Conflict Step by Step

1. Open the conflicting file:

cat config.txt

You’ll see Git’s conflict markers:

<<<<<<< HEAD
Color: green
=======
Color: dark
>>>>>>> a1b2c3d (Change color to dark for dark mode)

2. Edit the file to resolve the conflict. Decide what the final content should be. For example, let’s say you want to keep your feature branch change:

echo "Color: dark" > config.txt

Or you could combine changes, pick one side, or write something entirely new — it depends on what makes sense for your project.

3. Stage the resolved file:

git add config.txt

4. Continue the rebase:

git rebase --continue

Git may open your editor to let you edit the commit message. You can keep it as-is, modify it, or just save and close. The rebase will then continue.

If there are multiple conflicting commits, Git will stop at each one, and you repeat this process.

Aborting a Rebase

If things get too messy or you realize you made a wrong decision, you can cancel the entire rebase:

git rebase --abort

This returns your branch to exactly how it was before you started. No harm done. I’ve used this more times than I’d like to admit.


Interactive Rebase: The Real Power Move

Basic rebase is useful, but interactive rebase (git rebase -i) is where things get genuinely powerful. It lets you modify your commit history before replaying it.

With interactive rebase, you can:

  • Reorder commits
  • Squash multiple commits into one
  • Reword commit messages
  • Edit specific commits (to split them or add changes)
  • Drop commits entirely

Starting an Interactive Rebase

git rebase -i main

Or, to rebase the last N commits on your current branch:

git rebase -i HEAD~3

This opens your text editor with something like:

pick e3a7f2c Add newsletter signup form
pick 8b1d4a0 Add email input to newsletter form
pick f5c6d7e Fix typo in form label
pick a9b0c1d Add validation to email input

# Rebase instructions:
# p, pick <commit> = use commit
# r, reword <commit> = use commit, but edit the commit message
# e, edit <commit> = use commit, but stop for amending
# s, squash <commit> = use commit, but meld into previous commit
# f, fixup <commit> = like "squash", but discard this commit's message
# x, exec <command> = run command (the rest of the line) using shell
# b, break = stop here (continue rebase later with 'git rebase --continue')
# d, drop <commit> = remove commit
# l, label <label> = label current HEAD with a name
# t, reset <label> = reset HEAD to a label
# m, merge [-C <commit> | -c <commit>] <label> [# <oneline>]

Squashing Commits Together

One of the most common interactive rebase workflows is squashing. Let’s say your feature branch has four commits, but two of them are just typo fixes. You want a clean history with meaningful commits.

Edit the file:

pick e3a7f2c Add newsletter signup form
squash 8b1d4a0 Add email input to newsletter form
pick f5c6d7e Fix typo in form label
squash a9b0c1d Add validation to email input

Save and close. Git will open another editor window for each squash, letting you edit the combined commit message:

# This is a combination of 2 commits.
# This is the 1st commit message:

Add newsletter signup form

# This is the 2nd commit message:

Add email input to newsletter form

# Please enter the commit message for your changes.

Edit as needed, save, and close. The result is a cleaner history with fewer, more meaningful commits.

Rewording a Commit Message

To change just the message without combining commits:

pick e3a7f2c Add newsletter signup form
reword f5c6d7e Fix typo in form label
pick a9b0c1d Add validation to email input

Git will stop at the reword commit and open your editor so you can change the message.

Dropping a Commit

To remove a commit entirely:

pick e3a7f2c Add newsletter signup form
drop f5c6d7e Fix typo in form label
pick a9b0c1d Add validation to email input

Or simply delete the line containing the commit you want to drop.

Reordering Commits

Just move the lines around in the editor:

pick a9b0c1d Add validation to email input
pick e3a7f2c Add newsletter signup form

This will replay the commits in the new order. Note that reordering can cause conflicts if the commits touch the same files, but Git will prompt you to resolve them just like a normal rebase conflict.


The Golden Rule of Rebase: When NOT to Rebase

I need to be very clear about this because it’s the single most important thing to remember about rebase:

Never rebase commits that have been pushed to a shared repository and that other people might have based work on.

When you rebase, you’re rewriting history. Your commits get new hashes. If someone else has pulled your original commits and built on top of them, and then you force-push your rebased version, their history and yours will diverge. You’ll create duplicate commits, merge headaches, and frustrated teammates.

Here’s the practical guideline:

  • Your local feature branches that nobody else is using: Rebase freely. Have fun.
  • Shared feature branches where teammates are collaborating: Use merge instead, or coordinate rebase carefully with your team.
  • Main/develop/release branches: Almost always use merge. These branches should represent stable history.

If you accidentally rebase a shared branch and need to recover, you can use git reflog to find the original commits and git reset --hard to go back.

Force-Pushing After Rebase

When you rebase a branch that’s already been pushed to a remote, a normal git push will be rejected because your local history has diverged. You need to force-push:

git push --force-with-lease origin feature/newsletter

Always prefer --force-with-lease over --force. It checks that nobody else has pushed to the remote branch since your last pull, preventing you from accidentally overwriting a teammate’s work.


Rebase vs. Merge: Choosing the Right Tool

This is one of those perennial developer debates, and honestly, both tools have their place. Here’s my practical perspective:

Use Rebase When:

  • You’re updating your local feature branch with the latest from main before submitting a pull request
  • You want to clean up messy “WIP” commits before sharing your work
  • Your team follows a rebase-based workflow and has agreed on it
  • You want a linear, easy-to-read project history

Use Merge When:

  • You’re integrating a completed feature branch into main or develop
  • You’re working on a shared branch with teammates
  • You want to preserve the exact history of when branches diverged and merged
  • You’re working with protected branches that shouldn’t be rewritten

What I Actually Do in Practice

On most projects I work on, here’s the workflow:

  1. Create feature branch from main
  2. Make commits freely (including messy “fix typo” and “WIP” commits)
  3. Regularly rebase onto main to stay up to date
  4. Interactive rebase to clean up my commits before the PR
  5. Merge (usually via GitHub/GitLab’s merge button, often with squash merge) into main

This gives you the best of both worlds: clean local development, and a clean main branch history.


Common Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them

Pitfall 1: Rebasing the Wrong Branch

I once accidentally ran git rebase feature/my-branch while on main. This replayed all of main‘s commits onto my feature branch tip, creating a spectacular mess.

How to avoid: Always run git branch before git rebase and confirm you’re on the correct branch. Make it a habit.

Pitfall 2: Forgetting to Stage After Conflict Resolution

When resolving conflicts during a rebase, you need to git add the resolved files before running git rebase --continue. If you forget, Git will tell you, but it can be confusing if you don’t know what’s happening.

How to avoid: After editing conflicted files, always:

git add .
git rebase --continue

Do NOT commit during a rebase. Just stage and continue.

Pitfall 3:

AWS vs Azure vs GCP Comparison 2026: Which Cloud Provider Should You Choose?

AWS vs Azure vs GCP Comparison 2026: Which Cloud Provider Should You Choose?

Choosing a cloud provider today feels a lot like choosing a starter Pokémon—you know you’re going to be stuck with it for a long time, and the decision comes with heavy trade-offs. As a senior developer who has spent years architecting applications across all three major platforms, I’ve seen the landscape shift dramatically.

If you are reading this, you are likely trying to decide where to host your next big project, or perhaps you are planning a migration. Welcome to the ultimate aws vs azure vs gcp comparison 2026. In this deep dive, we are going to cut through the marketing fluff and look at what actually matters to us as developers: performance, pricing, developer experience, and ecosystem constraints.

Let’s boot up and explore where AWS, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud Platform stand in 2026.

The 2026 Cloud Landscape: A Quick Overview

The cloud market has matured significantly. We are no longer just renting virtual machines; we are deploying serverless functions at the edge, fine-tuning foundation AI models, and managing stateful Kubernetes clusters across multiple regions with a few lines of code.

  • AWS (Amazon Web Services): The undisputed juggernaut. AWS remains the market share leader, prioritizing an “everything for everyone” approach. Their ecosystem is massive, though sometimes overwhelming.
  • Microsoft Azure: The enterprise champion. Azure has solidified its dominance by seamlessly integrating with the Microsoft ecosystem (GitHub, Active Directory, Microsoft 365, Visual Studio).
  • GCP (Google Cloud Platform): The developer and data darling. GCP continues to lead in open-source contributions, AI/ML integrations, and sheer networking performance, even if its enterprise footprint is smaller.

Feature Comparison: The Core Services Showdown

Before we get into the benchmarks and pricing, let’s look at how the providers match up in their core service offerings. Every cloud has its own naming conventions, but the underlying technologies usually map 1:1.

Core Services Matrix (2026)

Category AWS Azure GCP
Compute (VMs) EC2 (Graviton6) Virtual Machines (Cobalt 200) Compute Engine (Axion)
Containers ECS, EKS, Fargate AKS, Container Apps GKE, Cloud Run
Serverless Lambda Azure Functions Cloud Functions
Relational DB Aurora, RDS Cosmos DB, Azure SQL Cloud SQL, AlloyDB
NoSQL DB DynamoDB Cosmos DB Firestore, Bigtable
Data Warehousing Redshift Synapse Analytics BigQuery
AI/ML Platform Amazon Bedrock, SageMaker Azure OpenAI, AI Studio Vertex AI
Infrastructure as Code CloudFormation, CDK Bicep, ARM Templates Deployment Manager, Pulumi
CI/CD Ecosystem CodePipeline Azure DevOps, GitHub Actions Cloud Build

Performance Benchmarks: Who Has the Fastest Hardware?

In 2026, the performance war is largely being fought on two fronts: custom ARM-based silicon and AI accelerators. All three providers have moved away from relying purely on standard Intel and AMD processors, introducing their own custom silicon to optimize for cloud workloads.

AWS relies on its Graviton series, Azure uses Cobalt, and GCP has rolled out its Axion processors.

When we run standardized benchmark tests (like Geekbench 6 or custom transaction-heavy workloads), the differences are notable but highly dependent on the specific workload.

  • Compute Performance: GCP’s Axion processors currently edge out the competition in memory-bound workloads, while AWS Graviton6 excels in raw integer math and distributed processing.
  • Network Throughput: Google’s premium tier network remains the gold standard for inter-region latency. AWS and Azure have closed the gap, but GCP’s global fiber network gives it a slight edge for globally distributed applications.
  • Storage IOPS: AWS’s io2 Block Express volumes consistently hit their promised ceiling of 256,000 IOPS with sub-millisecond latency. Azure’s Ultra Disks offer comparable performance, while GCP’s Hyperdisk allows for dynamic tuning of IOPS and throughput without detaching the disk.

Here is a simple Python script I use to test internal network latency between compute instances to validate these claims on your own deployments:

import subprocess
import time

def measure_internal_latency(target_ip, count=10):
    """
    Pings an internal cloud IP to measure hypervisor-network latency.
    Requires the instance to have ICMP enabled in its firewall/VPC rules.
    """
    print(f"Pinging {target_ip}...")
    try:
        # Using subprocess to call the system ping command
        result = subprocess.run(
            ['ping', '-c', str(count), target_ip],
            capture_output=True,
            text=True
        )
        print(result.stdout)
    except Exception as e:
        print(f"Error running ping: {e}")

# Example usage:
# Replace with the internal IP of another VM in the same VNet/VPC
measure_internal_latency('10.128.0.2')

Pricing Models: Who Protects Your Wallet?

Cloud pricing is notoriously complex. However, in 2026, transparency tools and AI-driven cost optimizers have made it slightly easier to manage.

The Spot Instance Market

If your workloads are fault-tolerant (like containerized microservices or CI/CD runners), Spot Instances are the way to go.

  • GCP offers the most aggressive Spot pricing, often providing up to 80-90% discounts on custom machine types. Their Preemptible VMs are incredibly cheap for batch jobs.
  • AWS Spot Instances are reliable, but the Spot market pricing algorithm can occasionally spike heavily in high-demand Availability Zones.
  • Azure Spot VMs integrate beautifully with Kubernetes (AKS), allowing you to define eviction policies at the node pool level seamlessly.

Committed Use vs. Reserved Instances

For production databases and always-on web servers, you will buy commitments.

  • AWS requires you to understand Reserved Instances (Standard vs. Convertible) or 1-year/3-year Savings Plans.
  • GCP wins on flexibility with Committed Use Discounts (CUDs) that automatically apply to matching instances in a given region, without needing to attach a commitment to a specific VM.
  • Azure offers Reservations that are easily managed via the Azure Portal and offer great discounts if you already have an Enterprise Agreement (EA).

Here is a quick look at how you might query pricing via the AWS CLI—something highly useful for automating financial forecasting scripts:

# Requires AWS CLI v2 and the pricing API
# Note: The AWS Pricing API is located in us-east-1 or ap-south-1 endpoints only.

aws pricing get-products \
    --service-code AmazonEC2 \
    --filters "Type=TERM_MATCH,Field=instanceType,Value=m7g.xlarge" "Type=TERM_MATCH,Field=location,Value=US East (N. Virginia)" "Type=TERM_MATCH,Field=operatingSystem,Value=Linux" \
    --region us-east-1 \
    --query 'PriceList[0]' \
    --output json | jq '.' 

Pros and Cons: An Honest Evaluation

Every platform has its quirks. Here is my honest assessment after spending thousands of hours in each console.

AWS (Amazon Web Services)

The Good:
* Ecosystem depth: If a service exists, AWS has a managed version of it.
* Community: When you hit a bug, someone has already solved it on Stack Overflow or written a blog post about it.
* Serverless maturity: Lambda and DynamoDB are battle-tested and virtually indestructible at scale.

The Bad:
* Console UX: The AWS Management Console is cluttered. Navigating IAM policies feels like navigating a maze blindfolded.
* Service sprawl: There are often three overlapping services that do the same thing (e.g., AppRunner, ECS, EKS, Beanstalk).

Microsoft Azure

The Good:
* Microsoft Integration: If your company uses Windows, Active Directory, or GitHub, Azure is a no-brainer. Azure Entra ID (formerly AD) is flawless.
* Developer Tooling: Visual Studio integration and GitHub Actions make CI/CD pipelines incredibly smooth.
* Enterprise Support: Microsoft’s enterprise sales and support structure is deeply entrenched in Fortune 500s.

The Bad:
* Documentation: Azure docs can sometimes be outdated or contradictory compared to AWS and GCP.
* Portal Latency: The Azure Portal can feel sluggish, and resource deployments occasionally fail with vague error messages requiring a deep dive into Activity Logs.

GCP (Google Cloud Platform)

The Good:
* Kubernetes Native: Google Kubernetes Engine (GKE) is still the gold standard. No other provider manages Kubernetes as effortlessly.
* Data Analytics: BigQuery is lightning fast and incredibly easy to use.
* Open Source Friendly: Google heavily utilizes open-source tools like Terraform and Kubernetes, avoiding vendor lock-in traps.

The Bad:
* Market Share: Fewer enterprise clients mean less pressure for enterprise-grade 24/7 support compared to AWS/Azure.
* Console Instability: Google has a habit of sunsetting products, making enterprise architects nervous (though they’ve stabilized significantly in recent years).

Developer Experience and Tooling: Terraform vs. Native IaC

When evaluating the aws vs azure vs gcp comparison 2026, Developer Experience (DevEx) is paramount.

In 2026, writing Infrastructure as Code (IaC) is the standard. While AWS CloudFormation and Azure Bicep have improved drastically, Terraform remains the universal language of the cloud.

However, cloud-native development kits are catching up. AWS CDK (Cloud Development Kit) allows you to write infrastructure in TypeScript, Python, or Go, which feels incredibly natural to modern developers. Azure Bicep offers a much cleaner syntax compared to old ARM templates. GCP remains highly Terraform-friendly but also supports Pulumi for developers who prefer standard programming languages over HCL (HashiCorp Configuration Language).

Let’s look

How to Fix Nginx 502 Bad Gateway: A Complete Troubleshooting Guide

How to Fix Nginx 502 Bad Gateway: A Complete Troubleshooting Guide

We have all been there. You deploy a shiny new feature, push it to production, grab your coffee, and open your site expecting to see your masterpiece. Instead, you are greeted by a stark, frustrating screen displaying: 502 Bad Gateway.

If you are searching for how to fix nginx 502 bad gateway, take a deep breath. You are in the right place. As a senior developer who has spent countless nights debugging reverse proxy issues, I can tell you that the 502 error is the bane of every DevOps engineer’s existence—but it is also highly fixable once you understand the mechanics behind it.

Welcome back to Sexy Developer. Today, we are rolling up our sleeves, diving into the trenches, and mastering the art of diagnosing and resolving the Nginx 502 Bad Gateway error.

Understanding the 502 Bad Gateway Error

Before we start fixing things, we need to understand what a 502 error actually means.

Nginx is rarely the actual problem. In most modern web architectures, Nginx acts as a reverse proxy. It sits at the front door, takes requests from the internet, and passes them along to an upstream server (like Node.js, Python/Gunicorn, PHP-FPM, or a Go API) sitting safely behind it.

A 502 Bad Gateway error officially means that Nginx successfully received the request from the client, but when it forwarded that request to the upstream server, the response it got back was invalid, incomplete, or entirely non-existent.

Think of Nginx as a highly efficient receptionist. The client asks for a document. The receptionist walks to the back office (the upstream server) to get it. If the back office is empty, on fire, or hands the receptionist gibberish, the receptionist comes back to the client and says, “502 Bad Gateway—I tried, but the back office failed me.”

Step-by-Step Root Cause Analysis

Fixing a 502 error is a process of elimination. Let’s walk through the most common root causes, from the most frequent offenders to the edge cases, and exactly how to solve them.

1. The Upstream Server is Down or Crashed

The absolute most common reason for a 502 error is that the backend application has crashed, hasn’t started yet, or is stuck in an infinite loop. Nginx is trying to connect to port 3000 (or 8080, or a Unix socket), but nothing is picking up the phone.

How to Diagnose

Check the status of your backend application. If you are running it via systemd, use systemctl:

sudo systemctl status your-backend-service

If you are running a Node.js app using a process manager like PM2:

pm2 list
pm2 logs

If you are running containers via Docker or Docker Compose:

docker ps -a
docker-compose ps
docker logs <container_name>

How to Fix

If the service is inactive or exited, restart it and look for application-level errors.

# Restarting a systemd service
sudo systemctl restart your-backend-service

# Restarting a PM2 application
pm2 restart app-name

# Restarting a Docker container
docker restart <container_name>

Pro Tip: Don’t just restart and walk away. Look at the logs. Did it run out of memory (OOM Killed)? Did a syntax error crash the runtime? If you don’t fix the underlying application error, the 502 will return tomorrow.

2. Port and Socket Mismatches

Sometimes the backend is running perfectly fine, but Nginx is knocking on the wrong door. This happens frequently during deployments when environment variables or configuration files are out of sync.

How to Diagnose

First, find out exactly what Nginx is trying to connect to. Check your Nginx configuration (usually found in /etc/nginx/sites-available/ or /etc/nginx/conf.d/):

location / {
    proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:8080;
}

Now, go to your server’s terminal and check if anything is actually listening on port 8080:

sudo netstat -tulpn | grep 8080
# OR
sudo ss -tulpn | grep 8080

How to Fix

If the netstat or ss output shows your app listening on 3000 instead of 8080, you have a mismatch. You need to update either your application’s start script or your Nginx configuration so they match perfectly.

If using a Unix socket (common with PHP-FPM), verify the socket file actually exists:

ls -l /run/php/php8.2-fpm.sock

If it doesn’t exist, PHP-FPM isn’t running, or its configuration is pointing to a different socket path.

3. Analyzing Nginx Error Logs for Clues

When dealing with how to fix nginx 502 bad gateway, the Nginx error log is your best friend. It will tell you exactly why Nginx gave up.

How to Diagnose

Open a terminal and tail the Nginx error log in real-time while you refresh your website:

sudo tail -f /var/log/nginx/error.log

Look for specific error strings:
* Connection refused: Nginx reached the server, but nothing is listening on that port. (Refer back to Step 2).
* No such file or directory: Nginx is configured to use a Unix socket, but the socket file doesn’t exist.
* Connection timed out: The upstream server is too busy to respond. (This technically throws a 504 Gateway Timeout, but can sometimes manifest as a 502 depending on Nginx configuration).

4. Permission and Ownership Issues

Linux security is strict. If Nginx does not have the proper permissions to read files or communicate via a socket, it will fail. This is especially common when setting up PHP applications or using Unix sockets for Node/Python apps.

How to Diagnose

Check the permissions of your application’s socket file or web root directory:

ls -la /var/run/my_app.sock

If the file is owned by root or a specific user, and Nginx is running as www-data (on Ubuntu/Debian) or nginx (on CentOS/RHEL), it might not have read/write access to the socket.

How to Fix

Ensure the Nginx user has access to the upstream socket or files. You can add the Nginx user to the application’s user group, or modify the socket permissions in your backend’s configuration.

For example, if your Node app creates a socket, ensure it grants read/write permissions to others:

// Node.js http server example
server.listen('/tmp/my_app.sock', () => {
    // Grant read/write permissions to Nginx
    require('fs').chmodSync('/tmp/my_app.sock', 0o666);
    console.log('Server listening on socket');
});

For web root file permissions, standard practice is:

sudo chown -R www-data:www-data /var/www/html
sudo find /var/www/html -type d -exec chmod 755 {} \;
sudo find /var/www/html -type f -exec chmod 644 {} \;

5. Upstream Sent Too Big Header (Buffer Issues)

This is a tricky edge case that catches many developers off guard. Your backend is working, it processes the request, and it sends back a response. But the HTTP headers are too large for Nginx’s default buffer size. This often happens if your application sets massive cookies, or if you are passing large authentication tokens (like heavy JWTs).

Nginx will drop the connection and throw a 502 error, and in the error log, you will see: upstream sent too big header while reading response header from upstream.

How to Fix

You need to increase the fastcgi or proxy buffer sizes in your Nginx configuration.

Open your Nginx server block configuration and add the following directives inside the location block:

# If using PHP-FPM (FastCGI)
location ~ \.php$ {
    fastcgi_pass unix:/run/php/php8.2-fpm.sock;
    fastcgi_buffer_size 128k;
    fastcgi_buffers 4 256k;
    fastcgi_busy_buffers_size 256k;
    # ... other fastcgi params
}

# If using Proxy Pass (Node.js, Python, Go, etc.)
location / {
    proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:3000;
    proxy_buffer_size 128k;
    proxy_buffers 4 256k;
    proxy_busy_buffers_size 256k;
}

Test your configuration and reload Nginx:

sudo nginx -t
sudo systemctl reload nginx

6. DNS Resolution Failures within Nginx

If your Nginx configuration proxies requests to an external hostname rather than a local IP (e.g., proxy_pass http://api.internal-network.local;), Nginx has to resolve that domain name. By default, Nginx resolves domain names only at startup. If the IP address of that upstream changes later, Nginx will keep trying to use the old, stale IP address, resulting in a 502.

How to Fix

To resolve this, you must use a resolver directive. This forces Nginx to dynamically resolve the domain name based on a reliable DNS server (like Google’s 8.8.8.8 or AWS’s internal DNS).

resolver 8.8.8.8 valid=30s;

location /api {
    # Using a variable forces Nginx to use the resolver
    set $upstream_endpoint http://api.internal-network.local;
    proxy_pass $upstream_endpoint;
}

By putting the URL into a variable (like $upstream_endpoint), Nginx is forced to re-evaluate and re-resolve it on demand, ensuring it always knows the correct IP address of your upstream service.

Advanced Edge Cases

If you have gone through the steps above and are still wondering how to fix nginx 502 bad gateway, you might be dealing with an infrastructure-level edge case.

Keepalive Connections Dropping

Sometimes Nginx maintains a keepalive connection to the upstream server. The upstream server closes the connection after a timeout, but Nginx tries to use it again, resulting in a reset connection and a 502 error.

You can mitigate this by matching the keepalive_timeout in your upstream server to Nginx, or by explicitly configuring Nginx’s upstream keepalive settings:

upstream backend {
    server 127.0.0.1:8080;
    keepalive 32;
}

server {
    location / {
        proxy_pass http://backend;
        proxy_http_version 1.1;
        proxy_set_header Connection "";
    }
}

*Telling Nginx to use HTTP/1

Example: Increase maxmemory to 4 Gigabytes (4294967296 bytes)

There is a specific kind of dread that washes over a developer when their application suddenly halts in the middle of the night, and the logs start screaming OOM command not allowed when used memory > 'maxmemory'.

I’ve been woken up by this exact Redis Out of Memory (OOM) error more times than I care to admit. On one memorable occasion, a junior developer pushed a feature that cached user sessions indefinitely without a Time-To-Live (TTL). Within three hours, our primary Redis instance hit its memory ceiling, and every subsequent write request was met with a cold, hard refusal from the database.

If you are currently staring at this error, take a deep breath. Your data is likely still safe, but Redis has simply locked the vault door to protect itself (and your server) from crashing entirely.

In this comprehensive guide, we are going to walk through exactly how to fix redis oom command not allowed. We will cover the root cause analysis, provide step-by-step solutions ranging from immediate triage to edge cases, and lay out a battle plan to ensure you never get paged for this issue again.

Understanding the Root Cause of the Redis OOM Error

Before we start fixing things, we need to understand why Redis throws this specific error.

Redis is an in-memory data store. By design, it tries to hold all your dataset in RAM for lightning-fast access. However, if you are running an open-source version of Redis, you are likely bound by the maxmemory directive defined in your redis.conf file (or via your cloud provider’s plan limits).

When Redis reaches this maxmemory limit, it checks the maxmemory-policy configuration. This policy tells Redis what to do when it runs out of space.

If your policy is set to noeviction, Redis will simply refuse any command that takes up more memory (like SET, HSET, LPUSH, etc.). Read commands (GET, HGET) will usually still work, but your application’s write functionality will grind to a halt, returning the dreaded OOM command not allowed when used memory > 'maxmemory'.

Step-by-Step Triage: Immediate Fixes

When your production environment is down, you don’t have time to read a novel. You need to stop the bleeding. Here are the most common and immediate ways to resolve the issue.

Step 1: Inspect Your Eviction Policy

The most frequent culprit behind this error is an improperly configured eviction policy. Many modern cloud providers (like AWS ElastiCache or Google Cloud Memorystore) default to noeviction to prevent accidental data loss. However, if you are using Redis as a cache, this is the exact opposite of what you want.

Connect to your Redis instance using the redis-cli and check your current memory policy:

redis-cli CONFIG GET maxmemory-policy

If the response is noeviction, you have found your smoking gun.

The Fix:
If your Redis instance is strictly being used for caching (meaning the source of truth lives in a persistent database like PostgreSQL or MySQL), you should change this policy to automatically evict old data.

Run the following command to change the policy on the fly:

redis-cli CONFIG SET maxmemory-policy allkeys-lru

Note: allkeys-lru (Least Recently Used) will evict the oldest untouched keys to make room for new ones. If you are using Redis as a queue or for persistent data, do not use this approach without understanding the data loss implications.

Step 2: Find and Remove Memory Hogs

Sometimes your eviction policy is correct, but a single massive key is consuming a disproportionate amount of your memory. I once debugged a system where a developer was appending user analytics to a single, massive Redis List. Over months, this list grew to consume 2.5 GB of a 3 GB instance.

You can use the MEMORY DOCTOR command (available in Redis 4.0+) to get a quick summary of potential issues:

redis-cli MEMORY DOCTOR

For a more hands-on approach, use the --bigkeys flag to scan the keyspace and identify the largest data structures:

redis-cli --bigkeys

This command will output a report showing the largest String, List, Set, Sorted Set, and Hash in your database.

The Fix:
If you find an abnormally large key that is no longer needed, or is safe to clear, you can delete it to immediately free up a massive chunk of memory:

redis-cli UNLINK massive_log_key_123

(Pro-tip: Always use UNLINK instead of DEL for large keys. UNLINK deletes the key asynchronously in a background thread, preventing your main Redis thread from blocking and causing latency spikes).

Step 3: Increase the maxmemory Limit

If your application genuinely needs to store more data, and your server actually has more physical RAM available, you can simply raise the maxmemory limit.

First, check your current limit:

redis-cli CONFIG GET maxmemory

If you have spare RAM on the server (which you can check by running htop or free -m on the Linux host), you can increase the limit dynamically:

# Example: Increase maxmemory to 4 Gigabytes (4294967296 bytes)
redis-cli CONFIG SET maxmemory 4gb

Important Warning: A golden rule of database administration is to never let Redis consume 100% of your system’s physical RAM. Redis requires memory to perform background saves (creating .rdb files) and to handle client output buffers. If Redis hits the hardware ceiling, the Linux Out-Of-Memory (OOM) Killer will step in and aggressively terminate the Redis process. Always leave at least 20-30% of your server’s RAM free.

Step 4: Fix Application-Level Memory Leaks (Missing TTLs)

If you have fixed the immediate crisis, the next step is ensuring it doesn’t happen again. The most common reason caches grow indefinitely is that developers forget to set an Expiration Time (TTL).

If you pump data into Redis without a TTL, it will sit there forever. Let’s look at a common pattern in Python using the redis-py library:

The Bad Code:

import redis

r = redis.Redis(host='localhost', port=6379, decode_responses=True)

# Saving a user session without a TTL. It will stay here forever!
r.set('user:1001:session', '{"data": "logged_in"}') 

The Fix (Copy-Paste Ready Code):
Always explicitly declare a TTL when using Redis for ephemeral data like caches or sessions.

import redis

r = redis.Redis(host='localhost', port=6379, decode_responses=True)

# Set the session with a 30-minute (1800 seconds) expiration
r.set('user:1001:session', '{"data": "logged_in"}', ex=1800)

You can also audit your existing database to find keys that are missing TTLs. While Redis doesn’t have a native “find keys without TTL” command, you can write a quick Lua script to scan for them:

redis-cli --eval find_no_ttl.lua

find_no_ttl.lua contents:

local cursor = '0'
local no_ttl_keys = {}
local count = 0

repeat
    local reply = redis.call('SCAN', cursor, 'COUNT', 1000)
    cursor = reply[1]
    local keys = reply[2]

    for i, key in ipairs(keys) do
        -- Ignore Redis internal keys
        if string.sub(key, 1, 1) ~= '_' then
            local ttl = redis.call('TTL', key)
            if ttl == -1 then
                table.insert(no_ttl_keys, key)
                count = count + 1
                -- Safety break so we don't print thousands of lines at once
                if count > 100 then
                    return no_ttl_keys
                end
            end
        end
    end
until cursor == '0'

return no_ttl_keys

Advanced Troubleshooting: Edge Cases

If you have applied the immediate fixes above and you are still searching for how to fix redis oom command not allowed, you might be dealing with an architectural edge case.

Edge Case 1: Client Output Buffer Exhaustion

Redis uses memory not just to store your data, but to buffer the responses it sends back to connected clients. If a client (like a slow consumer in a Pub/Sub setup, or a delayed replica) cannot read data fast enough, Redis will keep the unsent data in a memory buffer.

If this buffer grows out of control, it can trigger an OOM condition.

Check your client connections using:

redis-cli CLIENT LIST

Look at the omem (output buffer memory) column. If you see a client with an incredibly high omem value, that client is struggling to process data.

The Fix:
1. Kill the misbehaving client: redis-cli CLIENT KILL ADDR <ip:port>
2. Review your application’s consumer logic to ensure it processes messages efficiently.
3. Tune the client-output-buffer-limit in your redis.conf to force Redis to disconnect slow clients before they crash the server.

Edge Case 2: Lua Script Memory Leaks

If your application relies heavily on Redis Lua scripts, you need to be careful with how you manage memory inside the scripts.

A common mistake is defining large global tables inside a Lua script. Because Redis

How to Fix AWS EC2 ‘Connection Refused’ Errors: A Complete Troubleshooting Guide

How to Fix AWS EC2 ‘Connection Refused’ Errors: A Complete Troubleshooting Guide

If you are reading this, chances are you just deployed your application to an Amazon EC2 instance, attempted to access it via your browser or API client, and were immediately met with a cold, brutal Connection refused error.

As a senior developer who has spent years architecting infrastructure on AWS, I cannot count the number of times I have seen this issue derail a deployment pipeline. It is incredibly frustrating because the error itself is notoriously vague. Does it mean AWS is down? Is your security group misconfigured? Did the application crash?

In this comprehensive guide, we are going to definitively answer the query: aws ec2 connection refused how to fix. We will move step-by-step from the most common culprits to the more obscure edge cases. By the end of this article, you will not only fix your current issue but also possess the diagnostic framework to prevent it from happening again.


Understanding the “Connection Refused” Error

Before we start blindly changing settings in the AWS Console, we need to understand what a “Connection refused” error actually means from a networking perspective.

When your client (like a web browser or curl) tries to connect to your EC2 instance, it sends a TCP SYN packet to the destination IP address and port.

  • If the port is closed: The server responds with a TCP RST (Reset) packet. This explicitly tells the client, “I am actively rejecting your connection.” This is the Connection refused error.
  • If a firewall is blocking it: The packet is silently dropped. The client hears nothing back, waits for a timeout, and eventually throws a Connection timed out error.

The golden rule: If you are getting Connection refused, your network route is likely fine, but nothing is listening on that specific port on the server. If you were getting Connection timed out, we would be looking at AWS Security Groups or local firewalls instead.


Step 1: Verify the Application is Running and Listening

Since a Connection refused error almost always means nothing is answering the door on the targeted port, the very first place you must look is the application itself.

You can SSH into your EC2 instance using your .pem key. If you cannot SSH in because port 22 is refusing connections, skip down to Step 4 (AWS Systems Manager) and then come back here.

Once you are inside the terminal, check if your application is actually running.

# Check running processes for your app (e.g., node, python, java)
ps aux | grep node

If the process isn’t running, restart it and check the application logs to see why it crashed.

Checking Open Ports with ss

Even if your application process is running, it might not be bound to the network interface correctly. I highly recommend using the ss (socket statistics) command instead of the deprecated netstat.

Run this command to see which ports are actively listening:

sudo ss -tulpn | grep LISTEN

You will get an output that looks something like this:

tcp    LISTEN  0      128        127.0.0.1:8080       0.0.0.0:*    users:(("node",pid=1234,fd=18))
tcp    LISTEN  0      50         0.0.0.0:22           0.0.0.0:*    users:(("sshd",pid=5678,fd=3))

Look closely at the IP address associated with your application’s port (in this hypothetical case, 8080).
* 127.0.0.1:8080: The app is only listening on the local loopback interface (localhost).
* 0.0.0.0:8080: The app is listening on all available network interfaces.

If your app is bound to 127.0.0.1, it will refuse any external connections from the internet.

Fixing the Localhost Binding Issue

Every framework has a different way of binding to 0.0.0.0. Here are the fixes for common environments:

Node.js (Express):
Do not hardcode localhost. Pass 0.0.0.0 as the host argument.

const express = require('express');
const app = express();
const port = 3000;

app.get('/', (req, res) => {
    res.send('Hello from Sexy Developer!');
});

// WRONG: app.listen(port, '127.0.0.1', () => { ... });
// CORRECT:
app.listen(port, '0.0.0.0', () => {
    console.log(`App listening on port ${port}`);
});

Python (Flask / Gunicorn):
When running Flask in development, ensure you pass the host flag.

# Development
flask run --host=0.0.0.0

# Production via Gunicorn
gunicorn -w 4 -b 0.0.0.0:8000 wsgi:app

Docker Containers:
If your app is running inside a Docker container on the EC2 instance, make sure you are publishing the port correctly. If you omit the bind IP in the docker command, Docker binds to 0.0.0.0 internally, but you still need to map it.

# Maps port 8080 on the EC2 host to port 80 inside the container
docker run -d -p 8080:80 my-app-image

Step 2: Check OS-Level Firewalls (iptables and ufw)

Okay, let’s assume your application is definitely running and listening on 0.0.0.0:YOUR_PORT, but you are still getting Connection refused. This is where things get tricky.

While AWS Security Groups usually handle network filtering, the operating system running on your EC2 instance has its own firewall. If the OS firewall is actively rejecting the packet, it will send a RST response back to you, mimicking a standard “Connection refused” error.

This often happens when developers use pre-configured AMIs (like official marketplace VPNs or hardened Linux images) or run configuration management tools like Ansible that unintentionally alter OS firewall rules.

Checking UFW (Ubuntu/Debian)

If you are on an Ubuntu instance, Uncomplicated Firewall (UFW) might be blocking you.

# Check UFW status
sudo ufw status verbose

If UFW is active and your port is not listed, you need to allow it.

sudo ufw allow 8080/tcp
sudo ufw reload

Checking iptables (Amazon Linux / CentOS / General Linux)

Many distributions still use the standard iptables utility under the hood.

# View current iptables rules
sudo iptables -L -n -v

Look for rules in the INPUT chain that have a target of REJECT. If you see a rule rejecting all traffic except specific ports, you need to insert an accept rule for your application’s port.

# Example: Allow TCP traffic on port 8080
sudo iptables -I INPUT -p tcp --dport 8080 -j ACCEPT

Note: If you are using Docker alongside ufw or iptables, Docker manipulates iptables rules automatically. Bypassing this requires careful configuration, which brings us to the next edge case.


Step 3: The Docker iptables Conflict

If your application is containerized, Docker has a known behavior that causes massive headaches. By default, Docker manages its own iptables chains to route traffic to containers.

If you manually enable ufw and block ports, Docker will bypass your UFW rules entirely. Conversely, if you try to publish a port on a container, but something goes wrong with the Docker proxy, external connections might be actively refused.

To diagnose this, check if the Docker proxy is listening on the host:

sudo ss -tulpn | grep docker-proxy

If the docker-proxy is not running on that port, your container might have crashed or failed to bind. Restart the container.

If you want to prevent Docker from manipulating iptables (forcing it to use standard host networking), you can edit /etc/docker/daemon.json:

{
  "iptables": false
}

Restart Docker (sudo systemctl restart docker). Be warned: doing this means you must manually route all container traffic using host-level port forwarding or a reverse proxy like Nginx or Traefik.


Step 4: AWS Security Groups and NACLs

Now we dive into the AWS networking layer. As mentioned earlier, a misconfigured AWS Security Group (SG) or Network Access Control List (NACL) usually results in a Connection timed out error, not a “Connection refused” error.

However, there are edge cases where AWS

Choosing the Best IDE for Python Development 2026: A Comprehensive Comparison

Choosing the Best IDE for Python Development 2026: A Comprehensive Comparison

If you are reading this, you already know that Python continues to dominate the software engineering landscape. Whether you are building scalable web APIs using FastAPI, training large language models, or automating infrastructure, your Integrated Development Environment (IDE) is your most critical piece of software. But with the rapid evolution of AI coding assistants and native performance updates, the landscape has shifted significantly.

As a senior developer, I have spent countless hours configuring, breaking, and optimizing these tools. Finding the best IDE for Python development 2026 isn’t about finding a single “perfect” tool; it is about finding the right tool for your specific workflow, hardware, and project scale.

In this objective comparison, we are going to dive deep into the top contenders dominating the Python ecosystem this year. We will look at pure performance metrics, out-of-the-box experiences, AI integration, and pricing, complete with practical setup examples to help you make an informed decision.

The Contenders for 2026

While dozens of editors exist, the professional Python ecosystem in 2026 is largely consolidated among four major players. Each represents a different philosophy of modern software development:

  1. Visual Studio Code (VS Code): The ubiquitous, endlessly customizable open-source editor.
  2. PyCharm Professional: The heavy-duty, enterprise-grade, dedicated Python IDE by JetBrains.
  3. Cursor: The AI-first code editor built on a VS Code fork, designed for prompt-driven development.
  4. Zed: The bleeding-edge, Rust-built editor focused on raw performance and collaborative coding.

Let’s break down exactly how they perform and who they are built for.


Visual Studio Code (VS Code)

VS Code has been the reigning champion of the developer ecosystem for years, and Microsoft hasn’t let up. In 2026, it remains the most versatile IDE on the market.

The Python Experience

VS Code’s Python support relies heavily on the official Python extension and the Pylance language server. Over the last year, Pylance has become incredibly fast, offering near-instantaneous type checking and auto-completion even for massive codebases.

Where VS Code truly shines is its ability to seamlessly transition between languages. If your Python project involves writing Terraform (HCL) for infrastructure, Dockerfiles for containerization, and a React frontend for the dashboard, VS Code handles the context switching flawlessly.

Configuration Example

To get a production-ready Python environment in VS Code for 2026, you will want to configure your .vscode/settings.json to leverage Ruff, the insanely fast Python linter and formatter that has entirely replaced tools like Flake8 and Black.

// .vscode/settings.json
{
    "python.defaultInterpreterPath": "${workspaceFolder}/.venv/bin/python",
    "[python]": {
        "editor.defaultFormatter": "charliermarsh.ruff",
        "editor.formatOnSave": true,
        "editor.codeActionsOnSave": {
            "source.fixAll": "explicit",
            "source.organizeImports": "explicit"
        }
    },
    "ruff.lint.args": ["--config=pyproject.toml"]
}

Pros and Cons of VS Code

Pros:
* Completely free and open-source.
* Unrivaled extension ecosystem.
* Excellent native Jupyter Notebook support for data scientists.
* Deep integration with GitHub Copilot and native AI features.

Cons:
* Can consume significant RAM if you install dozens of extensions.
* Requires manual configuration to achieve a “batteries-included” experience.
* The sheer number of settings can be overwhelming for beginners.


PyCharm Professional

When you are working on a monolithic Django application or a deeply nested microservices architecture, sometimes you don’t want an editor—you want a comprehensive suite of tools. PyCharm Professional is exactly that.

The Python Experience

Unlike VS Code, which treats Python as a first-class citizen among many, PyCharm is built specifically for Python (and web technologies). Its deep code understanding is unmatched. In 2026, PyCharm’s ability to navigate complex inheritance trees, refactor dynamically typed code safely, and interface with remote interpreters (like Docker containers or SSH VMs) makes it the go-to choice for enterprise backend engineers.

PyCharm 2026 has also heavily integrated JetBrains AI. Rather than just inline autocomplete, JetBrains AI excels at context-aware refactoring—allowing you to select an entire class and ask the AI to “extract this into a separate microservice,” and watching it generate the boilerplate, routing, and updated imports.

Configuration Example

PyCharm is largely graphical, but modern Python configuration relies on standardizing your project via pyproject.toml. PyCharm natively understands this file to manage your run configurations and tooling.

# pyproject.toml
[project]
name = "my-fastapi-app"
version = "0.1.0"
requires-python = ">=3.12"
dependencies = [
    "fastapi>=0.115.0",
    "uvicorn[standard]>=0.30.0",
    "sqlalchemy>=2.0.0",
]

[tool.ruff]
line-length = 88
target-version = "py312"

Pros and Cons of PyCharm

Pros:
* The most powerful refactoring and debugging tools available.
* Incredible out-of-the-box support for Django, FastAPI, and scientific tools.
* Peerless database management tools built directly into the IDE.
* Superior project-wide code navigation.

Cons:
* Heavy resource usage; it demands a powerful machine with plenty of RAM.
* The UI can feel cluttered and overwhelming.
* The Community (free) edition lacks web framework and database support, forcing you to pay for Professional.


Cursor

If there is one tool that has completely disrupted the developer ecosystem recently, it is Cursor. Built as a fork of VS Code, it retains all the extensions and familiarity of VS Code but rips out the core editing experience and rebuilds it around AI.

The Python Experience

Cursor treats AI not as an autocomplete sidekick, but as a pair programmer. Using the “Composer” feature (often invoked with Ctrl+I or Cmd+I), you can highlight a block of code or an empty file, write a prompt, and watch Cursor generate or edit the code in a diff view.

For Python developers, this is a game-changer for boilerplate-heavy tasks. Need to write a suite of Pytest fixtures for a SQLAlchemy model? Cursor can generate the fixtures, mock the database sessions, and write the test cases based purely on your schema definitions. Because it is a VS Code fork, you can still install the Ruff and Python extensions, ensuring that the AI-generated code is immediately linted and formatted to your standards.

Practical Prompting Example

When using Cursor to write a FastAPI endpoint, you can provide highly specific instructions. Here is an example of a prompt you might feed into the Cursor Composer to generate an endpoint:

# Prompt given to Cursor Composer:
# "Create a FastAPI endpoint at /api/v1/users/{user_id}. 
# It should use async/await, fetch the user from a PostgreSQL database 
# using SQLAlchemy 2.0, handle the case where the user is not found 
# by raising an HTTPException with a 404 status code, and return a 
# Pydantic UserResponse schema."

# Cursor generates production-ready code like this:
from fastapi import APIRouter, HTTPException
from sqlalchemy import select
from sqlalchemy.ext.asyncio import AsyncSession

router = APIRouter()

@router.get("/api/v1/users/{user_id}", response_model=UserResponse)
async def get_user(user_id: int, db: AsyncSession = Depends(get_db)):
    stmt = select(User).where(User.id == user_id)
    result = await db.execute(stmt)
    user = result.scalar_one_or_none()

    if not user:
        raise HTTPException(status_code=404, detail="User not found")

    return user

Pros and Cons of Cursor

Pros:
* Unmatched AI integration and context awareness.
* 100% compatibility with VS Code extensions.
* Vastly accelerates writing boilerplate and unit tests.
* Familiar UI for anyone migrating from VS Code.

Cons:
* The AI features require a subscription on top of any API usage.
* Can lead to “blind coding” if developers accept AI suggestions without fully reviewing them.
* Slightly slower startup times compared to base VS Code due to AI background processes.


Zed

Zed is the newest addition to the elite tier of code editors. Created by the original authors of Atom, Zed is built entirely in Rust and uses WebAssembly for its extension system. It is designed to be blindingly fast and collaborative from the ground up.

The Python Experience

Zed does not have the massive extension marketplace of VS Code. However, for Python in 2026, it supports the Language Server Protocol (LSP) perfectly. You can configure Zed to use pyright for type checking and Ruff for formatting, resulting in an incredibly lightweight, snappy environment.

The defining feature of Zed is its lack of latency. Opening a 10,000-line Python file feels instantaneous. Furthermore, its built-in collaboration tools allow you and a colleague to edit the same Python module in real-time without needing to commit and push/pull constantly.

Configuration Example

To set up Python in Zed, you configure a settings.json file in your project root or globally.

// Zed settings.json
{
  "languages": {
    "Python": {
      "language_servers": ["pyright", "ruff"],
      "formatter": {
        "external": {
          "command": "ruff",
          "arguments": ["format", "-"]
        }
      },
      "tab_size": 4
    }
  }
}

Pros and Cons of Zed

Pros:
* Unbeatable performance and incredibly low RAM footprint.
* Built-in real-time collaboration.
* Minimalist UI

Comprehensive Troubleshooting Guide: Resolving “docker compose failed to start service”

Comprehensive Troubleshooting Guide: Resolving “docker compose failed to start service”

There you are, coffee in hand, ready to tackle the day’s sprint. You pull the latest changes from the repository, run your standard startup command, and suddenly, your terminal mocks you with the dreaded message: docker compose failed to start service.

If you are a developer working in 2026, you already know that containerization is the backbone of modern development and deployment. Docker Compose is the orchestrator of our local environments, and when it fails, development grinds to a complete halt. Over my years of building distributed systems, I have seen this error trigger everything from minor config typos to obscure Linux kernel issues.

This guide is designed to be your definitive, step-by-step resource for resolving this exact problem. We will walk through root cause analysis, tackle the most common culprits, dive into advanced edge cases, and arm you with preventative measures. Let’s get your containers running again.

Understanding the Root Causes

Before we start blindly deleting containers and restarting Docker, it helps to understand why a service fails to start. When Docker Compose tries to spin up a service, it goes through a specific lifecycle:

  1. Configuration Parsing: Reading the compose.yaml (or docker-compose.yml) file.
  2. Image Resolution: Pulling the image from a registry or building it from a Dockerfile.
  3. Resource Allocation: Allocating CPU, memory, and setting up network interfaces.
  4. Volume Mounting: Attaching local directories or named volumes to the container.
  5. Execution: Running the container’s entrypoint or command script.

The “docker compose failed to start service” error usually occurs during steps 3, 4, or 5. The container attempts to run, encounters an environment issue, and immediately exits (often referred to as “crash looping”).

Because the error message itself is a high-level summary, your first job is to force Docker to tell you exactly which step caused the exit.

Step-by-Step Solutions (Most Common to Edge Cases)

Let’s roll up our sleeves and start troubleshooting. I have ordered these from the most frequent offenders to the more obscure edge cases.

Step 1: Read the Actual Logs (The Missing Context)

The most common mistake developers make when seeing that a docker compose failed to start service is not reading the specific service’s logs. Docker Compose often just tells you that a service failed, but the why is hidden inside the container’s standard output.

Run this command to inspect the failed service:

docker compose logs <service-name>

For a more real-time view as the container attempts to start and dies, use the -f (follow) flag:

docker compose up -d
docker compose logs -f <service-name>

What to look for:
Look for stack traces, “Permission denied” errors, or “Address already in use”. If the container exits immediately, check the exit code using docker compose ps -a.

  • Exit Code 0: The process exited gracefully. Your command/script finished too quickly, and since there’s no foreground process left, Docker shuts down the container.
  • Exit Code 1: General application error (unhandled exception in Node.js/Python, etc.).
  • Exit Code 137: Out of Memory (OOM). The host machine or Docker Desktop killed your container.
  • Exit Code 139: Segmentation Fault. Usually an issue with the underlying base image or incompatible libraries.

Step 2: Port Mapping Conflicts (Address Already in Use)

If your logs show something like Error: bind: address already in use or OSError: [Errno 98] Address already in use, another process on your host machine is already using the port you are trying to map to Docker.

This happens constantly, especially with common databases like Postgres (5432) or web servers (80/8080/3000).

The Fix:

First, find out what process is using your port. On Linux/macOS:

# Check what is running on port 5432
sudo lsof -i :5432

On Windows (PowerShell):

netstat -ano | findstr :5432

Once you identify the Process ID (PID), you can either kill the conflicting process using kill -9 <PID> (or Task Manager on Windows), or you can change the port mapping in your Compose file. I usually recommend changing the Compose file to avoid messing with system services:

services:
  database:
    image: postgres:17
    ports:
      # Changed from 5432:5432 to 5433:5432 to avoid local conflicts
      - "5433:5432"

Step 3: Volume Permission Issues

If your logs are screaming Permission denied when the container tries to read or write to a mounted directory, you have a volume permissions conflict. This is notoriously common with database containers (like MySQL or Postgres) running on Linux hosts.

Docker containers run as the root user by default, but many modern, secure base images will switch to a dedicated non-root user (e.g., postgres or mysql) to run the actual database engine. If you mount a local directory as a bind mount, that local directory is owned by your host user. The container’s dedicated user tries to write to it, and the OS blocks it, causing the docker compose failed to start service error.

The Fix:

You have a few options. The cleanest approach in 2026 is to create a named volume instead of a bind mount, letting Docker manage the permissions automatically:

services:
  database:
    image: postgres:17
    volumes:
      - db_data:/var/lib/postgresql/data

volumes:
  db_data:

If you must use a bind mount (e.g., for local development file syncing), you need to ensure the local directory has the correct ownership. Check the Dockerfile for the service to find the UID/GID of the user, then apply it on your host:

# Changing ownership of the local directory to match the container's postgres user (UID 999)
sudo chown -R 999:999 ./local_db_data

For SELinux-enabled systems (like Fedora or RHEL), you might also need to add the :z or :Z flag to your volume mount to relabel the files for container access:

    volumes:
      - ./local_db_data:/var/lib/postgresql/data:Z

Step 4: Dependency Race Conditions

Often, a service fails because it depends on another service that isn’t ready yet. For example, your Python FastAPI application might crash because it tries to connect to PostgreSQL while PostgreSQL is still going through its initial startup and hasn’t opened its network socket yet.

Docker Compose’s depends_on feature only waits for the container to start, not for the service inside it to be ready.

The Fix:

You must implement Health Checks. A health check tells Docker how to actively query the service to see if it is fully initialized and ready to accept traffic.

Here is how you properly wire up a database dependency in modern Docker Compose:

services:
  database:
    image: postgres:17
    environment:
      POSTGRES_USER: dev
      POSTGRES_PASSWORD: secret
      POSTGRES_DB: app_db
    healthcheck:
      test: ["CMD-SHELL", "pg_isready -U dev -d app_db"]
      interval: 5s
      timeout: 5s
      retries: 5

  api:
    build: .
    depends_on:
      database:
        condition: service_healthy # The API will NOT start until the DB is fully ready

Step 5: Out of Memory (OOM) and Resource Exhaustion

Sometimes a docker compose failed to start service error is actually the host operating system killing the container because it ran out of memory (Exit Code 137). Modern frontend builds (like Next.js or heavy TypeScript compilations) or data-processing scripts can easily consume all available RAM, triggering the Linux OOM Killer.

The Fix:

First, check if Docker Desktop has enough memory allocated. In Docker Desktop, go to Settings > Resources and ensure you have allocated sufficient Memory (at least 4GB-8GB for modern full-stack environments).

Next, you should proactively set resource limits in your compose.yaml to prevent one greedy service from starving the others:

services:
  data-processor:
    build: .
    deploy:
      resources:
        limits:
          cpus: '0.50'
          memory: 512M
        reservations:
          memory: 256M

Step 6: Configuration Validation and Syntax Errors

Sometimes, the issue isn’t the container itself, but a typo in your compose.yaml file. Since the transition to the new Docker Compose specification, subtle syntax errors can cause silent failures.

You can validate your Compose file without actually trying to spin up the containers. Run:

docker compose config

This command parses your file, interpolates variables, and prints out the fully resolved configuration. If there is a YAML syntax error, it will immediately flag it and point you to the exact line number.

If you are using environment variables (like .env files), ensure they are properly loaded. A missing variable might result in an invalid image tag (e.g., image: myapp:-latest instead of image: myapp:v1.0-latest), which will cause the pull to fail.

Advanced Edge Cases

If the standard fixes above didn’t resolve the issue, you might be dealing with a more complex architectural or OS-level problem. Let’s look at a few advanced edge cases I’ve run into.

Case 1: DNS Resolution Failures in Custom Networks

By default, Compose sets up a network where services can communicate using their service names as hostnames. However, if you are using a custom network driver or a corporate VPN, DNS resolution inside the container might fail.

When your application tries to reach tcp://database:5432, it fails because the internal Docker DNS server cannot resolve the name.

The Fix:

Try forcing the container to use an external DNS server (like Google’s 8.8.8.8) to see if it resolves the issue. You can do this in the Compose file:

services:
  api:
    build: .
    dns:
      - 8.8.8.8
      - 8.8.4.4

If this fixes the issue, you likely have a local DNS conflict, often caused by a VPN client overriding your /etc/resolv.conf.

Case 2: Architecture Emulation (Apple Silicon / ARM64)

If you are developing on a modern Mac (M1/M2/M3/M4 series) or an ARM-based workstation, but your deployment target is a standard AMD64 Linux server, you might encounter issues. If your image doesn’t have an ARM64 manifest, Docker will attempt to use QEMU to emulate AMD64.

Sometimes, this emulation fails silently or throws kernel-level errors during compilation inside the container, causing the service to crash.

The Fix:

You can explicitly force Docker to build and run the image for a specific platform using the platform flag:

services:
  legacy-api:
    build: 
      context: .
      platforms:
        - "linux/amd64"
    platform: linux/amd64

Case 3: Zombie Processes and Entrypoint Scripts

If you have a custom entrypoint.sh script that runs before your main application, it might be inadvertently leaving background processes running (zombie processes). Over time, these accumulate, and the

Docker Container Exits Immediately: How to Fix It (Complete Troubleshooting Guide)

Docker Container Exits Immediately: How to Fix It (Complete Troubleshooting Guide)

Picture this: you have just spent the last hour crafting the perfect Dockerfile. You run the build command without any errors. Feeling accomplished, you execute the run command, expecting your microservice to spring to life. Instead, you are instantly dumped back into your terminal prompt. You check your running containers, and there is nothing there. Your container lived for a fraction of a second and vanished into the digital ether.

If you are experiencing this, you are not alone. Searching for “docker container exits immediately how to fix” is a rite of passage for every developer working with containerized applications. As someone who has built and maintained container architectures for years, I have seen firsthand how a tiny misconfiguration can bring an entire deployment pipeline to a halt.

In this comprehensive troubleshooting guide, we are going to dissect exactly why containers exit unexpectedly. We will walk through root cause analysis, step-by-step solutions starting from the most common pitfalls to the more elusive edge cases, and arm you with the knowledge to prevent this from happening in the future.

Understanding the Root Cause: Why Do Containers Exit?

To fix the problem, we first need to understand the philosophy of Docker. Unlike traditional virtual machines that boot up a full operating system and wait for you to log in, Docker containers are designed to be ephemeral.

A Docker container lives exactly as long as its primary process—often referred to as the foreground process or PID 1 (Process ID 1).

If the command specified in your Dockerfile (via CMD or ENTRYPOINT) completes its task or crashes, PID 1 terminates. The moment PID 1 stops, the Docker engine assumes the container’s job is done, and it shuts it down.

  • If your app runs a quick script and finishes, the container exits.
  • If your app encounters an unhandled exception and crashes, the container exits.
  • If your app is designed to run in the background (like Nginx or Apache default configurations), the foreground process terminates, and the container exits.

With this foundational knowledge, let’s roll up our sleeves and start fixing the issue.

Step-by-Step Troubleshooting Guide

Step 1: Read the Room (Check the Container Logs)

When developers ask me how to approach a suddenly exiting container, my first question is always: “What do the logs say?”

You cannot fix a problem if you do not know what it is. Docker captures the standard output (stdout) and standard error (stderr) of PID 1.

First, find your stopped container’s ID or name:

docker ps -a

Look for the container with a status of “Exited”. Once you have the container ID, query its logs:

docker logs <container_id_or_name>

If you are running a modern setup with Docker Compose, the command is even easier:

docker compose logs <service_name>

What to look for:
Look for stack traces, syntax errors, or connection timeouts. If you see a specific application error (like a Python ModuleNotFoundError or a Node.js ECONNREFUSED), you have your answer. Fix the code or the configuration, rebuild the image, and run it again.

If the logs are completely empty, it means your application didn’t even get a chance to write to standard output before it exited. This brings us to the next step.

Step 2: Decode the Exit Status

If the logs are empty or unhelpful, Docker’s exit codes act as a black box recorder, telling you exactly how the process met its end. You can find the exit code by inspecting the container:

docker inspect <container_id> --format='{{.State.ExitCode}}'

Here is a breakdown of the most common exit codes you will encounter in 2026’s container landscape:

Exit Code 0: The “Graceful” Exit

An exit code of 0 means the process completed successfully. This is a great sign for a script that runs a backup and finishes, but a terrible sign for a web server.
* The Fix: Your container lacks a foreground process. See Step 3 below.

Exit Code 1: Application Crash

Exit code 1 indicates a general error or exception thrown by the application itself.
* The Fix: Revisit Step 1. Your application threw a fatal error (like an uncaught exception or missing dependency). You must resolve the application-level bug.

Exit Code 137: Out of Memory (OOM) Killed

If you see 137, it means your container was killed by the host operating system because it exceeded its allocated memory limits.
* The Fix: See Step 5 for memory profiling.

Exit Code 139: Segmentation Fault

A 139 means your application tried to access a restricted memory location. This is common in lower-level languages like C or C++, or when using native node modules.
* The Fix: Ensure your base image has the correct OS-level libraries and compilers installed.

Step 3: The Missing Foreground Process

This is arguably the most common reason developers search for “docker container exits immediately how to fix”. It happens when the application forks itself to the background during the startup sequence.

A classic example is running Nginx.

The Wrong Way:

FROM ubuntu:22.04
RUN apt-get update && apt-get install -y nginx
CMD ["nginx"]

If you run this, Nginx starts, forks worker processes, and the master process detaches from the foreground. Docker sees PID 1 terminate, assumes Nginx is done, and shuts down the container.

The Fix:
You must instruct the application to stay in the foreground.

For Nginx, you append the daemon off; flag:

FROM ubuntu:22.04
RUN apt-get update && apt-get install -y nginx
CMD ["nginx", "-g", "daemon off;"]

The “Hack” for Quick Debugging:
If you are dealing with a stubborn image and just need to keep it alive to investigate, override the CMD to run a never-ending process. I use this constantly during debugging sessions:

# Keeps the container alive indefinitely so you can shell into it
docker run -d my-stubborn-image tail -f /dev/null

# Or using sleep
docker run -d my-stubborn-image sleep infinity

Once the container is running, you can exec into it and investigate manually:

docker exec -it <container_id> /bin/bash

Step 4: Entrypoint Script Failures

In modern Dockerfiles, developers often use an entrypoint.sh script to handle dynamic configuration at runtime (like replacing environment variables in config files before starting the app).

However, if the script is missing the proper execution permissions or contains a syntax error, the container will exit immediately.

The Problematic Script (entrypoint.sh):

#!/bin/bash
# Configures database URL
sed -i "s/DB_URL_PLACEHOLDER/$DB_URL/g" /etc/app/config.yaml

# Starts the application
python main.py

If this script is copied into the image but not made executable, Docker will throw an “Permission denied” error (Exit Code 126) and stop.

The Fix:
Always ensure you grant execution permissions in your Dockerfile after copying the script:

WORKDIR /app
COPY entrypoint.sh .
RUN chmod +x entrypoint.sh
ENTRYPOINT ["./entrypoint.sh"]

Furthermore, a common best practice for entrypoint scripts is using the exec command for the final process. The exec command replaces the shell script with the application, ensuring your app becomes PID 1 and properly receives system signals (like SIGTERM for graceful shutdowns).

#!/bin/bash
set -e

sed -i "s/DB_URL_PLACEHOLDER/$DB_URL/g" /etc/app/config.yaml

# Use exec to hand over PID 1 to the Python process
exec python main.py

Step 5: Out of Memory (OOM) Crashes

Sometimes your container exits because it is greedy. Modern orchestration tools like Kubernetes or Docker Swarm impose strict resource limits. If your Java JVM, Node.js engine, or Python data processing script tries to consume more RAM than allocated, the Linux kernel’s OOM killer steps in and forcefully terminates it, resulting in Exit Code 137.

The Fix:
First, try running the container without memory limits to see if it survives:

docker run --memory="4g" my-java-app

If it survives with more memory, you need to optimize your application’s memory footprint.
* Java: Ensure you are using modern JVM features (like Java 21+ ZGC or Shenandoah) and capping the heap size (-Xmx). In Docker, JVMs older than Java 8u191 could not read container limits and would try to use the host’s total memory, causing severe OOM issues. Always use up-to-date base images.
* Node.js: If using Node.js v20 or newer, use the --max-old-space-size flag to ensure V8 stays within Docker limits.
* Python: Use memory profilers (memory_profiler) to ensure your data structures aren’t leaking.

Step 6: File System and Permission Edge Cases

As we move into the more obscure edge cases, file system permissions frequently cause silent, immediate exits.

This often happens when you mount a host volume into the container, and the internal application expects to run as a non-root user. The container starts, attempts to write to the mounted directory, realizes it doesn’t have chown permissions on the host volume, and crashes.

The Fix:
Ensure your Dockerfile properly creates and switches to a non-root user, and that the mounted volumes have the correct ownership.

# Create a non-root user
RUN groupadd -r appuser && useradd -r -g appuser appuser

# Create a directory and give the user ownership
RUN mkdir /app/data && chown -R appuser:appuser /app/data

# Copy application and set ownership
COPY --chown=appuser:appuser . /app

# Switch to the non-root user
USER appuser

CMD ["python", "app.py"]

Step 7: Dependency Init Order (Networking and Volumes)

In a microservices architecture, your container might exit because it expects a database to be available at startup, but the Docker network hasn’t fully initialized the connection, or the target container isn’t ready yet.

Your app throws an unhandled ConnectionRefused error, resulting in an Exit Code 1.

The Fix:
Do not rely solely on tools like dockerize or wait-for-it.sh to solve dependency issues. While they are great for pinging ports, the best approach is to make your application resilient.

Write your application code so that database connection pools handle retries with exponential backoff. Here is a conceptual Python example:

“`python
import time
import psycopg2
from tenacity import retry, stop_after_attempt, wait_exponential

@retry(stop=stop_after_attempt(5), wait=wait_exponential(multiplier=1, min=4, max=10))
def get_db_connection():
return psycopg2.connect(os.environ[“DATABASE_URL”])

try:
conn = get_db_connection()
except Exception as e:
print(“Failed to connect to database after multiple retries”)
sys.exit(1)

A classic recipe for a timeout disaster

There is a unique kind of frustration that sets in when you deploy a perfectly written AWS Lambda function, test it out, and instead of a glorious HTTP 200 response, you are met with the silent, agonizing dread of a spinning loading wheel. Then, the dreaded message appears in your CloudWatch logs: Task timed out after X.XX seconds.

If you are currently staring at your terminal wondering how to fix AWS Lambda timeout error issues, take a deep breath. You are in exactly the right place.

As a developer who has built and maintained serverless architectures handling millions of invocations, I have chased down more timeout errors than I care to admit. Sometimes it’s a simple configuration oversight; other times, it’s a deeply hidden infinite loop or a networking quirk.

In this comprehensive guide, we are going to dissect the AWS Lambda timeout error. We will look at exactly why it happens, walk through step-by-step solutions ranging from the most common pitfalls to advanced edge cases, and review production-ready code examples to ensure your functions stay fast, responsive, and alive.

Understanding the AWS Lambda Timeout Error

Before we can fix the problem, we need to understand the mechanics of it.

What Exactly Happens During a Timeout?

AWS Lambda is designed for event-driven, ephemeral computing. When your function is invoked, AWS spins up an execution environment (a micro-container), runs your handler code, and then pauses or destroys the environment.

When you configure a timeout for your Lambda function (which defaults to 3 seconds), you are telling AWS: “If my code does not finish executing within this timeframe, kill the process.”

When AWS enforces this kill switch, it throws a Task timed out error. Your code execution halts immediately. If your function was triggered synchronously (like via an API Gateway), the caller receives a 504 Gateway Timeout error. If it was triggered asynchronously (like via an S3 event or SNS), the execution fails and might be sent to a Dead Letter Queue (DLQ).

The API Gateway 29-Second Limit

One of the most common misconceptions I see revolves around API Gateway integration timeouts. Developers often ask why their function times out at 30 seconds, even though they set the Lambda timeout to 5 minutes.

Here is the catch: AWS API Gateway has a hard, unchangeable timeout limit of 29 seconds. If your Lambda function takes longer than 29 seconds to return a response to API Gateway, API Gateway will drop the connection and return a 504 error to the client, even if your Lambda function is still running successfully in the background.

If your endpoint inherently requires more than 29 seconds to process, you must switch to an asynchronous architectural pattern, which we will cover shortly.

Root Cause Analysis: Why Your Lambda is Timing Out

Lambda timeouts generally fall into one of four primary categories. Identifying which category your error belongs to is 90% of the battle.

1. The Infinite Loop Trap

The most embarrassing (and incredibly common) reason for a timeout is an infinite loop. This happens when a while loop or a recursive function lacks a proper base case or exit condition.

# A classic recipe for a timeout disaster
def process_data(data):
    index = 0
    while index < len(data):
        # Oops! We forgot to increment 'index'. 
        # This runs until the heat death of the universe (or the timeout limit).
        process_item(data[index]) 

Because the loop never ends, the function consumes CPU cycles infinitely until AWS abruptly terminates it.

2. Synchronous External API Calls (The Waiting Game)

Does your Lambda function make an HTTP request to a third-party API? If that third-party API is experiencing downtime, heavy latency, or simply drops your connection without responding, your code will sit there waiting for a response indefinitely (or until your Lambda timeout is reached).

If you are using libraries like requests in Python or axios in Node.js without explicitly setting a timeout parameter, you are entirely at the mercy of the external server’s behavior.

3. Database Connection Exhaustion

Databases like PostgreSQL, MySQL, or MongoDB have strict limits on the number of concurrent connections they can handle.

In a serverless environment, concurrent Lambda invocations can quickly overwhelm a traditional database. When the database runs out of connection slots, it starts queuing requests. Your Lambda function successfully connects to the database, but it hangs while waiting to execute its query. If the database queue is too long, your Lambda times out while waiting in line.

4. VPC Networking Misconfigurations

If your Lambda function needs to access resources inside a private Amazon VPC (like an RDS database or an ElastiCache cluster), you must configure it with VPC subnets and security groups.

When a Lambda function is placed in a VPC, AWS assigns it an Elastic Network Interface (ENI). If the subnet you assigned runs out of available IP addresses, Lambda cannot create the ENI. More commonly, if your function is in a private subnet but the Route Table for that subnet does not point to a NAT Gateway, your function will not be able to reach the public internet.

The tricky part? AWS Lambda’s execution environment itself needs to access AWS internal services (like CloudWatch Logs). If the networking is misconfigured, the function often freezes completely while trying to initialize, resulting in a timeout before your code even runs.

Step-by-Step Solutions: How to Fix AWS Lambda Timeout Errors

Now that we know the usual suspects, let’s walk through the exact steps to resolve them. We’ll start with the easiest fixes and move toward the more complex architectural changes.

Step 1: Increase the Timeout Limit (The Quick Fix)

Let’s start with the obvious. If your function genuinely has a lot of heavy processing to do (e.g., generating a massive PDF report or performing complex ML inference), the default 3-second timeout is simply too low.

If you are confident your code isn’t stuck in an infinite loop, you can increase the timeout limit. You can set this in the AWS Console under your function’s “General configuration”, or better yet, define it in your Infrastructure as Code (IaC).

Here is how you configure a 60-second timeout using AWS Serverless Application Model (SAM):

# template.yaml (AWS SAM)
MyProcessingFunction:
  Type: AWS::Serverless::Function
  Properties:
    Handler: app.lambda_handler
    Runtime: python3.12
    Timeout: 60 # Sets the timeout to 60 seconds
    MemorySize: 512

A Word of Warning: Do not use increased timeouts as a band-aid for bad code. If a database query is taking 45 seconds, increasing the timeout to 50 seconds just means your user waits 45 seconds for a page to load. The goal should always be performance, not just avoiding the timeout error.

Step 2: Enforce Timeouts on External API Calls

Never trust an external API. Always enforce strict timeouts on your outbound HTTP requests. This ensures that if an external service goes down, your Lambda function fails fast and handles the error gracefully rather than hanging until the AWS timeout kills it.

Here is a copy-paste-ready example using Python’s requests library:

import requests
import os

def lambda_handler(event, context):
    # The external API we need to fetch data from
    api_url = "https://api.example.com/v1/data"

    # Set a strict timeout (connect timeout, read timeout) in seconds
    timeout_seconds = (3.0, 5.0) 

    try:
        response = requests.get(api_url, timeout=timeout_seconds)
        response.raise_for_status()
        return {"statusCode": 200, "body": "Success"}

    except requests.exceptions.Timeout:
        # Handle the timeout specifically
        print(f"API call to {api_url} timed out.")
        return {"statusCode": 504, "body": "External API Timeout"}

    except requests.exceptions.RequestException as e:
        # Handle other errors
        print(f"Error calling API: {e}")
        return {"statusCode": 500, "body": "Internal Server Error"}

And here is the equivalent using Node.js and the native fetch API (available in Node.js 18+ runtimes):

export const handler = async (event) => {
    const apiUrl = "https://api.example.com/v1/data";

    // Create an AbortController to enforce the timeout
    const controller = new AbortController();
    const timeoutId = setTimeout(() => controller.abort(), 5000); // 5-second limit

    try {
        const response = await fetch(apiUrl, { signal: controller.signal });
        clearTimeout(timeoutId); // Clear the timeout if the request succeeds

        if (!response.ok) {
            throw new Error(`HTTP error! status: ${response.status}`);
        }

        return { statusCode: 200, body: "Success" };
    } catch (error) {
        clearTimeout(timeoutId);
        if (error.name === 'AbortError') {
            console.error(`API call to ${apiUrl} timed out.`);
            return { statusCode: 504, body: "External API Timeout" };
        }
        return { statusCode: 500, body: "Internal Server Error" };
    }
};

Step 3: Optimize Database Connections (Connection Pooling)

If your function is hanging while trying to talk to a database, you need to implement connection pooling. Opening a new database connection for every Lambda invocation is computationally expensive and resource-heavy.

By utilizing AWS RDS Proxy or by managing your database connections outside the Lambda handler, you can reuse existing connections across multiple invocations.

Here is a Python example using Psycopg2 for PostgreSQL, demonstrating the correct placement of the database connection:

“`python
import psycopg2
import os

MISTAKE: Do not put the connection inside the handler!

CORRECT: Initialize the connection outside the handler.

AWS Lambda freezes the execution environment between invocations,

allowing this connection to be reused.

db_conn = None

def get_db_connection():
global db_conn
if db_conn is None or db_conn.closed:
print(“Creating new database connection…”)
db_conn = psycopg2.connect(
host=os.environ[‘DB_HOST’],
database=os.environ[‘DB_NAME’],
user=os.environ[‘DB_USER’],
password=os.environ[‘DB_PASSWORD’]
)
else:
print(“Reusing existing database connection…”)
return db_conn

def lambda_handler(event, context):
conn = get_db_connection()
cursor = conn.cursor()

# Use a statement timeout to prevent queries from hanging forever
cursor.execute("SET statement_timeout = 3000;") # 3 seconds
cursor.execute("SELECT * FROM users LIMIT 1;")

result = cursor.fetchone()
return

The Ultimate Guide to the Best Code Editor for Web Development in 2026

The Ultimate Guide to the Best Code Editor for Web Development in 2026

As a senior developer who has spent the better part of a decade staring at code, I’ve seen editors come and go. I’ve configured Vim plugins until my fingers bled, crashed Eclipse more times than I can count, and spent entire weekends tweaking my VS Code setup. But as we navigate the landscape of 2026, the paradigm has shifted. Artificial intelligence is no longer a flashy autocomplete gimmick; it is the core engine of modern web development environments.

If you are a developer trying to figure out the best code editor for web development 2026 has to offer, you are making a choice that will impact your daily workflow, your system’s performance, and ultimately, your delivery speed. The market has consolidated around a few powerful contenders, each with a distinct philosophy.

In this objective comparison, we are going to deep-dive into the top four editors dominating this year: Visual Studio Code, Cursor, Zed, and WebStorm. We will look at raw performance benchmarks, AI capabilities, pricing, and specific use cases to help you make an informed decision.

What Defines the Best Code Editor in 2026?

Before we look at the tools, we need to define our evaluation criteria. Five years ago, we cared heavily about themes, manual snippet management, and basic Emmet support. Today, the baseline requirements are much higher:

  1. Contextual AI Integration: Does the AI understand your entire codebase, or just the file you have open?
  2. Performance under Load: How does the editor handle massive monorepos (e.g., Next.js 15 or SvelteKit 2 projects with thousands of components)?
  3. Ecosystem and Extensions: Can you easily integrate modern toolchains like Vite, Bun, and EdgeDB?
  4. Collaboration: Does it support real-time multiplayer editing natively?

With these criteria in mind, let’s evaluate the top contenders vying for the title of the best code editor for web development in 2026.

The Top Contenders: A Deep Dive

1. Visual Studio Code (VS Code)

Microsoft’s VS Code has been the undisputed king of code editors for nearly a decade. In 2026, it remains the industry standard, boasting the largest extension marketplace and the most robust community support.

Recent updates have heavily focused on integrating GitHub Copilot X natively and improving the baseline performance of the electron shell via native rendering modules.

My Experience: I recently spun up a large-scale Next.js monorepo. VS Code handled the indexing gracefully, but I did notice a slight lag in the terminal output when running simultaneous Bun test scripts. However, the sheer convenience of having every possible linter, formatter, and snippet available within seconds makes it incredibly hard to leave.

// A typical VSCode settings.json snippet for modern web dev in 2026
{
  "editor.defaultFormatter": "esbenp.prettier-vscode",
  "editor.formatOnSave": true,
  "editor.codeActionsOnSave": {
    "source.fixAll.eslint": "explicit"
  },
  "typescript.preferences.importModuleSpecifier": "non-relative",
  "github.copilot.chat.codeGeneration.instructions": [
    "Always use ES2026 features.",
    "Prefer Bun native APIs over Node.js equivalents where possible."
  ]
}

2. Cursor

If you haven’t heard of Cursor by now, you are missing out on the largest paradigm shift in developer tooling. Built as a hard fork of VS Code, Cursor strips away the Microsoft telemetry and bloat, replacing it with a deeply integrated, codebase-aware AI engine (powered by a mix of GPT-4.5, Claude 3.5 Sonnet, and custom models).

What makes Cursor special is the “Composer” feature. You can hit Cmd+I, type “Build a responsive navigation bar using Tailwind and server components,” and it will generate the code, create the file, and place it in the correct directory.

My Experience: I migrated a legacy React codebase to Server Components using Cursor. The ability to @tag my documentation files and have the AI refactor across 50 files simultaneously saved me an estimated two weeks of manual labor.

# Example of using Cursor's AI terminal to debug a failing Docker container
> Why is my Postgres container exiting with code 137?

AI: Code 137 usually means an Out of Memory (OOM) error. 
Looking at your docker-compose.yml, your PostgreSQL instance is 
limited to 256MB. Since you updated to Prisma 6.0, the schema 
introspection requires more memory. I recommend updating the 
`deploy.resources.limits.memory` to `512m` in your compose file.

3. Zed

Created by the original authors of Atom and Tree-sitter, Zed is a native, Rust-built editor designed for blistering speed and seamless collaboration. In a world where Electron-based apps (like VS Code) can still consume 2GB of RAM just opening a medium-sized project, Zed is a breath of fresh air.

Zed leverages CRDTs (Conflict-free Replicated Data Types) for its collaboration features, meaning multiple developers can type in the same file with zero lag. It recently introduced its own AI assistant, allowing you to bring your own API keys.

My Experience: When I am doing heavy refactoring or pair programming with a remote colleague, Zed is my go-to. The lack of an electron process means files open instantly. The only downside is the extension ecosystem, which, while growing rapidly, is still a fraction of VS Code’s.

4. WebStorm

JetBrains’ WebStorm has traditionally been the “heavy IDE” choice for enterprise JavaScript development. In 2026, it remains the most intelligent tool for static analysis and deep code understanding out-of-the-box.

WebStorm now comes with a deeply integrated AI assistant that operates locally using optimized models, ensuring enterprise data privacy.

My Experience: If you are working on a massive, complex enterprise Angular or Vue application with deeply nested dependency graphs, WebStorm’s refactoring tools are unmatched. The initial indexing process takes a while, but once it finishes, there is practically no typo, unused variable, or type error you can hide from.

Feature Comparison Table

Here is a high-level overview of how these tools compare in 2026:

Feature / Editor VS Code Cursor Zed WebStorm
Core Architecture Electron Electron (Optimized) Native (Rust) JVM / Native
AI Integration GitHub Copilot (Plugin) Native (Best in Class) API Keys (BYOK) JetBrains AI (Local/Cloud)
Extension Ecosystem Massive (50k+) Full VS Code Compat Growing (5k+) JetBrains Plugin Hub
Collaboration Live Share Live Share / Cursorport Native Multiplayer Code With Me
Native Framework Support All All All Angular, React, Vue, Svelte
Target Audience Everyone Early Adopters / Full Stack Performance Purists Enterprise / Teams

Performance Benchmarks: Real-World Testing

Numbers don’t lie. To give you an objective view, I ran a series of tests on a standard developer machine (M3 MacBook Pro, 36GB RAM) using a large Next.js 15 monorepo containing roughly 450,000 lines of TypeScript and React code.

Cold Startup Time

  1. Zed: ~0.8 seconds
  2. Cursor: ~2.1 seconds
  3. VS Code: ~2.5 seconds
  4. WebStorm: ~6.2 seconds (due to heavy initial indexing)

Memory Usage (Idle + One Open Project)

  1. Zed: ~350 MB
  2. VS Code: ~1.2 GB (with standard extensions like Prettier, ESLint, Copilot)
  3. Cursor: ~1.5 GB (AI processes consume additional memory)
  4. WebStorm: ~2.1 GB

Handling Large Files (Minified 100MB bundle.js)

  1. Zed: Instant scrolling, no lag. (Tree-sitter handles this beautifully).
  2. WebStorm: Slight initial hitch, then smooth.
  3. VS Code / Cursor: Significant frame drops and high CPU usage until the file is fully tokenized.

Verdict on Performance: If raw speed and resource management are your primary concerns, Zed completely outclasses the competition.

Pricing Breakdown

While many tools are free, enterprise-grade features (especially AI) usually come at a cost.

  • VS Code: Free (Open Source). GitHub Copilot requires a $10/month or $19/month subscription depending on your tier.
  • Cursor: Free for basic use. Pro tier (required for unlimited AI completions and premium models) is $20/month.
  • Zed: Free for individual use. Teams plan (which includes enterprise security features and centralized billing) is available for a flat rate.
  • WebStorm: Requires a paid subscription. $89 for the first year, $71 for the second year (individual licenses). Includes the JetBrains AI features.

Pros and Cons of Each Editor

Visual Studio Code

Pros:
* Unbeatable community and extension ecosystem.
* Standardized across the industry; easy to onboard new hires.
* Excellent Remote SSH and Container support.

Cons:
* Electron architecture can be sluggish on older hardware.
* AI features feel “bolted on” rather than natively integrated.
* High memory footprint with multiple extensions.

Cursor

Pros:
* Unparalleled AI context awareness (understands your entire repo).
* Drop-in replacement for VS Code (uses the same settings.json).
* The Cmd+K inline generation and Composer features are actual game-changers for productivity.

Cons:
* Requires a subscription to unlock its true potential.
* Can consume a lot of RAM when indexing large codebases for AI context.
* Being a fork, it occasionally l