Swift Powers TelemetryDeck's 16M Monthly Users: A Case Study in Server-Side Swift at Scale
Swift Powers TelemetryDeck's 16M Monthly Users: A Case Study in Server-Side Swift at Scale
Breaking — TelemetryDeck, a privacy-focused app analytics service for developers, has revealed that its entire backend infrastructure runs on Swift, handling over 16 million monthly active users with remarkable efficiency. The company, which processes data for thousands of app publishers, says the decision to use Swift on the server has led to lower costs, higher performance, and faster iteration.

“We come from a world of iOS on the frontend and Python, Node, or Ruby on the backend,” said a TelemetryDeck spokesperson. “Swift is just as easy to use, and its compiled nature lets us catch errors at compile time instead of runtime. That’s ideal for a hardened, high-performance web service.”
The service, built on the Vapor web framework, runs in containers on Kubernetes. Its metadata lives in Postgres, while analytics data is stored in Apache Druid. Swift-native connectors handle all API calls, with some custom connectors contributed back to open source.
Background
TelemetryDeck started as a small exploratory hobby project. The founders, who were already proficient in Swift from iOS development, wanted to try using the language on the server. “Vapor was new, and we figured, let’s try this out and learn a new way to apply our skills,” the spokesperson recalled.
That gambit paid off. The architecture turned out to be lean, performant, and stable. Swift’s multithreading capabilities, which avoid the Global Interpreter Lock (GIL) that constrains Python, allow the service to handle 16 million users per month with resources that would buckle other stacks. “The efficiency gains translate directly to lower infrastructure costs and a better user experience,” the company notes.
What This Means
This case demonstrates that Swift is a viable option for backend services at scale, particularly for teams already familiar with the language. The Codable protocol, which encodes and decodes JSON with type safety, prevents entire classes of vulnerabilities. “When a request comes in with malformed data, Swift’s type system rejects it immediately,” the company explains. “That isn’t just convenient; it’s a security feature.”
For developers considering server-side Swift, TelemetryDeck’s experience suggests that the language’s performance, safety, and developer productivity can deliver real-world benefits. As Swift continues to mature on the server, more services may follow this path.
— Reporting by [Your News Organization]
Related Articles
- React Native 0.81: Key Updates for Android 16, iOS Builds, and Deprecations
- Build 20 Apps in 20 Days: 10 Lessons from a Flutter Developer's Challenge
- Google Clock Alarm Malfunctions Prompt Users to Seek More Reliable Wake-Up Apps
- Decoding Nothing's Pokémon Hints: A Step-by-Step Guide to Predicting Their Next Product
- Apple Posts Record Revenue While Admitting Mac Demand Outstrips Supply
- From Snooze to Success: 5 Alarm Apps That Actually Wake You Up
- Flutter Developer Builds 20 Apps in 20 Days Using AI-Powered Antigravity Tool
- Cross-Platform Messaging Just Got Safer: 6 Key Facts About iPhone-Android RCS Encryption