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Welcome to Özkan Pakdil’s Blog

👋 Hello! I’m Özkan Pakdil, a software engineer with professional experience since 2004.

  • I specialize in Java development and C# but consider myself a full-stack developer with expertise in backend, database, server-side development, UI, and UX.

  • My technical journey spans various technologies including Spring Boot, Kubernetes, React, and many more. I’m a Linux enthusiast since 1999 and enjoy optimizing system performance.

  • This blog contains articles about technologies I use and my experiences in software development. Feel free to explore my projects on GitHub.

Bun Microservice Framework Benchmark Results

Bun Joins the Microservice Framework Benchmark: Surprisingly Fast JavaScript Runtime

Introduction Today I’m excited to announce the addition of Bun to our microservice framework benchmark suite. The results are nothing short of remarkable . Bun has proven to be one of the fastest runtimes in our entire test suite, competing directly with Rust frameworks! What is Bun? Bun is a modern JavaScript runtime built from scratch using Zig and JavaScriptCore (the engine that powers Safari). It’s designed to be a drop-in replacement for Node.js with a focus on: ...

January 10, 2026 · 4 min · Özkan Pakdil
Eclipse Collections vs JDK Collections Performance Comparison

Eclipse Collections vs JDK Collections: A Performance Deep Dive

The Spark The other day I came across a fascinating post on Substack by Skilled Coder about Java data structure performance. The post showed some eye-opening numbers for 10M operations: Get operations: HashMap.get() → ~140 ms TreeMap.get() → ~420 ms ArrayList.get(i) → ~40 ms LinkedList.get(i) → ~2.5 s Insertion (10M elements): ArrayList.add() → ~180 ms HashMap.put() → ~300 ms LinkedList.add() → ~900 ms This got me thinking: how do these numbers compare to Eclipse Collections? And more importantly, how can we calculate these numbers ourselves using open source tools? ...

December 29, 2025 · 3 min · Özkan Pakdil
PKIX errors to a clean mTLS + Feign + IAM demo

From PKIX errors to a clean mTLS + Feign + IAM demo

Why this post I started this mini‑project after seeing a common roadblock: PKIX path building failed when calling HTTPS services with OpenFeign. The goal was to create a tiny, runnable example that eliminates guesswork, shows how to configure client certificates and trust properly, and layers basic IAM policies on top. Reference: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/79835509/unable-to-configure-ssl-context-for-open-feign-client-getting-pkix-error What’s inside the example Two Spring Boot apps: Server: HTTPS on 8443, requires client certs (mTLS), and recognizes/authorizes callers with Spring Security’s X.509 support. Client: Spring Cloud OpenFeign calling the server via Apache HttpClient5 with a custom SSLContext. A one‑command cert toolchain (local CA → server/client certs → PKCS#12 keystores/truststores). An automated test script that runs a positive call (expected 200) and a negative call with an unauthorized client (expected 403). Project (ready to publish here): ...

December 5, 2025 · 3 min · Özkan Pakdil
Golang and Express.js Benchmark Cover

Adding Golang and Express.js to the Microservice Framework Benchmark Suite

Introduction Test results for this benchmark run → Over the last two days, I’ve expanded our microservice framework benchmark suite to include two new contenders: Golang and Express.js. This addition allows us to compare performance across a broader spectrum of technologies, from compiled languages like Rust and Go to JVM-based frameworks and Node.js. New Additions Golang (Go 1.24.10) Go was added using the standard library only - no external frameworks. The implementation uses net/http package which is known for its excellent performance and simplicity. ...

December 3, 2025 · 4 min · Özkan Pakdil
Macos hdmi connected TV sound management problem

How to solve macos hdmi sound control problem

So I got my Mac Mini M4 from Amazon for £500 and started using it. I had so many problems with the shortcuts I normally use even Ctrl+A wasn’t working, I had to use Win+A, and many other shortcuts were different. One of the biggest problems was using the sound keys on the keyboard. On Linux they worked fine: sound up and down controlled the output volume. But on macOS it didn’t work. Very strange policy Apple has macOS doesn’t allow the user to control end devices connected through HDMI. ...

November 21, 2025 · 1 min · Özkan Pakdil