CtrlK
CommunityDocumentationLog inGet started
Tessl Logo

groq-migration-deep-dive

tessl install github:jeremylongshore/claude-code-plugins-plus-skills --skill groq-migration-deep-dive
github.com/jeremylongshore/claude-code-plugins-plus-skills

Execute Groq major re-architecture and migration strategies with strangler fig pattern. Use when migrating to or from Groq, performing major version upgrades, or re-platforming existing integrations to Groq. Trigger with phrases like "migrate groq", "groq migration", "switch to groq", "groq replatform", "groq upgrade major".

Review Score

76%

Validation Score

12/16

Implementation Score

63%

Activation Score

90%

Groq Migration Deep Dive

Overview

Comprehensive guide for migrating to or from Groq, or major version upgrades.

Prerequisites

  • Current system documentation
  • Groq SDK installed
  • Feature flag infrastructure
  • Rollback strategy tested

Migration Types

TypeComplexityDurationRisk
Fresh installLowDaysLow
From competitorMediumWeeksMedium
Major versionMediumWeeksMedium
Full replatformHighMonthsHigh

Pre-Migration Assessment

Step 1: Current State Analysis

# Document current implementation
find . -name "*.ts" -o -name "*.py" | xargs grep -l "groq" > groq-files.txt

# Count integration points
wc -l groq-files.txt

# Identify dependencies
npm list | grep groq
pip freeze | grep groq

Step 2: Data Inventory

interface MigrationInventory {
  dataTypes: string[];
  recordCounts: Record<string, number>;
  dependencies: string[];
  integrationPoints: string[];
  customizations: string[];
}

async function assessGroqMigration(): Promise<MigrationInventory> {
  return {
    dataTypes: await getDataTypes(),
    recordCounts: await getRecordCounts(),
    dependencies: await analyzeDependencies(),
    integrationPoints: await findIntegrationPoints(),
    customizations: await documentCustomizations(),
  };
}

Migration Strategy: Strangler Fig Pattern

Phase 1: Parallel Run
┌─────────────┐     ┌─────────────┐
│   Old       │     │   New       │
│   System    │ ──▶ │  Groq   │
│   (100%)    │     │   (0%)      │
└─────────────┘     └─────────────┘

Phase 2: Gradual Shift
┌─────────────┐     ┌─────────────┐
│   Old       │     │   New       │
│   (50%)     │ ──▶ │   (50%)     │
└─────────────┘     └─────────────┘

Phase 3: Complete
┌─────────────┐     ┌─────────────┐
│   Old       │     │   New       │
│   (0%)      │ ──▶ │   (100%)    │
└─────────────┘     └─────────────┘

Implementation Plan

Phase 1: Setup (Week 1-2)

# Install Groq SDK
npm install @groq/sdk

# Configure credentials
cp .env.example .env.groq
# Edit with new credentials

# Verify connectivity
node -e "require('@groq/sdk').ping()"

Phase 2: Adapter Layer (Week 3-4)

// src/adapters/groq.ts
interface ServiceAdapter {
  create(data: CreateInput): Promise<Resource>;
  read(id: string): Promise<Resource>;
  update(id: string, data: UpdateInput): Promise<Resource>;
  delete(id: string): Promise<void>;
}

class GroqAdapter implements ServiceAdapter {
  async create(data: CreateInput): Promise<Resource> {
    const groqData = this.transform(data);
    return groqClient.create(groqData);
  }

  private transform(data: CreateInput): GroqInput {
    // Map from old format to Groq format
  }
}

Phase 3: Data Migration (Week 5-6)

async function migrateGroqData(): Promise<MigrationResult> {
  const batchSize = 100;
  let processed = 0;
  let errors: MigrationError[] = [];

  for await (const batch of oldSystem.iterateBatches(batchSize)) {
    try {
      const transformed = batch.map(transform);
      await groqClient.batchCreate(transformed);
      processed += batch.length;
    } catch (error) {
      errors.push({ batch, error });
    }

    // Progress update
    console.log(`Migrated ${processed} records`);
  }

  return { processed, errors };
}

Phase 4: Traffic Shift (Week 7-8)

// Feature flag controlled traffic split
function getServiceAdapter(): ServiceAdapter {
  const groqPercentage = getFeatureFlag('groq_migration_percentage');

  if (Math.random() * 100 < groqPercentage) {
    return new GroqAdapter();
  }

  return new LegacyAdapter();
}

Rollback Plan

# Immediate rollback
kubectl set env deployment/app GROQ_ENABLED=false
kubectl rollout restart deployment/app

# Data rollback (if needed)
./scripts/restore-from-backup.sh --date YYYY-MM-DD

# Verify rollback
curl https://app.yourcompany.com/health | jq '.services.groq'

Post-Migration Validation

async function validateGroqMigration(): Promise<ValidationReport> {
  const checks = [
    { name: 'Data count match', fn: checkDataCounts },
    { name: 'API functionality', fn: checkApiFunctionality },
    { name: 'Performance baseline', fn: checkPerformance },
    { name: 'Error rates', fn: checkErrorRates },
  ];

  const results = await Promise.all(
    checks.map(async c => ({ name: c.name, result: await c.fn() }))
  );

  return { checks: results, passed: results.every(r => r.result.success) };
}

Instructions

Step 1: Assess Current State

Document existing implementation and data inventory.

Step 2: Build Adapter Layer

Create abstraction layer for gradual migration.

Step 3: Migrate Data

Run batch data migration with error handling.

Step 4: Shift Traffic

Gradually route traffic to new Groq integration.

Output

  • Migration assessment complete
  • Adapter layer implemented
  • Data migrated successfully
  • Traffic fully shifted to Groq

Error Handling

IssueCauseSolution
Data mismatchTransform errorsValidate transform logic
Performance dropNo cachingAdd caching layer
Rollback triggeredErrors spikedReduce traffic percentage
Validation failedMissing dataCheck batch processing

Examples

Quick Migration Status

const status = await validateGroqMigration();
console.log(`Migration ${status.passed ? 'PASSED' : 'FAILED'}`);
status.checks.forEach(c => console.log(`  ${c.name}: ${c.result.success}`));

Resources

  • Strangler Fig Pattern
  • Groq Migration Guide

Flagship+ Skills

For advanced troubleshooting, see groq-advanced-troubleshooting.