There is something deceptively simple about Pastebin. You paste some text, click a button, and get a short URL back. You share that URL with someone else, they open it, and they see your text. That is the entire product in one sentence. And yet, building Pastebin at the scale of tens of millions of daily users, billions of stored pastes, and a global audience requires you to make dozens of careful engineering decisions that would fill a whiteboard wall from top to bottom.
The reason Pastebin is a classic system design interview question is not because it is hard to understand — it is because it forces you to think through the full lifecycle of a piece of data in a distributed system: write it, store it, serve it to millions of readers, expire it gracefully, cache it intelligently, and make sure no one abuses it to host malware or leak credentials. Each of those steps has gotchas.

This post is a full engineering deep dive. We will go through the architecture layer by layer, explain every major decision, and make sure you understand not just what Pastebin does but why it is built the way it is.
What Pastebin Actually Is
Before we go deep into the systems, let us be clear about the product. Pastebin is a text-sharing service. Users paste raw text, often source code, configuration files, log dumps, or command output, and get a short URL they can share. The core workflow is:
- A user submits a block of text
- The system assigns it a unique short ID and URL
- Other users visit that URL and read the text
- The paste may expire after a set time or persist forever


