Skip to content

aalda/ignite-redis

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

18 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Apache Ignite Redis Module

Build Status Maven Central Javadocs

Apache Ignite Redis module provides a TCP Discovery IP Finder that uses a Redis set to locate other Ignite nodes to connect to.

Currently it does not support Redis clusters.

Importing Apache Ignite Redis Module In Maven Project

If you are using Maven to manage dependencies of your project, you can add the latest version of the Redis module dependency like this:

<project xmlns="http://maven.apache.org/POM/4.0.0"
    xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
    xsi:schemaLocation="http://maven.apache.org/POM/4.0.0
                        http://maven.apache.org/xsd/maven-4.0.0.xsd">
    ...
    <dependencies>
        ...
        <dependency>
            <groupId>io.github.aalda</groupId>
            <artifactId>ignite-redis</artifactId>
            <version>0.1.0</version>
        </dependency>
        ...
    </dependencies>
    ...
</project>

Configuration

In Ignite, nodes can discover each other by using DiscoverySpi. Ignite provides TcpDiscoverySpi as a default implementation of DiscoverySpi that uses TCP/IP for node discovery. For more information, please refer to the official Apache Ignite Cluster Configuration documentation.

If you're using Redis to coordinate your distributed environment, you can utilize it for a common shared storage of initial IP addresses. This is done via TcpDiscoveryRedisIpFinder.

Here is an example of how to configure this finder via Spring XML file:

<bean class="org.apache.ignite.configuration.IgniteConfiguration">
    ...
    <property name="discoverySpi">
        <bean class="org.apache.ignite.spi.discovery.tcp.TcpDiscoverySpi">
            <property name="ipFinder">
                 <bean class="io.github.aalda.ignite.spi.discovery.tcp.ipfinder.redis.TcpDiscoveryRedisIpFinder">
                    <property name="redisConnectionString" value="localhost:6379"/>
                    <property name="serviceName" value="myService" />
                 </bean>
            </property>
        </bean>
    </property>
    ...
</bean>

Or programmatically from Java:

TcpDiscoverySpi spi = new TcpDiscoverySpi();

TcpDiscoveryRedisIpFinder ipFinder = new TcpDiscoveryRedisIpFinder();

// Specify Redis connection string.
ipFinder.setRedisConnectionString("127.0.0.1:6379");
ipFinder.serServiceName("myService");

spi.setIpFinder(ipFinder);

IgniteConfiguration cfg = new IgniteConfiguration();

// Override default discovery SPI.
cfg.setDiscoverySpi(spi);

// Start Ignite node.
Ignition.start(cfg);

How it works

Once you have configured the Redis IP Finder, every Ignite node will be able to register its own address in a Set stored in Redis. Such address will follow the pattern "host#port". The format of the key that points to that set will be the concatenation of the service name established through the serviceName property and the suffix "/addresses".

When a node is stopped, it does not unregister itself and remove its address from the Redis set. The coordinator node is responsible for that operation. It frequently runs a clean process that detects left nodes and remove their addresses from the Redis set. You can tune the frequency of this process changing the ipFinderCleanFreq property in the configuration of the TcpDiscoverySpi. By default, it takes the value of 60 seconds.

Note that all nodes are stopped before the clean process is executed, the last node will only be able to unregister its own address but not the remaining ones. So such addresses will remain in the Redis set until a new one node reuse the same ip/port combination. Fortunately, an unreachable IP address will not affect the discovery process.

License

This code is open source software licensed under the Apache 2.0 License.

About

Apache Ignite Redis Module

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages