Discovering Command Routes
The SpringCloudCommandRouter
uses Spring Cloud’s discovery mechanism to find the other nodes in the cluster. To that end it uses the DiscoveryClient
and Registration
from Spring Cloud. These are respectively used to gather remote command routing information and maintain local information. The most straightforward way to retrieve both is by annotating your application with @EnableDiscoveryClient
.
Gathering and storing the command routing information revolves around Spring Cloud’s ServiceInstances
. A Registration
is just the local ServiceInstance
, whereas the DiscoveryClient
provides the API to find remote ServiceInstances
. Furthermore, it is the ServiceInstance
which provides us with the required information (for example, the URI) to retrieve a node’s capabilities.
Spring Cloud’s Heartbeat Requirement
When using the Thus, if heartbeat events are disabled, your instance will no longer be updated with the current command routing capabilities. If so, this will cause issues during command routing. |
The logic to store the local capabilities and discovering the remote capabilities of a ServiceInstance
is maintained in the CapabilityDiscoveryMode
. It is thus the CapabilityDiscoveryMode
which provides us the means to actually retrieve a ServiceInstance
's set of commands it can handle (if any). The sole full implementation provided of the CapabilityDiscoveryMode
, is the RestCapabilityDiscoveryMode
, using a RestTemplate
and the ServiceInstance
URI to invoke a configurable endpoint. This endpoint leads to the MemberCapabilitiesController
which in turn exposes the MemberCapabilities
on the RestCapabilityDiscoveryMode
of that instance.
There are decorators present for the CapabilityDiscoveryMode
, providing two additional features:
-
IgnoreListingDiscoveryMode
- aCapabilityDiscoveryMode
decorator which on failure of retrieving theMemberCapabilities
will place the givenServiceInstance
on a list to be ignored for future validation. It thus effectively removes discoverableServiceInstances
from the set. -
AcceptAllCommandsDiscoveryMode
- aCapabilityDiscoveryMode
decorator which regardless of what this instance can handle as commands, state it can handle anything. This decorator comes in handy if the nodes in the system are homogeneous (aka, everybody can handle the same set of commands).
The Registration
, DiscoveryClient
and CapabilityDiscoveryMode
are arguably the heart of the SpringCloudCommandRouter
. There are, however, a couple of additional things you can configure for this router, which are the following:
-
RoutingStrategy
- The component in charge of deciding which of the nodes receives the commands consistently. By default, aAnnotationRoutingStrategy
is used (see Distributing the Command Bus for more). -
A
ServiceInstance
filter - ThisPredicate
is used to filter outServiceInstance
retrieved through theDiscoveryClient
. For example, it allows the removal of instances which are known to not handle any command messages. This might be useful if you have several services within the Spring Cloud Discovery Service set up, which you do not ever want to take into account for command handling. -
ConsistentHashChangeListener
- Adding a consistent hash change listener provides you with the opportunity to perform a specific task if new nodes have been added to the known command handlers set.
Differing Command Capabilities per Node
It is not required for all nodes to have the same set of command handlers. You may use different segments for different command types altogether. The Distributed Command Bus will always choose a node to dispatch a command to the one that has support for that specific type of command. |