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DDSL - Dynamic Distributed Service Locator

DDSL is written in Scala and can be used by Scala, Java or any other Language on the JVM.

Have a look at ddsl-cmdline-tool if you are using a none-JVM-language or just likes the command-line.

Here you can find my Lightningtalk about DDSL at Roots Conference in may, 2011.

Check out ddslConfigWriter which automatically reconfigures nginx (or any other reverse proxy like apache, squid etc)

Project history

  • 20130211 - Version 0.3.3 released - using Scala 2.10.0
  • 20121029 - Version 0.3.2 released
  • 20121029 - Fixes #6 - Prevent exception when querying a never-used zookeeper
  • 20121009 - Version 0.3.1 released - Fixes logger dependency issue
  • 20121004 - Version 0.3 released
  • 20121004 - Added persistent serviceUp - usefull for static resources like databases etc
  • 20120911 - Added ddsl-cmdline-tool
  • 20120907 - (0.3-SNAPSHOT) Upgraded to scala 2.9.2, sbt 0.12, replaced log4j with logback/slf4j, and upgraded to zookeper 3.4.3
  • 201105xx - Added Java example
  • 20110226 - version 0.2 released
  • 20110125 - version 0.1.RC1 released

Where does DDSL help?

In many big companies you have a lot of services (SOAP, REST, etc) spread across many servers on several different Web Containers/Application Servers/ESB (Weblogic, Glassfish, Tomcat, Jetty, Mule, etc). At least this is the situation where I work. You also have several different environments: test, preprod, prod etc with different servers and databases etc.

One service might use several other services.

You might also have (or want) several different versions of one service to run at the same time.

All those service locations... This means a lot of configuring

This is where DDSL helps..

What is DDSL ?

DDSL - Dynamic Distributed Service Locator

(Scaladoc can be found here)

Dynamic

  • No admin needed
  • You don't have to manually add your service / version to the repository
  • Your application can automatically register its location. -- It can also register it's "quality" (Clients will preferred locations with better "quality"
  • Locations on "localhost" will be preferred
  • You can mix several "environments" (prod, test) within the same DDSL-repository
  • Automatically load balancing between multiple locations with same "quality"
  • Service is automatically removed from repository, if it crashes/go down

Distributed

  • DDSL has no single point of failure
  • It uses ZooKeeper as its dynamic distributed storage

Service Locator

  • A repository of services (with version) and their current locations

Coming functionality

Distributed logging

Distributed logging will have no single point of failure and will make it possible to look up which client is using / depending on which service...

How to use DDSL?

The idea behind DDSL is really simple and dynamic / flexible - So is its usage.

API documentation can be found here

Below you can find a simple and running example but first some highlights.

Both servers and clients uses DdslClient to communicate with DDSL. The client is created like this:

val client = new DdslClientImpl

When a service wants to broadcast that it is available, this is how it is done:

client.serviceUp( Service( serviceId, serviceLocation))

ServiceId specifies what kind of service it is, and serviceLocation specifies how clients can reach us.

When a client wants to get the best location of a specific service:

val location = client.getBestServiceLocation( ServiceRequest(serviceId, clientId ))

It specifies the ServiceId describing what service it needs, and ClientId so DDSL can log which client is using which services.

When using DDSL to plumb your deployment together, you might also want to use DDSL for everything; including finding the database-server, or some other static service. In situations like this, you can save the location in DDSL permanent (Meaning it will not go offline when the DDSL-client disconnects):

client.serviceUp( Service( serviceId, serviceLocation), true)

Have a look at the examples to see how it can be used:


Also, have a look at DDSL-Status, a simple web-app showing status of all online services.