Load balancing
This examples shows how ClientConn
can pick different load balancing policies.
Note: to show the effect of load balancers, an example resolver is installed in
this example to get the backend addresses. It's suggested to read the name
resolver example before this example.
Try it
go run server/main.go
go run client/main.go
Explanation
Two echo servers are serving on ":50051" and ":50052". They will include their
serving address in the response. So the server on ":50051" will reply to the RPC
with this is examples/load_balancing (from :50051)
.
Two clients are created, to connect to both of these servers (they get both
server addresses from the name resolver).
Each client picks a different load balancer (using grpc.WithBalancerName
):
pick_first
or round_robin
. (These two policies are supported in gRPC by
default. To add a custom balancing policy, implement the interfaces defined in
https://godoc.org/google.golang.org/grpc/balancer).
Note that balancers can also be switched using service config, which allows
service owners (instead of client owners) to pick the balancer to use. Service
config doc is available at
https://github.com/grpc/grpc/blob/master/doc/service_config.md.
pick_first
The first client is configured to use pick_first
. pick_first
tries to
connect to the first address, uses it for all RPCs if it connects, or try the
next address if it fails (and keep doing that until one connection is
successful). Because of this, all the RPCs will be sent to the same backend. The
responses received all show the same backend address.
this is examples/load_balancing (from :50051)
this is examples/load_balancing (from :50051)
this is examples/load_balancing (from :50051)
this is examples/load_balancing (from :50051)
this is examples/load_balancing (from :50051)
this is examples/load_balancing (from :50051)
this is examples/load_balancing (from :50051)
this is examples/load_balancing (from :50051)
this is examples/load_balancing (from :50051)
this is examples/load_balancing (from :50051)
round_robin
The second client is configured to use round_robin
. round_robin
connects to
all the addresses it sees, and sends an RPC to each backend one at a time in
order. E.g. the first RPC will be sent to backend-1, the second RPC will be be
sent to backend-2, and the third RPC will be be sent to backend-1 again.
this is examples/load_balancing (from :50051)
this is examples/load_balancing (from :50051)
this is examples/load_balancing (from :50052)
this is examples/load_balancing (from :50051)
this is examples/load_balancing (from :50052)
this is examples/load_balancing (from :50051)
this is examples/load_balancing (from :50052)
this is examples/load_balancing (from :50051)
this is examples/load_balancing (from :50052)
this is examples/load_balancing (from :50051)
Note that it's possible to see two continues RPC sent to the same backend.
That's because round_robin
only picks the connections ready for RPCs. So if
one of the two connections is not ready for some reason, all RPCs will be sent
to the ready connection.