fish-and-loaves
v1.0.0
Published
Proof-of-Concept Load Balancer written with Express
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fish-and-loaves
fish-and-loaves
is a Proof-of-Concept Load Balancer written with Express, and it only supports requests with no Request Body as the configuration with the request
API was too complicated.
Inspiration
The inspiration for the project was this blog post by The Code Barbarian.
One difference between the implementation in the blog and fish-and-loaves
is that the application is defined by a configuration file as opposed to hard coding the structure in the code.
Not only this, but the load balancer also uses child-process
to spawn
multiple instances of the application and customize the instance output.
Installation
npm install --save-dev fish-and-loaves
yarn add -D fish-and-loaves
Usage
To run fish-and-loaves
, three environmental variables need to be defined in a .env
file.
# Host IP
FISH_HOST=127.0.0.1
# Load Balancer Port
FISH_PORT=3030
# Determines HTTPS (Provide SSL)
FISH_SSL=false
After installation in a project, a simple command can be used.
yarn fish-and-loaves <path/to/lb-config.js>
Instance Configuration
With the configuration file, the structure is designed to be intuitive as a simple layer of Infrastructure-as-Code.
module.exports = {
// Name of Application
name: 'myapp',
// Path to run Application in 'node <path/to/start/script>'
path: './myapp/bin/www',
// Recipe as an Array of Instances
recipe: [
{
// Name of Instance
name: 'main',
// ANSI Color Output
color: '\x1b[36m%s\x1b[0m',
// Weight of Instance
weight: 3,
// Preferred Port (Optional)
port: 5000
},
{
name: 'aux1',
color: '\x1b[33m%s\x1b[0m',
weight: 1
},
// More Instances...
]
}
Personal Notes
I have been curious about load balancers for a while ever since I took a class on Internet Technology and saw a picture of a server hierarchy.
The implementation of a Load Balancer is not limited to the Weighted Priority Policy used (as opposed to Round-Robin, Classification, etc.), but the single implementation of one of the policies was enough to understand the concepts of a Load Balancer and managing processes.
However, these types of policies are important to understand as they are useful for any distributed system at any level of abstraction, not just the application layer.
Although I will not be able to make a full-fledged cloud architecture framework, this project gave me a little taste of how DevOps software is developed: automating the organization of many different components in a system as opposed to only focusing on a single process.
Side Note: The names in the code are based on a story from Matthew 14:14-21 in which Jesus feeds 5,000 people with only 5 loaves and 2 fish, which parallels the precise distribution and organization of a Load Balancer