Can I configure a cluster at the Engine
level?
Yes, beginning with Tomcat 5.5.10 you can configure clusters at both the
Engine
and Host
levels. This helps support
clustering for web hosting companies.
Show me a simple cluster configuration example.
For Tomcat 5.5.10 and later:
<Cluster className="org.apache.catalina.cluster.tcp.SimpleTcpCluster" defaultMode="true" />
How do I turn on transport logging?
- Use "org.apache.catalina.cluster" as logger category and switch to info, debug or trace as log level.
- Configure the clusterLog attribute (logging category) to get and send and receive message log.
How do I use JMX to monitor the cluster?
With Java 5 you can use the jconsole application to look inside the runnnig cluster: please see the
JMX configuration section in the Clustering HowTo document.
In fastasyncmode replication mode you can got more information with
sender attributes doProcessingStats="true"
and queueDoStats="true"
.
Finally, with the new JMX remote ant task you can access the state and call operations.
Can I pause the message sending?
Yes, the async senders buffer the messages, but make sure the membership ping is active. With fastasyncqueue
mode you can limit the max queue size.
Can I add more senders (pooled mode)?
Yes, with sender attribute maxPoolSocketLimit="40"
you can have more than the default
25
sockets to transfer more parallel messages.
What happens when I pull the network cable?
The other members will remove the instance from the cluster,
but when you insert the cable again, the Tomcat instance might have completely flipped out.
This is because the OS might start using 100% of the CPU when a multicast message is sent.
There has not yet been a good solution for this, I will let you know when I have come up with one.
(pero: I test this and I works correct with java 5 and exists when you use the cluster with JDK 1.4.x)
At my windows laptop without network my cluster doesn't work?
The Membership attribute mcastBindAddress="127.0.0.1"
must be set!
The cluster dosen't work under linux with two nodes at two boxes?
Check the the following:
- Is your network interface enabled for multicast?
ifconfig eth0 MULTICAST
- Exists a multicast route to your network interface?
route add -host 228.0.0.4 dev eth0
- Is your firewall active? Then check that multicast port is on your UDP open list
and the receiver TCP port is also for both machines open!
I get "localhost" rather than "eth0" or another interface when using tcpListenAddress="auto".
Change /etc/hosts so that the localhost domain resolves to the actual IP address of the NIC, eth0.
Please see
Bugzilla for more.