Pattern: Service registry

pattern   inter-service communication   service discovery  

Context

Clients of a service use either Client-side discovery or Server-side discovery to determine the location of a service instance to which to send requests.

Problem

How do clients of a service (in the case of Client-side discovery) and/or routers (in the case of Server-side discovery) know about the available instances of a service?

Forces

  • Each instance of a service exposes a remote API such as HTTP/REST, or Thrift etc. at a particular location (host and port)
  • The number of services instances and their locations changes dynamically. Virtual machines and containers are usually assigned a dynamic IP address. An EC2 Autoscaling Group, for example, adjusts the number of instances based on load.

Solution

Implement a service registry, which is a database of services, their instances and their locations. Service instances are registered with the service registry on startup and deregistered on shutdown. Client of the service and/or routers query the service registry to find the available instances of a service. A service registry might invoke a service instance’s health check API to verify that it is able to handle requests

Examples

The Microservices Example application is an example of an application that uses client-side service discovery. It is written in Scala and uses Spring Boot and Spring Cloud as the Microservice chassis. They provide various capabilities including a Netflix Eureka service registry.

The Eureka Server is a small Spring Boot application:

@SpringBootApplication
@EnableEurekaServer
public class EurekaServer {

  public static void main(String[] args) {
    new SpringApplicationBuilder(EurekaServer.class).web(true).run(args);
  }

}

It is deployed using Docker:

eureka:
  image: java:openjdk-8u91-jdk
  working_dir: /app
  volumes:
    - ./eureka-server/build/libs:/app
  command: java -jar /app/eureka-server.jar --server.port=8761
  ports:
    - "8761:8761"

Other examples of service registries (or technologies that are commonly used as service registries) include:

Some systems such as Kubernetes, Marathon and AWS ELB have an implicit service registry.

Resulting context

The benefits of the Service Registry pattern include:

  • Client of the service and/or routers can discover the location of service instances.

There are also some drawbacks:

  • Unless the service registry is built in to the infrastructure, it is yet another infrastructure component that must be setup, configured and managed. Moreover, the service registry is a critical system component. Although clients should cache data provided by the service registry, if the service registry fails that data will eventually become out of date. Consequently, the service registry must be highly available.

You need to decide how service instances are registered with the service registry. There are two options:

The clients of the service registry need to know the location(s) of the service registry instances. Service registry instances must be deployed on fixed and well known IP addresses. Clients are configured with those IP addresses.

For example, Netflix Eureka service instances are typically deployed using elastic IP addresses. The available pool of Elastic IP addresses is configured using either a properties file or via DNS. When a Eureka instance starts up it consults the configuration to determine which available Elastic IP address to use. A Eureka client is also configured with the pool of Elastic IP addresses.


pattern   inter-service communication   service discovery  


Copyright © 2024 Chris Richardson • All rights reserved • Supported by Kong.

About www.prc.education

www.prc.education is brought to you by Chris Richardson. Experienced software architect, author of POJOs in Action, the creator of the original CloudFoundry.com, and the author of Microservices patterns.

Upcoming public workshops: Microservices and architecting for fast flow

In-person: Berlin and Milan

DevOps and Team topologies are vital for delivering the fast flow of changes that modern businesses need.

But they are insufficient. You also need an application architecture that supports fast, sustainable flow.

Learn more and register for one of my upcoming public workshops in November.

NEED HELP?

I help organizations improve agility and competitiveness through better software architecture.

Learn more about my consulting engagements, and training workshops.

LEARN about microservices

Chris offers numerous other resources for learning the microservice architecture.

Get the book: Microservices Patterns

Read Chris Richardson's book:

Example microservices applications

Want to see an example? Check out Chris Richardson's example applications. See code

Virtual bootcamp: Distributed data patterns in a microservice architecture

My virtual bootcamp, distributed data patterns in a microservice architecture, is now open for enrollment!

It covers the key distributed data management patterns including Saga, API Composition, and CQRS.

It consists of video lectures, code labs, and a weekly ask-me-anything video conference repeated in multiple timezones.

The regular price is $395/person but use coupon CCMHVSFB to sign up for $95 (valid until November 8th, 2024). There are deeper discounts for buying multiple seats.

Learn more

Learn how to create a service template and microservice chassis

Take a look at my Manning LiveProject that teaches you how to develop a service template and microservice chassis.

Signup for the newsletter


BUILD microservices

Ready to start using the microservice architecture?

Consulting services

Engage Chris to create a microservices adoption roadmap and help you define your microservice architecture,


The Eventuate platform

Use the Eventuate.io platform to tackle distributed data management challenges in your microservices architecture.

Eventuate is Chris's latest startup. It makes it easy to use the Saga pattern to manage transactions and the CQRS pattern to implement queries.


Join the microservices google group