Hi Alan,
It is possible to use the TUNNEL with multiple gossip routers to
avoid this, but I understand not wanting to have to setup and maintain the extra gossip
router processes.
True, it’s mainly about maintaining extra components.
Which IP address from your example is retrieved with this command:
EXTERNAL_HOST_IP=$(curl
http://169.254.169.254/latest/meta-data/local-ipv4)”
I get the Amazon EC2 instance’s internal IP. This is what I want. There’s another endpoint
for public but I don’t want to use it. What’s good about this is when called from inside a
Docker container, I manage to get the actual internal IP for the EC2 instance.
How are you setting the JGROUPS_INITIAL_HOSTS environment variable?
Since this was a test with just 2 known hosts, I injected them as a Docker environment
variable with two fixed IPs. Once we switch to JDBC_PING, this will be removed.
For my curiosity, can you tell me more about why you don't want
to use S3_PING? Is it the cost or something else? Just wondering and JDBC_PING should work
fine.
S3_PING, like Gossip Router adds an external dependency on another service. S3 has had
consistency issues 3 times in 2015 (at least in US East). I don’t want to rely another
component when I already need the database to be up. Less components, less chance of
failure. Also, there are ton of variables to set with S3 and it requires preliminary work.
I want something that scales well from dev to QA to prod. JDBC_PING has a
datasource_jndi_name property. I can just reuse the data source I set up for Keycloak.
I hope I got all your questions.
Best,
Scott
Scott Rossillo
Smartling | Senior Software Engineer
srossillo(a)smartling.com
<
http://www.sigstr.com/>
> On Dec 16, 2015, at 3:33 PM, Alan Field <afield(a)redhat.com> wrote:
>
> Hey Scott,
>
> Thanks for following up and showing me your code. I have some questions inline for
you:
>
> From: "Scott Rossillo" <srossillo(a)smartling.com>
> To: "Alan Field" <afield(a)redhat.com>
> Cc: "Niko Köbler" <niko(a)n-k.de>, "keycloak-user"
<keycloak-user(a)lists.jboss.org>
> Sent: Wednesday, December 16, 2015 2:19:27 PM
> Subject: Re: [keycloak-user] Replace use of Infinispan with User Sessions SPI
?
>
> Hi Alan,
>
> Thanks for the informative email. The steps you outlined are similar to what I’ve
tested with ECS. The gossip router is definitely a no-go for production since it’s a
single point of failure.
It is possible to use the TUNNEL with multiple gossip routers to
avoid this, but I understand not wanting to have to setup and maintain the extra gossip
router processes.
>
> I am testing this down at the JGroups level right now and got it working with ECS.
There were two issues. On TCP you have to specify the external_addr to match the EC2 host
otherwise the nodes won’t form a cluster. Secondly, FD_SOCK attempts to connect back on a
random port. With Docker instances, this fails. Using a known client_bind_port works
well.
> Which IP address from your example is retrieved with this command:
>
> EXTERNAL_HOST_IP=$(curl
http://169.254.169.254/latest/meta-data/local-ipv4
<
http://169.254.169.254/latest/meta-data/local-ipv4>)"
>
> Is it the 172.16.0.4 address or the 10.10.0.100 address? When I use this command in
EC2, I get the internal IP address for the instance, but not the public IP address. In
your example, that would be the 172.16.0.4 address. Also which address is used for the
bind_addr when you use -Djgroups.bind_addr=global?
>
> Here’s the code I’m testing with:
https://github.com/foo4u/aws-infinispan-poc
<
https://github.com/foo4u/aws-infinispan-poc>
>
> Most interesting are probably:
>
>
https://github.com/foo4u/aws-infinispan-poc/blob/master/ecs-jgroups-poc/e...
<
https://github.com/foo4u/aws-infinispan-poc/blob/master/ecs-jgroups-poc/e...
How are you setting the JGROUPS_INITIAL_HOSTS environment variable?
>
https://github.com/foo4u/aws-infinispan-poc/blob/master/ecs-jgroups-poc/s...
<
https://github.com/foo4u/aws-infinispan-poc/blob/master/ecs-jgroups-poc/s...
>
> With this set up the nodes on different machines communicate without issue. I still
have to add in something other than TCP_PING, but that wasn’t the main issue. Will use
JDBC_PING most likely. Not a fan of S3 for coordination. Plus I already need an RDBMS for
Keycloak.
For my curiosity, can you tell me more about why you don't want
to use S3_PING? Is it the cost or something else? Just wondering and JDBC_PING should work
fine.
>
> Thanks,
> Alan
>
> Scott Rossillo
> Smartling | Senior Software Engineer
> srossillo(a)smartling.com <mailto:srossillo@smartling.com>
>
> <
https://app.sigstr.com/uc/55e5d41c6533390d03580000>
> <
http://www.sigstr.com/>
> On Dec 15, 2015, at 2:13 PM, Alan Field <afield(a)redhat.com
<mailto:afield@redhat.com>> wrote:
>
> Just to be clear, I have successfully tested Infinispan library and server mode
clusters on EC2 using S3_PING, TCP, and the internal EC2 IP addresses. None of the cloud
providers support multicast. The Docker case is a little different though, because of the
issues with getting access to the IP address.
>
> Thanks,
> Alan
>
> From: "Niko Köbler" <niko(a)n-k.de <mailto:niko@n-k.de>>
> To: "Paul Blair" <pblair(a)clearme.com
<mailto:pblair@clearme.com>>
> Cc: "keycloak-user" <keycloak-user(a)lists.jboss.org
<mailto:keycloak-user@lists.jboss.org>>
> Sent: Tuesday, December 15, 2015 1:53:18 PM
> Subject: Re: [keycloak-user] Replace use of Infinispan with User Sessions SPI
?
>
> We will go for the first run with EC2 and S3_PING, but w/o Docker.
> If we/you/whoever will find a proper solution (possibly on the jgroups mailinglist),
we will test this.
>
> Seams that everybody is aware of the Docker/Cloud/Multicast issues, but no-one has a
proper solution, only workarounds. :(
>
>
>
> Am 15.12.2015 um 15:47 schrieb Paul Blair <pblair(a)clearme.com
<mailto:pblair@clearme.com>>:
>
> I've also been working on setting up clustered Keycloak on Docker containers in
EC2 and would be interested in any potential solutions for this configuration.
>
> Alternatively I've set up on EC2 without Docker with S3_PING. I'd be
interested in hearing about the issues with this configuration.
>
> From: Scott Rossillo <srossillo(a)smartling.com
<mailto:srossillo@smartling.com>>
> Date: Mon, 14 Dec 2015 18:31:30 -0500
> To: Marek Posolda <mposolda(a)redhat.com <mailto:mposolda@redhat.com>>,
<afield(a)redhat.com <mailto:afield@redhat.com>>
> Cc: keycloak-user <keycloak-user(a)lists.jboss.org
<mailto:keycloak-user@lists.jboss.org>>
> Subject: Re: [keycloak-user] Replace use of Infinispan with User Sessions SPI ?
>
> There are two issues:
>
> 1. Infinispan relies on JGroups, which is difficult to configure correctly with the
various ping techniques that aren’t UDP multicast. I can elaborate on each one that we
tested but it’s just generally complex to get right. That’s not to say it’s impossible or
the biggest reason this is complicated on ECS or _insert container service here_, see #2
for that.
>
> 2. It is difficult to do discovery correctly with JGroups and Docker. Non-privileged
Docker instances - the default and recommend type - do not implicitly know their host’s
IP. This causes IP mismatches between what JGroups thinks the machine’s IP is and what it
actually is when connecting to hosts on different machines. This is the main issue and
it’s not the fault of JGroups per se, but there’s no simple work around.
>
> Take for example a simple 2 node cluster:
>
> Node 1 comes up on the docker0 interface of host A with the IP address 172.16.0.4.
The host A IP is 10.10.0.100.
> Node 2 comes up on the docker0 interface of host B with the IP address 172.16.0.8.
The host B IP is 10.10.0.108.
>
> The 172.16 network is not routable between hosts (by design). Docker does port
forwarding for ports we wish to expose to this works fine for HTTP/HTTPS but not the
cluster traffic.
>
> So Node 1 will advertise itself as having IP 172.16.0.4 while Node 2 advertises
172.16.0.8. The two cannot talk to each other by default. However, using the hard coded
IPs and TCP PING, we can set external_addr on Node 1 to 10.10.0.100 and external_addr on
Node 2 to 10.10.0.108 and set initial_hosts to 10.10.0.100, 10.10.0.108. This will cause
the nodes to discover each other. However, they will not form a cluster. The nodes will
reject the handshake thinking they’re not actually 10.10.0.100 or 10.10.0.108
respectively.
>
> I’d like to discuss further and I can share where we’ve gotten so far with
workarounds to this but it may be better to get into the weeds on another list.
>
> Let me know what you think.
>
> Best,
> Scott
>
> Scott Rossillo
> Smartling | Senior Software Engineer
> srossillo(a)smartling.com <mailto:srossillo@smartling.com>
>
> <
http://www.sigstr.com/>
> On Dec 14, 2015, at 5:32 PM, Marek Posolda <mposolda(a)redhat.com
<mailto:mposolda@redhat.com>> wrote:
>
> CCing Alan Field from RH Infinispan team and forwarding his question:
> I'd like to know which configuration files you are using and why is is
> harder to use with Amazon’s Docker service (ECS) or Beanstalk. I'd also be
> interested in how big a cluster you are using in AWS.
>
>
>
> On 14/12/15 22:24, Scott Rossillo wrote:
> AWS was why we didn’t use Infinispan to begin with. That and it’s even more
complicated when you deploy using Amazon’s Docker service (ECS) or Beanstalk.
>
> It’s too bad Infinispan / JGroups are beasts when the out of the box configuration
can’t be used. I’m planning to document this as we fix but I’d avoid S3_PING and use
JDBC_PING. You already need JDBC for the Keycloak DB, unless you’re using Mongo and it’s
easier to test locally.
>
> TCPPING will bite you on AWS if Amazon decides to replace one of your instances
(which it does occasionally w/ECS or Beanstalk).
>
> Best,
> Scott
>
> Scott Rossillo
> Smartling | Senior Software Engineer
> srossillo(a)smartling.com <mailto:srossillo@smartling.com>
>
> <
http://www.sigstr.com/>
> On Dec 14, 2015, at 10:59 AM, Marek Posolda <mposolda(a)redhat.com
<mailto:mposolda@redhat.com>> wrote:
>
> On 14/12/15 16:55, Marek Posolda wrote:
> On 14/12/15 15:58, Bill Burke wrote:
> On 12/14/2015 5:01 AM, Niko Köbler wrote:
> Hi Marek,
>
> Am 14.12.2015 um 08:50 schrieb Marek Posolda <mposolda(a)redhat.com
<mailto:mposolda@redhat.com>
> <mailto:mposolda@redhat.com <mailto:mposolda@redhat.com>>>:
>
> Btv. what's your motivation to not use infinispan? If you afraid of
> cluster communication, you don't need to worry much about it, because
> if you run single keycloak through standalone.xml, the infinispan
> automatically works in LOCAL mode and there is no any cluster
> communication at all.
> My current customer is running his apps in AWS. As known, multicast is
> not available in cloud infrastructures. Wildfly/Infinispan Cluster works
> pretty well with multicast w/o having to know too much about JGroups
> config. S3_PING seams to be a viable way to get a cluster running in AWS.
> But additionally, my customer doesn’t have any (deep) knowledge about
> JBoss infrastructures and so I’m looking for a way to be able to run
> Keycloak in a cluster in AWS without the need to build up deeper
> knowlegde of JGroups config, for example in getting rid of Infinispan.
> But I do understand all the concerns in doing this.
> I still have to test S3_PING, if it works as easy as multicast. If yes,
> we can use it, if no… I don’t know yet. But this gets offtopic for
> Keycloak mailinglist, it’s more related to pure Wildfly/Infinispan.
>
> seems to me it would be much easier to get Infinispan working on AWS
> than to write and maintain an entire new caching mechanism and hope we
> don't refactor the cache SPI.
>
>
> +1
>
> I am sure infinispan/JGroups has possibility to run in non-multicast
> environment. You may just need to figure how exactly to configure it. So
> I agree that this issue is more related to Wildfly/Infinispan itself
> than to Keycloak.
>
> You may need to use jgroups protocols like TCP instead of default UDP
> and maybe TCPPING (this requires to manually list all your cluster
> nodes. But still, it's much better option IMO than rewriting UserSession
> SPI)
> Btv. if TCPPING or S3_PING is an issue, there is also AWS_PING
>
http://www.jgroups.org/manual-3.x/html/protlist.html#d0e5100
<
http://www.jgroups.org/manual-3.x/html/protlist.html#d0e5100> , but it's
> not official part of jgroups.
>
> Marek
>
> Marek
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