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Posted to dev@qpid.apache.org by "ASF subversion and git services (JIRA)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2016/05/04 04:09:12 UTC
[jira] [Commented] (DISPATCH-57) Balance deliveries adaptively
across all competing consumers in the network
[ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/DISPATCH-57?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=15270015#comment-15270015 ]
ASF subversion and git services commented on DISPATCH-57:
---------------------------------------------------------
Commit 8fa9635252abac997266f2388ba5a5844f34e88b in qpid-dispatch's branch refs/heads/master from [~tross@redhat.com]
[ https://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf?p=qpid-dispatch.git;h=8fa9635 ]
DISPATCH-57 - Fixed balanced forwarding so it a) wont involve "full" links, and b) will honor
the valid-origin for messages when choosing a path to the destination, and c) uses the router
cost as a threshold for using inter-router links.
> Balance deliveries adaptively across all competing consumers in the network
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: DISPATCH-57
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/DISPATCH-57
> Project: Qpid Dispatch
> Issue Type: Improvement
> Components: Router Node
> Reporter: Ted Ross
> Assignee: Ted Ross
> Fix For: 0.6
>
>
> When there are multiple competing consumers on an address across a network, the network should balance deliveries to those consumers adaptively. This will cause more messages to be delivered to faster consumers and fewer messages to slower consumers.
> The basic idea is that each router tracks the deliveries and can know how many outstanding (unacked) deliveries have been sent via each outbound link. It can then choose a link based on the smallest number of outstanding deliveries. Faster links will tend to have fewer deliveries and will get preference in the balancing.
> This feature makes use of the route-cost to remove router nodes. The cost-to-remote-consumer is used as a threshold for forwarding deliveries to that node. For example, if the cost to a remote consumer is 100, then the local router that takes in deliveries to the address will only start forwarding messages to the remote node once local consumers have a backlog of at least 100 outstanding (unsettled) deliveries.
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