Okay, I've spent over a week trying to figure this out to no avail, so if anyone has a clue, you are a hero. This isn't going to be an easy question to answer, unless I am being a dunce.
I am using node-http-proxy to proxy sticky sessions to 16 node.js workers running on different ports.
I use Socket.IO's Web Sockets to handle a bunch of different types of requests, and use traditional requests as well.
When I switched my server over to proxying via node-http-proxy, a new problem crept up in that sometimes, my Socket.IO session cannot establish a connection.
I literally can't stably reproduce it for the life of me, with the only way to turn it on being to throw a lot of traffic from multiple clients to the server.
If I reload the user's browser, it can then sometimes re-connect, and sometimes not.
I have to proxy sticky sessions as my app authenticates on a per-worker basis, and so it routes a request based on its Connect.SID cookie (I am using connect/express).
This is my proxy.js file that runs in node and routes to each of the workers:
var http = require('http'); var httpProxy = require('http-proxy'); // What ports the proxy is routing to. var data = { proxyPort: 8888, currentPort: 8850, portStart: 8850, portEnd: 8865, }; // Just gives the next port number. nextPort = function() { var next = data.currentPort++; next = (next > data.portEnd) ? data.portStart : next; data.currentPort = next; return data.currentPort; }; // A hash of Connect.SIDs for sticky sessions. data.routes = {} var svr = httpProxy.createServer(function (req, res, proxy) { var port = false; // parseCookies is just a little function // that... parses cookies. var cookies = parseCookies(req); // If there is an SID passed from the browser. if (cookies['connect.sid'] !== undefined) { var ip = req.connection.remoteAddress; if (data.routes[cookies['connect.sid']] !== undefined) { // If there is already a route assigned to this SID, // make that route's port the assigned port. port = data.routes[cookies['connect.sid']].port; } else { // If there isn't a route for this SID, // create the route object and log its // assigned port. port = data.currentPort; data.routes[cookies['connect.sid']] = { port: port, } nextPort(); } } else { // Otherwise assign a random port, it will/ // pick up a connect SID on the next go. // This doesn't really happen. port = nextPort(); } // Now that we have the chosen port, // proxy the request. proxy.proxyRequest(req, res, { host: '127.0.0.1', port: port }); }).listen(data.proxyPort); // Now we handle WebSocket requests. // Basically, I feed off of the above route // logic and try to route my WebSocket to the // same server regular requests are going to. svr.on('upgrade', function (req, socket, head) { var cookies = parseCookies(req); var port = false; // Make sure there is a Connect.SID, if (cookies['connect.sid'] != undefined) { // Make sure there is a route... if (data.routes[cookies['connect.sid']] !== undefined) { // Assign the appropriate port. port = data.routes[cookies['connect.sid']].port; } else { // this has never, ever happened, i've been logging it. } } else { // this has never, ever happened, i've been logging it. }; if (port === false) { // this has never happened... }; // So now route the WebSocket to the same port // as the regular requests are getting. svr.proxy.proxyWebSocketRequest(req, socket, head, { host: 'localhost', port: port }); });
Socket connects like so:
var socket = io.connect('http://whatever:8888');
After about 10 seconds on logging on, I get this error back on this listener, which doesn't help much.
socket.on('error', function (data) { // this is what gets triggered. -> // Firefox can't establish a connection to the server at ws://whatever:8888/socket.io/1/websocket/Nnx08nYaZkLY2N479KX0. });
The Socket.IO GET request that the browser sends never comes back - it just hangs in pending, even after the error comes back, so it looks like a timeout error. The server never responds.
This is how a worker receives a socket request. Pretty simple. All workers have the same code, so you think one of them would get the request and acknowledge it...
app.sio.socketio.sockets.on('connection', function (socket) { // works... some of the time! all of my workers run this // exact same process. });
That's a lot of data, and I doubt anyone is willing to confront it, but i'm totally stumped, don't know where to check next, log next, whatever, to solve it. I've tried everything I know to see what the problem is, to no avail.
Okay, I am fairly certain that the problem is in this statement on the node-http-proxy github homepage:
node-http-proxy is <= 0.8.x compatible, if you're looking for a >= 0.10 compatible version please check caronte
I am running Node.js v0.10.13, and the phenomena is exactly as some have commented in github issues on this subject: it just drops websocket connections randomly.
I've tried to implement caronte, the 'newer' fork, but it is not at all documented and I have tried my hardest to piece together their docs in a workable solution, but I can't get it forwarding websockets, my Socket.IO downgrades to polling.
Are there any other ideas on how to get this implemented and working? node-http-proxy has 8200 downloads yesterday! Sure someone is using a Node build from this year and proxying websockets....
I want to accomplish a proxy server (preferrably Node) that proxies to multiple node.js workers, and which routes the requests via sticky sessions based on a browser cookie. This proxy would need to stably support traditional requests as well as web sockets.
I don't mind accomplishing the above via clustered node workers, if that works. My only real requirement is maintaining sticky sessions based on a cookie in the request header.
If there is a better way to accomplish the above than what I am trying, I am all for it.
In general I don't think node is not the most used option as a proxy server, I, for one use nginx as a frontend server for node and it's a really great combination. Here are some instructions to install and use the nginx sticky sessions module.
It's a lightweight frontend server with json like configuration, solid and very well tested.
nginx is also a lot faster if you want to serve static pages, css. It's ideal to configure your caching headers, redirect traffic to multiple servers depending on domain, sticky sessions, compress css and javascript, etc.
You could also consider a pure load balancing open source solution like HAProxy. In any case I don't believe node is the best tool for this, it's better to use it to implement your backend only and put something like nginx in front of it to handle the usual frontend server tasks.
I agree with hexacyanide. To me it would make the most sense to queue workers through a service like redis or some kind of Message Query system. Workers would be queued through Redis Pub/Sub functionality by web nodes(which are proxied). Workers would callback upon error, finish, or stream data in realtime with a 'data' event. Maybe check out the library kue. You could also roll your own similar library. RabbitMQ is another system for similar purpose.
I get using socket.io if you're already using that technology, but you need to use tools for their intended purpose. Redis or a MQ system would make the most sense, and pair great with websockets(socket.io) to create realtime, insightful applications.
Session Affinity(sticky sessions) is supported through Elastic LoadBalancer for aws, this supports webSockets. A PaaS provider(Modulus) does this exactly. Theres also satalite which provides sticky sessions for node-http-proxy, however I have no idea if it supports webSockets.
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