NOTICE: Stats has been removed and can now be found in a seperate module: stats-server
Create robust node.js applications with automatic forking of multiple processes and multiple apps, signal handling and reforking.
All in a couple of lines and without changing your existing code!
CAUTION:
The watch feature can cause problems under certain versions of node.js.
Make sure to test it with the node.js version and the OS you intend to use it under.
What to look for when testing: When a file changes, the main process will die and throw this error: Bus error 10
Known problem versions are: 0.10.17 - 0.10.20 both included. Version 0.10.21 are known to work. UPDATE: package.json updated to reflect the need for node 0.10.21
You really shouldn't use watchers on live systems! At least not for systems that has a lot of file updates.
After having run applications in live environments for years, using multi-cluster to make them stabil and multi-core friendly, it should be safe to call this module production ready.
You can NOT run 2 different applications, that both starts an HTTP (or TCP) server and tries to listen on the same port!!!
This would not fail when trying - just give you some weird results!
The reason for this lies in the node.js cluster handler, which CAN split incoming requests between processes, but can't know, which application should get which requests.
This will of course result in unwanted results, where you will see all requests being handled by one app and suddenly shift to the other app.
Basically the module will enable you to seperate your app code from cluster and signal handling code. You can start 1 or many apps with a single script. The module will keep track on which processes (app childs) dies, which to restart and enables you to live reload all apps at once.
The architecture of this module simplifies development by seperating everything completely! You can write your app as if it should run by itself, without signal handling and clustering.
Once you want to put it live, you can just write a start script like this:
var MultiCluster = require('multi-cluster');
var multiCluster = new MultiCluster('myapp.js');
That's it!
--
If you want to automate 3 more apps, it will look something like this:
var MultiCluster = require('multi-cluster');
var multiCluster1 = new MultiCluster('myapp.js');
var multiCluster2 = new MultiCluster('my_second_app.js');
var multiCluster3 = new MultiCluster('my_third_app.js');
// The second argument with a value of 10 is the amount of children to start
// Default is to start as many children as there is CPUs
var multiCluster4 = new MultiCluster('my_fourth_app.js', 10);
Can it get any simpler?
This is a simple implementation for now.
The following will look for file changes in the current working dir and reload the child processes. It will wait for up to 5 secs, for all connections to close properly.
var MultiCluster = require('multi-cluster');
var multiCluster = new MultiCluster('myapp.js');
multiCluster.watch(__dirname);
You can synchronize state between all the workers by broadcasting a message to all sibling processes.
// example
process.on('message', function (msg) {
if (msg.broadcast && msg.broadcast == 'sync') {
synchronize();
}
});
if (process.send) process.send({broadcast: 'sync'});
Which would make all worker processes call the synchronize()
function.