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The following sections give you information and instructions on how to cluster the integration profile of WSO2 EI with a third-party load balancer. 

The clustering deployment pattern

This pattern has two WSO2 EI nodes to serve service requests with high availablity and scalability. It allows access to the Management Console through an external load balancer and directs service requests to nodes through this load balancer. The following image depicts the sample pattern this clustering deployment scenario will follow.

This pattern uses two nodes as well-known members. It is always recommended to have all nodes of the cluster as well-known members.


integration profile cluster

When configuring your WSO2 products for clustering to host them in your production environment, it is necessary to use a specific IP address and not localhost or host names in your configurations.

Configuring the load balancer

The load balancer automatically distributes incoming traffic across multiple WSO2 product instances. It enables you to achieve greater levels of fault tolerance in your cluster and provides the required balancing of load needed to distribute traffic.

These configurations are written assuming that default 80 and 443 ports are used and exposed by the third party load balancer for this WSO2 EI cluster. If any other ports are used instead of the default ones, replace 80 and 443 values with the corresponding ports accordingly. Also, note the following facts when configuring the load balancer:

  • These configurations are not required if your clustering setup does not have a load balancer.

  • Load balancer ports are HTTP 80 and HTTPS 443 in the deployment pattern above.

  • Direct the HTTP requests to WSO2 EI nodes using the http://xxx.xxx.xxx.xx3/<service> URL via HTTP 80 port.

  • Direct the HTTPS requests to the WSO2 EI nodes using the https://xxx.xxx.xxx.xx3/<service> URL via HTTPS 443 port.

  • Access the Management Console using the https://xxx.xxx.xxx.xx3/carbon/URL via HTTPS 443 port.

It is recommended to use NGINX Plus as your load balancer of choice.


Follow the steps below to configure 
NGINX Plus version 1.7.11 or NGINX community version 1.9.2 as the load balancer.

  1. Install NGINX Plus or Nginx community version configured in a server within your cluster network.

  2. Create a VHost file (ei.http.conf) in the /etc/nginx/conf.d directory and add the following configurations into it. This configures NGINX Plus to direct the HTTP requests to the two WSO2 EI nodes via the HTTP 80 port using the  http://ei.wso2.com/> URL. 

    Nginx Community Version and NGINX Plus
    upstream wso2.ei.com {
            server xxx.xxx.xxx.xx3:8280;
            server xxx.xxx.xxx.xx4:8280;
    }
    
    server {
            listen 80;
            server_name ei.wso2.com;
            location / {
                   proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Host $host;
                   proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Server $host;
                   proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
                   proxy_set_header Host $http_host;
                   proxy_read_timeout 5m;
                   proxy_send_timeout 5m;
                   proxy_pass http://wso2.ei.com;
    
    			   proxy_http_version 1.1;
            	   proxy_set_header Upgrade $http_upgrade;
            	   proxy_set_header Connection "upgrade";
            }
    }
  3. Create a VHost file (ei.https.conf) in the /etc/nginx/conf.d directory and add the following configurations into it. This configures NGINX Plus to direct the HTTPS requests to the WSO2 EI nodes via the HTTPS 443 port using the  https://ei.wso2.com/> URL.

  4. Configure Nginx to access the Management Console as https://mgt.as.wso2.com/carbon via HTTPS 443 port. To do this, create a VHost file (ui.as.https.conf) in the /etc/nginx/conf.d/ directory and add the following configurations into it.

    Nginx Community Version and NGINX Plus
    server {
    	listen 443;
    	server_name ui.ei.wso2.com;
    	ssl on;
    	ssl_certificate /etc/nginx/ssl/server.crt;
    	ssl_certificate_key /etc/nginx/ssl/server.key;
    
    	location / {
                   proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Host $host;
                   proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Server $host;
                   proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
                   proxy_set_header Host $http_host;
                   proxy_read_timeout 5m;
                   proxy_send_timeout 5m;
    			   proxy_pass https://xxx.xxx.xxx.xx3:9443/;
     
    			   proxy_http_version 1.1;
    			   proxy_set_header Upgrade $http_upgrade;
    			   proxy_set_header Connection "upgrade";
        	}
    	error_log  /var/log/nginx/ui-error.log ;
               access_log  /var/log/nginx/ui-access.log;
    }
  5. Follow the instructions below to create SSL certificates for both WSO2 EI nodes.

    Enter the host name (i.e., ei.wso2.com ) as the common name when creating keys.

    1. Execute the following command to create the Server Key: $sudo openssl genrsa -des3 -out server.key 1024
    2. Execute the following command to request to sign the certificate: $sudo openssl req -new -key server.key -out server.csr
    3. Execute the following commands to remove the passwords:
      $sudo cp server.key server.key.org 
      $sudo openssl rsa -in server.key.org -out server.key
    4. Execute the following command to sign your SSL Certificate: $sudo openssl x509 -req -days 365 -in server.csr -signkey server.key -out server.crt

    5. Execute the following command to add the certificate to the <EI_HOME>/repository/resources/security/client-truststore.jks file: keytool -import -trustcacerts -alias server -file server.crt -keystore client-truststore.jks

  6. Execute the following command to restart the NGINX Plus server: $sudo service nginx  restart 

    Execute the following command if you do not need to restart the server when you are simply making a modification to the VHost file: $sudo service nginx reload 

Creating the databases

All profiles of WSO2 EI uses a database to store information such as user management details and registry data. All nodes in the cluster must use one central database for config and governance registry mounts. You can create the following databases and associated datasources.

The embedded H2 database is suitable for development. However, for most enterprise testing and production environments it is recommended an industry-standard RDBMS such as Oracle, PostgreSQL, MySQL, MS SQL, etc.

Database NameDescription
WSO2_USER_DB
JDBC user store and authorization manager
REGISTRY_DBShared database for config and governance registry mounts in the product's nodes
REGISTRY_LOCAL1Local registry space in the manager node
REGISTRY_LOCAL2Local registry space in the worker node


Following the steps below to create the databases necessary.

These instructions assume you are installing MySQL as your relational database management system (RDBMS), but you can install another supported RDBMS as needed

  1. Download and install MySQL Server.

  2. Download the MySQL JDBC driver.

  3. Download and unzip the WSO2 EI binary distribution. 

    Throughout this guide, <EI_HOME> refers to the extracted directory of the WSO2 EI product distribution.

  4. Unzip the downloaded MySQL driver, and copy the MySQL JDBC driver JAR (mysql-connector-java-x.x.xx-bin.jar) into the <EI_HOME>/lib/ directory of both WSO2 EI nodes.
  5. Add the following line to the /etc/hosts file to define the hostname for configuring permissions for the new database: <MYSQL-DB-SERVER-IP> carbondb.mysql-wso2.com

    Do this step only if your database is not on your local machine and on a separate server.

  6. Execute the following command in a terminal/command window, where username is the username you want to use to access the databases: mysql -u username -p
  7. Specify the password to access the databases with the username you specified when prompted.

  8. Create the databases using the following commands:

    mysql> create database WSO2_USER_DB;
    mysql> use WSO2_USER_DB;
    mysql> source <EI_HOME>/dbscripts/mysql.sql;
    mysql> grant all on WSO2_USER_DB.* TO regadmin@"carbondb.mysql-wso2.com" identified by "regadmin";
    
    mysql> create database REGISTRY_DB;
    mysql> use REGISTRY_DB;
    mysql> source <EI_HOME>/dbscripts/mysql.sql;
    mysql> grant all on REGISTRY_DB.* TO regadmin@"carbondb.mysql-wso2.com" identified by "regadmin";
    
    mysql> create database REGISTRY_LOCAL1;
    mysql> use REGISTRY_LOCAL1;
    mysql> source <EI_HOME>/dbscripts/mysql.sql;
    mysql> grant all on REGISTRY_LOCAL1.* TO regadmin@"carbondb.mysql-wso2.com" identified by "regadmin";
     
    mysql> create database REGISTRY_LOCAL2;
    mysql> use REGISTRY_LOCAL2;
    mysql> source <EI_HOME>/dbscripts/mysql.sql;
    mysql> grant all on REGISTRY_LOCAL2.* TO regadmin@"carbondb.mysql-wso2.com" identified 
    by "regadmin";

    About using MySQL in different operating systems

    For users of Microsoft Windows, when creating the database in MySQL, it is important to specify the character set as latin1. Failure to do this may result in an error (error code: 1709) when starting your cluster. This error occurs in certain versions of MySQL (5.6.x) and is related to the UTF-8 encoding. MySQL originally used the latin1 character set by default, which stored characters in a 2-byte sequence. However, in recent versions, MySQL defaults to UTF-8 to be friendlier to international users. Hence, you must use latin1 as the character set as indicated below in the database creation commands to avoid this problem. Note that this may result in issues with non-latin characters (like Hebrew, Japanese, etc.). The following is how your database creation command should look.

    mysql> create database <DATABASE_NAME> character set latin1;

    For users of other operating systems, the standard database creation commands will suffice. For these operating systems, the following is how your database creation command should look.

    mysql> create database <DATABASE_NAME>;

Mounting the registry

Add the following configurations to the <EI_HOME>/conf/registry.xml file of each WSO2 EI node to configure the shared registry database and mounting details. This ensures that the shared registry for governance and configurations (i.e., the REGISTRY_DB database) mounts on both WSO2 EI nodes. 

Note the following when adding these configurations:

  • The existing dbConfig called wso2registry must not be removed.
  • The datasource you specify in the <dbConfig name="sharedregistry"> tag must match the JNDI Config name you specify in the <EI_HOME>/conf/datasources/master-datasources.xml file.
  • The registry mount path denotes the type of registry. For example, ”/_system/config” refers to configuration Registry, and "/_system/governance" refers to the governance registry.

  • The <dbconfig> entry enables you to identify the datasource you configured in the <EI_HOME>/conf/datasources/master-datasources.xml file. The unique name "sharedregistry" refers to that datasource entry.

  • The <remoteInstance> section refers to an external registry mount. Specify the read-only/read-write nature of this instance, caching configurations and the registry root location in this section.
  • Also, specify the cache ID in the <remoteInstance> section. This enables caching to function properly in the clustered environment.

    Cache ID is the same as the JDBC connection URL of the registry database. This value is the Cache ID of the remote instance. It should be in the format of $database_username@$database_url, where $database_username is the username of the remote instance database and $database_url is the remote instance database URL. This cacheID denotes the enabled cache. In this case, the database it should connect to is REGISTRY_DB, which is the database shared across all the nodes. You can find that in the mounting configurations of the same datasource that is being used.

  • Define a unique name in the <id> tag for each remote instance. This is then referred to from mount configurations. In the above example, the unique ID for the remote instance is "instanceId".

  • Specify the actual mount path and target mount path in each of the mounting configurations. The target path can be any meaningful name. In this instance, it is "/_system/config".

<dbConfig name="sharedregistry">
<dataSource>jdbc/WSO2RegistryDB</dataSource>
</dbConfig> 

<remoteInstance url="https://localhost:9443/registry">
    <id>instanceid</id>
    <dbConfig>sharedregistry</dbConfig>
    <readOnly>false</readOnly>
    <enableCache>true</enableCache>
    <registryRoot>/</registryRoot>
<cacheId>regadmin@jdbc:mysql://carbondb.mysql-wso2.com:3306/REGISTRY_DB?autoReconnect=true</cacheId>
</remoteInstance>
 
<mount path="/_system/config" overwrite="true">
    <instanceId>instanceid</instanceId>
    <targetPath>/_system/config</targetPath>
</mount>
 
<mount path="/_system/governance" overwrite="true">
    <instanceId>instanceid</instanceId>
    <targetPath>/_system/governance</targetPath>
</mount>

Configuring the integration profile node

Do the following configurations for all nodes of your cluster.

  1. Configure the datasourcestopoint to the REGISTRY_LOCAL1WSO2_REGISTRY_DB, and WSO2_USER_DB databases as follows in the <EI_HOME>/conf/datasources/master-datasources.xml file.

    Replace the username, password, and database URL of your MySQL environment accordingly.

    <datasources-configuration xmlns:svns="http://org.wso2.securevault/configuration"> 
         <providers> 
            <provider>org.wso2.carbon.ndatasource.rdbms.RDBMSDataSourceReader</provider> 
        </providers> 
        <datasources> 
            <datasource> 
                <name>REGISTRY_LOCAL1</name> 
                <description>The datasource used for registry- local</description> 
                <jndiConfig> 
                    <name>jdbc/WSO2CarbonDB</name> 
                </jndiConfig> 
                <definition type="RDBMS"> 
                    <configuration> 
                        <url>jdbc:mysql://carbondb.mysql-wso2.com:3306/REGISTRY_LOCAL1?autoReconnect=true</url> 
                        <username>regadmin</username> 
                        <password>regadmin</password> 
                        <driverClassName>com.mysql.jdbc.Driver</driverClassName> 
                        <maxActive>50</maxActive> 
                        <maxWait>60000</maxWait> 
                        <testOnBorrow>true</testOnBorrow> 
                        <validationQuery>SELECT 1</validationQuery> 
                        <validationInterval>30000</validationInterval> 
                    </configuration> 
                </definition> 
            </datasource> 
            <datasource> 
                <name>REGISTRY_DB</name> 
                <description>The datasource used for registry- config/governance</description> 
                <jndiConfig> 
                    <name>jdbc/WSO2RegistryDB</name> 
                </jndiConfig> 
                <definition type="RDBMS"> 
                    <configuration> 
                        <url>jdbc:mysql://carbondb.mysql-wso2.com:3306/REGISTRY_DB?autoReconnect=true</url> 
                        <username>regadmin</username> 
                        <password>regadmin</password> 
                        <driverClassName>com.mysql.jdbc.Driver</driverClassName> 
                        <maxActive>50</maxActive> 
                        <maxWait>60000</maxWait> 
                        <testOnBorrow>true</testOnBorrow> 
                        <validationQuery>SELECT 1</validationQuery> 
                        <validationInterval>30000</validationInterval> 
                    </configuration> 
                </definition> 
            </datasource> 
             <datasource> 
                <name>WSO2_USER_DB</name> 
                <description>The datasource used for registry and user manager</description> 
                <jndiConfig> 
                    <name>jdbc/WSO2UMDB</name> 
                </jndiConfig> 
                <definition type="RDBMS"> 
                    <configuration> 
                        <url>jdbc:mysql://carbondb.mysql-wso2.com:3306/WSO2_USER_DB</url> 
                        <username>regadmin</username> 
                        <password>regadmin</password> 
                        <driverClassName>com.mysql.jdbc.Driver</driverClassName> 
                        <maxActive>50</maxActive> 
                        <maxWait>60000</maxWait> 
                        <testOnBorrow>true</testOnBorrow> 
                        <validationQuery>SELECT 1</validationQuery> 
                        <validationInterval>30000</validationInterval> 
                    </configuration> 
                </definition> 
            </datasource> 
       </datasources> 
    </datasources-configuration>

    Repeat this configuration on the second WSO2 EI node to configure the datasourcestopoint to the REGISTRY_LOCAL2WSO2_REGISTRY_DB, and WSO2_USER_DB databases as follows: (Change the username, password, and database URL as needed for your environment):

    <datasources-configuration xmlns:svns="http://org.wso2.securevault/configuration">     <providers>
            <provider>org.wso2.carbon.ndatasource.rdbms.RDBMSDataSourceReader</provider>
        </providers>
        <datasources>
            <datasource>
                <name>REGISTRY_LOCAL2</name>
                <description>The datasource used for registry- local</description>
                <jndiConfig>
                    <name>jdbc/WSO2CarbonDB</name>
                </jndiConfig>
                <definition type="RDBMS">
                    <configuration>
                        <url>jdbc:mysql://carbondb.mysql-wso2.com:3306/REGISTRY_LOCAL2?autoReconnect=true</url>
                        <username>regadmin</username>
                        <password>regadmin</password>
                        <driverClassName>com.mysql.jdbc.Driver</driverClassName>
                        <maxActive>50</maxActive>
                        <maxWait>60000</maxWait>
                        <testOnBorrow>true</testOnBorrow>
                        <validationQuery>SELECT 1</validationQuery>
                        <validationInterval>30000</validationInterval>
                    </configuration>
                </definition>
            </datasource>
            <datasource>
                <name>REGISTRY_DB</name>
                <description>The datasource used for registry- config/governance</description>
                <jndiConfig>
                    <name>jdbc/WSO2RegistryDB</name>
                </jndiConfig>
                <definition type="RDBMS">
                    <configuration>
                        <url>jdbc:mysql://carbondb.mysql-wso2.com:3306/REGISTRY_DB?autoReconnect=true</url>
                        <username>regadmin</username>
                        <password>regadmin</password>
                        <driverClassName>com.mysql.jdbc.Driver</driverClassName>
                        <maxActive>50</maxActive>
                        <maxWait>60000</maxWait>
                        <testOnBorrow>true</testOnBorrow>
                        <validationQuery>SELECT 1</validationQuery>
                        <validationInterval>30000</validationInterval>
                    </configuration>
                </definition>
            </datasource>
             <datasource>
                <name>WSO2_USER_DB</name>
                <description>The datasource used for registry and user manager</description>
                <jndiConfig>
                    <name>jdbc/WSO2UMDB</name>
                </jndiConfig>
                <definition type="RDBMS">
                    <configuration>
                        <url>jdbc:mysql://carbondb.mysql-wso2.com:3306/WSO2_USER_DB</url>
                        <username>regadmin</username>
                        <password>regadmin</password>
                        <driverClassName>com.mysql.jdbc.Driver</driverClassName>
                        <maxActive>50</maxActive>
                        <maxWait>60000</maxWait>
                        <testOnBorrow>true</testOnBorrow>
                        <validationQuery>SELECT 1</validationQuery>
                        <validationInterval>30000</validationInterval>
                    </configuration>
                </definition>
            </datasource>
       </datasources>
    </datasources-configuration>
  2. Add the following configuration in the <EI_HOME>/conf/user-mgt.xml file to configure the user stores. 

    Enter the datasource information for the user store that you configured in the <EI_HOME>/conf/datasources/master-datasources.xml file. You can change the admin username and password as well. However, you should do this before starting the server.

    <Configuration>
      <AddAdmin>true</AddAdmin>
      <AdminRole>admin</AdminRole>
      <AdminUser>
        <UserName>admin</UserName>
        <Password>admin</Password>
      </AdminUser>
      <EveryOneRoleName>everyone</EveryOneRoleName>
      <Property name="dataSource">jdbc/WSO2UMDB</Property>
    </Configuration>
  3. Update the dataSource property in all nodes in the <EI_HOME>/conf/user-mgt.xml file as shown below to configure the datasource: <Property name="dataSource">jdbc/WSO2UMDB</Property>
  4. Edit the <EI_HOME>/conf/axis2/axis2.xml file as follows to set up the cluster configurations.

    • Enable clustering for this node as follows: <clustering class="org.wso2.carbon.core.clustering.hazelcast.HazelcastClusteringAgent" enable="true">
    • Set the membership scheme to "wka" to enable the well-known address registration method. (This node sends cluster initiation messages to the WKA members): 
      <parameter name="membershipScheme">wka</parameter>
    • Specify the name of the cluster this node will join as folows: <parameter name="domain">wso2.ei.domain</parameter>
    • Specify the host to communicate cluster messages as follows: <parameter name="localMemberHost">xxx.xxx.xxx.xx2</parameter>
    • Specify the port to communicate cluster messages as follows: <parameter name="localMemberPort">4100</parameter>

      This port number is not affected by the port offset value specified in the <EI_HOME>/conf/carbon.xml file. If this port number is already assigned to another server, the clustering framework automatically increments this port number. However, if there are two servers running on the same machine, ensure that a unique port is set for each server.

    • Specify the well-known members as follows: (The port value for the WKA node must be the same value as it's localMemberPort (in this case it is 4100).

      You can also use IP address ranges for the hostname (e.g., 192.168.1.2-10). However, you can define a range only for the last portion of the IP address. Smaller the range, the faster the time it takes to discover members since each node has to scan a lesser number of potential members.

      <members>
      	<member>
      		<hostName>xxx.xxx.xxx.xx3</hostName>
      		<port>4100</port> 
      	</member>
      </members>
    • Uncomment and edit the WSDLEPRPrefix element under org.apache.synapse.transport.passthru.PassThroughHttpListener and
      org.apache.synapse.transport.passthru.PassThroughHttpSSLListener in the transportReceiver section.

      <parameter name="WSDLEPRPrefix" locked="false">http://esb.wso2.com:80</parameter> 
      <parameter name="WSDLEPRPrefix" locked="false">https://esb.wso2.com:443</parameter>
  5. Specify the port offset value in the <EI_HOME>/conf/carbon.xml file.

    This step is optional and only required if all server instances are running on the same machine. This is not recommended for production environments. Change all ports used in your configurations based on the offset value if you are setting a port offset.

     Click here for more information on configuring the port offset.

    When you run multiple products/clusters or multiple instances of the same product on the same server or virtual machines (VMs), change their default ports with an offset value to avoid port conflicts. An offset defines the number by which all ports in the runtime (e.g., HTTP(S) ports) are increased. For example, if the default HTTP port is 9763 and the offset is 1, the effective HTTP port will change to 9764. For each additional product instance, set the port offset to a unique value. The offset of the default ports is zero.

    The port value will automatically increase as shown in the Port Value column in the following table, allowing all five WSO2 product instances or servers to run on the same machine.

    WSO2 product instance

    Port Offset

    Port Value

    WSO2 server 1

    0

    9443

    WSO2 server 2

    1

    9444

    WSO2 server 3

    2

    9445

    WSO2 server 4

    3

    9446

    WSO2 server 5

    4

    9447

    <Ports>
    	...
    	<Offset>0</Offset>
    	...
    </Ports>
  6. Edit the <EI_HOME>/repository/conf/carbon.xml file as follows to configure the hostname:<HostName>esb.wso2.com</HostName>

  7. Add the host entries to your DNS, or “/etc/hosts” file (in Linux) in all the nodes of the cluster to map the hostnames to the IP addresses. For an example, you can map the IP address of the database server. In this example, MySQL is used as the database server, so <MYSQL-DB-SERVER-IP> is the actual IP address of the database server and the host entry is as follows: <IP-of-MYSQL-DB-SERVER> carbondb.mysql-wso2.com

  8. Edit the <EI_HOME>/repository/conf/tomcat/catalina-server.xml file as follows to configure the HTTP/HTTPS proxy ports to communicate through the load balancer. This allows accessing the Management Console only through the load balancer.  

    <Connector protocol="org.apache.coyote.http11.Http11NioProtocol"
    	port="9763"
    	proxyPort="80"
    	...
    	/>
    <Connector protocol="org.apache.coyote.http11.Http11NioProtocol"
    	port="9443"
    	proxyPort="443"
    	...
    	/>
     Click here for more information on this configuration.

    The Connector protocol tag sets the protocol to handle incoming traffic. The default value is HTTP/1.1, which uses an auto-switching mechanism to select either a blocking Java-based connector or an APR/native connector. If the PATH (Windows) or LD_LIBRARY_PATH (on most UNIX systems) environment variables contain the Tomcat native library, the APR/native connector will be used. If the native library cannot be found, the blocking Java-based connector will be used. Note that the APR/native connector has different settings from the Java connectors for HTTPS.

    The non-blocking Java connector used is an explicit protocol that does not rely on the auto-switching mechanism described above. The following is the value used:
    org.apache.coyote.http11.Http11NioProtocol

    The TCP port number is the value that this Connector will use to create a server socket and await incoming connections. Your operating system will allow only one server application to listen to a particular port number on a particular IP address. If the special value of 0 (zero) is used, Tomcat will select a free port at random to use for this connector. This is typically only useful in embedded and testing applications.

Deploying artifacts across the nodes

One common approach for synchronizing artifacts across all cluster nodes is to use rsync tool, which is a file copying tool. Therefore, you can first deploy artifacts in one node of the cluster and then use rsync to copy those artifacts to other nodes as described below.

Use the following deployment synchronization recommendations based on the rate of change of artifacts that happen in your cluster:

  • For a high rate of changes (i.e., if changes happen very frequently):
    - network file share
  • For a medium rate of change
    - rsync
  • For a low rate of changes (i.e., if changes happen once a week):
    - use the configuration management system to handle artifact
    - other deployment options (e.g., Puppet, Chef etc.)
  1. Create a file called nodes-list.txt that lists all the nodes in the deployment. The following is a sample of the file for two nodes.

    Different nodes are separated by new lines.

    nodes-list.txt
    ubuntu@192.168.1.1:~/setup/192.168.1.1/ei_node/repository/deployment/server
    ubuntu@192.168.1.2:~/setup/192.168.1.2/ei_node/repository/deployment/server
  2. Create a file to synchronize the <PRODUCT_HOME>/repository/deployment/server/directory between the nodes.

    You must create your own SSH key and define it as the pem_file. Alternatively, you can use an existing SSH key. Specify the ei_server_dir depending on the location in your local machine. Change the logs.txt file path and the lock location based on where they are locatedin your machine.

    Configure rsync in the <EI_HOME>/repository/tenant/ directory to share the tenant artifacts across the cluster.

    rsync-for-ei-depsync.sh
    #!/bin/sh 
    ei_server_dir=~/wso2ei-6.0.0/repository/deployment/server/
    pem_file=~/.ssh/carbon-440-test.pem
     
     
    #delete the lock on exit
    trap 'rm -rf /var/lock/depsync-lock' EXIT
     
    mkdir /tmp/carbon-rsync-logs/
     
     
    #keep a lock to stop parallel runs
    if mkdir /var/lock/depsync-lock; then
      echo "Locking succeeded" >&2
    else
      echo "Lock failed - exit" >&2
      exit 1
    fi
     
     
    #get the nodes-list.txt
    pushd `dirname $0` > /dev/null
    SCRIPTPATH=`pwd`
    popd > /dev/null
    echo $SCRIPTPATH
     
     
    for x in `cat ${SCRIPTPATH}/nodes-list.txt`
    do
    echo ================================================== >> /tmp/carbon-rsync-logs/logs.txt;
    echo Syncing $x;
    rsync --delete -arve "ssh -i  $pem_file -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no" $ei_server_dir $x >> /tmp/carbon-rsync-logs/logs.txt
    echo ================================================== >> /tmp/carbon-rsync-logs/logs.txt;
    done
  3. Execute the following command in your CLI to create a Cron job that executes the above file every minute for deployment synchronization.  

    *   *  *   *   *     /home/ubuntu/setup/rsync-for-depsync/rsync-for-ei-depsync.sh

Testing the cluster

Follow the steps below to test the cluster.

  1. Deploy artifacts to each product deployment location. 

    Use a deployment synchronization mechanism to synchronize the artifacts in the <EI_HOME>/repository/deployment/ directory. Always deploy artifacts first to the WSO2 EI server profile node with the registry configured as read/write. Next, deploy the artifacts to the other nodes.

  2. Restart the configured load balancer.

  3. Execute the following command and start both WSO2 EI nodes: sh <EI_HOME>/bin/integrator.sh
  4. Check for ‘member joined’ log messages in all consoles.

    Additional information on logs and new nodes

    When you terminate one node, all nodes identify that the node has left the cluster. The same applies when a new node joins the cluster. If you want to add another new node, copy existing node without any changes if you are running it on a new server (such as xxx.xxx.xxx.184). If you intend to use the new node on a server where another WSO2 product is running, use a copy of node and change the port offset accordingly in the <EI_HOME>/conf/carbon.xml file. You also have to change localMemberPort in the <EI_HOME>/conf/axis2/axis2.xml file if that product has clustering enabled. Also, map all hostnames to the relevant IP addresses when creating a new node. The log messages indicate if the new node joins the cluster.

  5. Access the Management Console through the LB using the following URL: https://xxx.xxx.xxx.xx2:443/carbon 
  6. Test load distribution via the following URLs: http://xxx.xxx.xxx.xx3:80/ or https://xxx.xxx.xxx.xx3:443/
  7. Add a sample proxy service with the log mediator in the inSequence so that it will display logs in the terminals, and then observe the cluster messages sent.

  8. Send a request to the endpoint through the load balancer to verify that the proxy service is activated only on the active node(s) while the nodes remain passive. This is to test that the load balancer manages the active and passive states of the nodes, activating nodes as needed and leaving the rest in passive mode. For example, you would send the request to the following URL: http://{Load_Balancer_Mapped_URL_for_worker}/services/{Sample_Proxy_Name 

Tuning performance of the cluster

Follow the steps below to tune performance of the cluster:

The below example parameter values might not be the optimal values for the specific hardware configurations in your environment. Therefore, it is recommended to carry out load tests on your environment to tune the load balancer and other configurations accordingly.

  1. Change the following default memory allocation settings for the server node and the JVM tuning parameters in the server startup scripts (i.e., the <EI_HOME>/bin/integrator.sh or <EI_HOME>/bin/integrator.bat file) according to the expected server load: -Xms256m -Xmx1024m -XX:MaxPermSize=256m
  2. Modify important system files, which affect all programs running on the server. It is recommended to familiarize yourself with these files using Unix/Linux documentation before editing them.


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