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docs | Semaphore | docs-guides-semaphore | This guide demonstrates how to implement a distributed semaphore using the Consul Key/Value store. |
Semaphore
This guide demonstrates how to implement a distributed semaphore using the Consul Key/Value store. This is useful when you want to coordinate many services while restricting access to certain resources.
~> If you only need mutual exclusion or leader election, this guide provides a simpler algorithm that can be used instead.
There are a number of ways that a semaphore can be built, so our goal is not to cover all the possible methods. Instead, we will focus on using Consul's support for sessions. Sessions allow us to build a system that can gracefully handle failures.
Note that JSON output in this guide has been pretty-printed for easier reading. Actual values returned from the API will not be formatted.
Contending Nodes
Let's imagine we have a set of nodes who are attempting to acquire a slot in the semaphore. All nodes that are participating should agree on three decisions: the prefix in the Key/Value store used to coordinate, a single key to use as a lock, and a limit on the number of slot holders.
For the prefix we will be using for coordination, a good pattern is simply:
service/<service name>/lock/
We'll abbreviate this pattern as simply <prefix>
for the rest of this guide.
The first step is to create a session. This is done using the Session HTTP API:
curl -X PUT -d '{"Name": "dbservice"}' \
http://localhost:8500/v1/session/create
This will return a JSON object contain the session ID:
{
"ID": "4ca8e74b-6350-7587-addf-a18084928f3c"
}
Next, we create a contender entry. Each contender creates an entry that is tied to a session. This is done so that if a contender is holding a slot and fails, it can be detected by the other contenders.
Create the contender key by doing an acquire
on <prefix>/<session>
via PUT
.
This is something like:
curl -X PUT -d <body> http://localhost:8500/v1/kv/<prefix>/<session>?acquire=<session>
The <session>
value is the ID returned by the call to
/v1/session/create
.
body
can be used to associate a meaningful value with the contender. This is opaque
to Consul but can be useful for human operators.
The call will either return true
or false
. If true
, the contender entry has been
created. If false
, the contender node was not created; it'slikely that this indicates
a session invalidation.
The next step is to use a single key to coordinate which holders are currently
reserving a slot. A good choice for this lock key is simply <prefix>/.lock
. We will
refer to this special coordinating key as <lock>
.
The current state of the semaphore is read by doing a GET
on the entire <prefix>
:
curl http://localhost:8500/v1/kv/<prefix>?recurse
Within the list of the entries, we should find the <lock>
. That entry should hold
both the slot limit and the current holders. A simple JSON body like the following works:
{
"Limit": 3,
"Holders": {
"4ca8e74b-6350-7587-addf-a18084928f3c": true,
"adf4238a-882b-9ddc-4a9d-5b6758e4159e": true
}
}
When the <lock>
is read, we can verify the remote Limit
agrees with the local value. This
is used to detect a potential conflict. The next step is to determine which of the current
slot holders are still alive. As part of the results of the GET
, we have all the contender
entries. By scanning those entries, we create a set of all the Session
values. Any of the
Holders
that are not in that set are pruned. In effect, we are creating a set of live contenders
based on the list results and doing a set difference with the Holders
to detect and prune
any potentially failed holders.
If the number of holders (after pruning) is less than the limit, a contender attempts acquisition
by adding its own session to the Holders
and doing a Check-And-Set update of the <lock>
. This
performs an optimistic update.
This is done by:
curl -X PUT -d <Updated Lock> http://localhost:8500/v1/kv/<lock>?cas=<lock-modify-index>
If this succeeds with true
, the contender now holds a slot in the semaphore. If this fails
with false
, then likely there was a race with another contender to acquire the slot.
Both code paths now go into an idle waiting state. In this state, we watch for changes
on <prefix>
. This is because a slot may be released, a node may fail, etc.
Slot holders must also watch for changes since the slot may be released by an operator
or automatically released due to a false positive in the failure detector.
Note that the session by default makes use of only the gossip failure detector. That is, the session is considered held by a node as long as the default Serf health check has not declared the node unhealthy. Additional checks can be specified if desired.
Watching for changes is done via a blocking query against <prefix>
. If a contender
holds a slot, then on any change the <lock>
should be re-checked to ensure the slot is
still held. If no slot is held, then the same acquisition logic is triggered to check
and potentially re-attempt acquisition. This allows a contender to steal the slot from
a failed contender or one that has voluntarily released its slot.
If a slot holder ever wishes to release voluntarily, this should be done by doing a
Check-And-Set operation against <lock>
to remove its session from the Holders
object.
Once that is done, the contender entry at <prefix>/<session>
should be deleted. Finally,
the session should be destroyed.