Conditional Traffic Routing

Spring Boot

Routing is the core traffic control mechanism in Dubbo. Based on it, we can implement canary releases, proportional traffic forwarding, same-region prioritization, full-link grayscale, and other traffic strategies. The design and basic principles of the routing (Router) mechanism in Dubbo, along with several built-in routing rules.

Common Traffic Control Scenarios

The built-in traffic strategies in Dubbo are very flexible, but there is also a certain understanding and usage cost. Therefore, we summarize some common usage scenarios and provide configuration methods:

ScenarioEffectTargetDescription
Timeout
Access Log
Call Retry

Next, let’s take a conditional routing example to see how to use the Dubbo traffic control mechanism.

A Conditional Routing Example

The requirements are very straightforward.

  • Forward traffic matching this condition to this batch of machines
  • Forward traffic matching another condition to another batch of machines

Draw a diagram of traffic matching and forwarding

This is implemented in Dubbo through conditional routing, and its detailed working principle is explained in our introduction. In the above example, xxx represents; yyy represents.

We need to deploy the rules to the running Dubbo SDK. In the Dubbo system, this is done as follows.

Routing Rule Distribution and Effect Principle Diagram

A zk/nacos distributes a rule, and the Dubbo instance receives the rule push. During the RPC call, rules are applied to filter, selecting a subset of addresses to call.

At this point, if we send a request to the xxx service,

There is one very important point.

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Last modified September 30, 2024: Translate (22d3d83a3b)