Static objects are initialized only once. Singleton classes are instantiated only once. If we use a singleton in a cluster then it will create multiple instances of singleton in the clusters. So what happens to the static object in a cluster environment? Why this object is not initialized in other cluster servers? or why the objects state doesn't change?
3 Answers
Static Objects are always in the scope of the ClassLoader (in most cases per JVM) and are not regarded in clustering. If you need a Singleton you have to tell the container to create one. It depends on the nature of your Singleton if it should exist only one per Cluster or once per JVM or once per Classloader.
Each node in a cluster runs in a separate JVM - so each JVM (cluster node) will have it's own Singleton. If you look at the cluster as a system of JVMs, then it is true that the number of instances of a Singleton in the cluster is equal to the number of nodes.
A cluster wide Singleton can not be implemented with normal Java classes. You may need a single (un-clustered) server instances that provides the singleton.
Singletons aren't even reliable within a single process. You can load the same class via multiple classloaders and end up with multiple 'singleton' objects.
Singleton is an anti-pattern for a reason - avoid it.
The case is even worse in a cluster since all nodes must coordinate to decide where the singleton will be located. This is vulnerable to network partitioning so it's untenable. Brewer's CAP Theorem will give you some background on this.
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As so often, it depends on the use case. Often it is sufficient to have a "Singleton" in some scope (i.e. per ClassLoader), e.g. for caching some data. It might be less efficient in that case because not the full cache is visible to all and it may contain redundant or even different data, but if you know the limitations it may be ok to apply the pattern.– rurouniMay 6, 2011 at 11:08