I'm designing a custom client server tcp/ip app. The networking requirements for the app are:
- Be able to speak a custom application layer protocol through a secure TCP/IP channel (opened at a designated port)
- The client-server connection/channel needs to remain persistent.
- If multiple instances of the server side app is running, be able to dispatch the client connection to a specific instance of the server side app (based on a server side unique ID).
One of the design goals is to make the app scale so load balancing is particularly important. I've been researching the load-balancing capabilities of EC2 and Windows Azure. I believe requirement 1 is supported by most offerings today. However I'm not so sure about requirement 2 and 3. In particular:
Do any of these services (EC2, Azure) allow the app to influence the load-balancing policy, by specifying additional application-layer requirements? Azure, for example, uses round-robin job allocation for cloud services, but requirement 3 above clearly needs to be factored in as part of the load balancing decision, i.e. forward based on unique ID, but uses round-robin allocation if the unique ID is not found at any of the server side instances.
Do the load-balancer work with persistent connection, per requirement 2? My understanding from Azure is that you can specify a public and private port-pair as an end-point, so the load-balancer monitors the public port and forward the connection request to the private port of some running instance, so basically you can do whatever you want with that connection thereafter. Is this the correct understanding?
Any help would be appreciated.