I find the introductory example of Akka remoting supplied on the Akka landing page a bit hard to swallow as an introduction, and the length of documentation necessary for learning the ins and outs of remoting malstructured for introductory purposes.
Here below is the code from the mentioned example, and I'd like to ask for a delineation of what that code means with some fair context, while relating to the question of whether any actor can be messaged remotely as if it were local requiring only a mere change of configuration. Previous answers about this last bit may seem somewhat contradictory to current Akka documentation, whereas the documentation in itself is somewhat inconclusive about this very point.
// ------------------------------
// config on all machines
akka {
actor {
provider = akka.remote.RemoteActorRefProvider
deployment {
/greeter {
remote = akka.tcp://MySystem@machine1:2552
}
}
}
}
// ------------------------------
// define the greeting actor and the greeting message
case class Greeting(who: String) extends Serializable
class GreetingActor extends Actor with ActorLogging {
def receive = {
case Greeting(who) ⇒ log.info("Hello " + who)
}
}
// ------------------------------
// on machine 1: empty system, target for deployment from machine 2
val system = ActorSystem("MySystem")
// ------------------------------
// on machine 2: Remote Deployment - deploying on machine1
val system = ActorSystem("MySystem")
val greeter = system.actorOf(Props[GreetingActor], name = "greeter")
// ------------------------------
// on machine 3: Remote Lookup (logical home of “greeter” is machine2, remote deployment is transparent)
val system = ActorSystem("MySystem")
val greeter = system.actorSelection("akka.tcp://MySystem@machine2:2552/user/greeter")
greeter ! Greeting("Sonny Rollins")
So an introductory explanation of this example code that also takes care of the key aspects mentioned above would be very helpful. An explanation that should hopefully enable picking an actors architecture that can easily scale within a single JVM and across JVM's and server boundaries, rather than going into experimentation mode for days if not more.
Thanks!