In general, load balancing is all about sending new client requests to servers which are the least busy. Based on the application running, assign a 'busy factor' to each server: basically a number reflecting one/several points of interest for your load balancing algorithm (connected clients, cpu/mem usage, etc.) and then, at runtime, choose the server with the lowest such score. Basically ANY load balancing technique is based on something like this:
- Round robin does not implement a 'busy score' per se, but assigns each consecutive request to the next server in a circular queue.
- Least connections has its score = number_of_open_connections to the server. Obviously, a server with fewer connections is a better choice.
- Random assignment is a special case - you make an uninformed decision about the server's load, but assume that the function has a statistically even distribution.