I'm building a real-time API handling 2 types of calls:
- Updates,
- Computation requests.
Internally, the updates are broadcasted among workers. The workers keep working data structures (such as hash-tables) in their RAM, and modify the contents as the updates are coming.
When a computation request comes, exactly one idle worker handles it, using multiple threads, working with the local copy in RAM.
I'm wondering whether I could migrate my current implementation to Storm. As I understand it, Storm is pretty real-time and could help me a lot with scalability and fault-tolerance.
Currently, I'm using UWSGI/Python to handle the API requests, and Java workers to do the computation. I'm thinking of putting the Java workers into the Storm topology as bolts. However, I'm not quite sure about the spouts.
As I understand it, I could use DRPC to handle the computation requests, just by connecting to a DRPC server from python. It is clearly written in the docs that DRPC can handle the whole life-cycle of the request-reply paradigm. But what about updates?
My question is: Is it a good idea (or is it even possible?) to use DRCP to only submit updates in non-blocking manner, not waiting for replies (because there are no results)?