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I'm looking for a good load balancer to use with Tomcat. Our application doesn't store anything in the session context so it isn't important to redirect to same server for the same user. I'd simply like something that can queue requests round-robin style or based on each server's inidividual load. I'd also like to be able to add application servers to those available to handle requests without having to restart the load balancer. We're running the application on linux if that matters.

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  • How big of an application are you talking here? If it is simply two servers to handle load, you can do that at the web server level. If you are looking at 5+ servers you may want to look at commercial solutions.
    – Sean
    Mar 10, 2012 at 20:50

1 Answer 1

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If all you need is a software load balancer on linux use Apache Webserver2, Mod-Jk and Tomcat Clustering:

At your Webserver:

  1. Install apache2 and modjk:

    sudo apt-get install apache2 libapache2-mod-jk
    sudo a2enmod jk
    
  2. Create a workers.properties file available to your apache2. In some cases it's automatically created in your /etc/apache2 directory. This file is holding the lb config, node names, ips and ports of your Tomcat servers, i.e.:

    worker.list=balancer,lbstats
    
    #node1
    worker.node1.type=ajp13
    worker.node1.host=YOUR_TOMCAT-NODE-IP
    worker.node1.port=YOUR_TOMCAT-NODE-AJP-PORT
    worker.node1.lbfactor=10
    
    #more nodes here ... (change name in between)
    
    #lb config
    worker.balancer.type=lb
    #turn off sticky session
    worker.balancer.sticky_session=0
    
    #add all defined node names to this list (node1, node2, ...):
    worker.balancer.balance_workers=node1
    
    #lb status information (optional)
    worker.lbstats.type=status
    
  3. Create a Mod-Jk section in your apache2 config file, if it has not been created automatically.

    JkWorkersFile   /etc/apache2/workers.properties
    JkLogFile       /var/log/apache2/mod_jk.log
    JkShmFile       /tmp/jk-runtime-status
    JkLogLevel      info
    
  4. Mount your application to the load balancer (apache2 config file):

    JkMount /My-Java-App-Name       balancer
    JkMount /My-Java-App-Name/*     balancer
    
    JkMount /modjkstatus lbstats
    

At your Tomcat servers:

  1. Install tomcat (using the tarball package, imho, way better then the apt verison). Change server.xml:

    1. disable the http connectors in server.xml (by commenting them out).

    2. enable AJP/1.3 connector and set the port you defined in workers.properties for this node.

    3. add jvmRoute with the right node name to the "Engine" element:

      <Engine jvmRoute="node1" ...

    4. add a "Cluster" element for simplest configuration

        <Cluster className="org.apache.catalina.ha.tcp.SimpleTcpCluster" />
      
  2. Deploy your application to all tomcats and add a distributable element to your applications web.xml.

       <distributable/>
    
  3. Make sure the webserver can access the ajp ports on your tomcat servers and no one else can.

  4. Start the webserver and the tomcats one after another and check the logs (/var/log/apache2/mod_jk.log, too).

  5. Access your app: http://mywebserver.com/MyApp

  6. Check (and deny access to) the lb status page http://mywebserver.com/modjkstatus

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