[Grok-dev] Grok deployment story unclear and weird

Graham Dumpleton Graham.Dumpleton at gmail.com
Sun May 17 08:18:35 EDT 2009



On May 17, 8:34 am, Graham Dumpleton <Graham.Dumple... at gmail.com>
wrote:
> On May 17, 4:07 am, Laurence Rowe <l... at lrowe.co.uk> wrote:
>
>
>
> > Andreas Jung wrote:
> > > Hi there,
>
> > > I am currently totally clueless and confused about the
> > > deployment story with Grok apps.
>
> > > As developer I can create my sandbox using grokproject and implement
> > > my_weird_package based on the generated skeleton. Ok, the application
> > > is working - now I want to package and distribute my_weird_package.
> > > What is the suggested approach for doing this?
>
> > > As a Grok user I want to setup a new Grok server and install
> > > my_weird_package
> > > (possibly together with other Grok apps within the Grok instance). As an
> > > experienced
> > > Grok user I would use grokproject for creating an empty instance and install
> > > my_weird_package in some way (in which way?). As a newbie Grok user I would
> > > expect 'easy_install my_weird_package' to produce a running Grok instance!?
>
> > > So what is the way doing it the right way - for the Grok developer/package
> > > and the Grok user?
>
> > As someone who has never used grok, but would like to be able to install
> > grok-built applications, I'd feel most comfortable if those applications
> >   were 'standard' wsgi components, just like the other wsgi applications
> > I already run (trac, paste, repoze and one day plone). These most likely
> > run under apachemod_wsgi. There is a tutorial here,http://grok.zope.org/documentation/tutorial/installing-and-setting-up...
>
> > As far as I can tell, the only drawback to using mod_wsgi compared to
> > proxying is that there is no way to provide session affinity. Useful
> > when you want the zodb cache to be relevant.
>
> There possibly is a way of providing session affinity. First off, use
> daemon mode with a single process. Obviously all requests come back to
> the same process so no actual need for it.
>
> Or, use daemon mode but define multiple daemon process groups of a
> single process rather than one group with multiple processes. You can
> then use a couple of different ways to control which of those
> processes requests go to.
>
> This has been discussed a little on the mod_wsgi list before, but no
> one has ever explained a concrete need enough to propose example
> configuration and/or code of what to do.
>
> If interested, specify what mechanism you are using to create stick
> sessions.

I decided to have a play and get together a working example which uses
cookies.

The Apache configuration for this is below. It is setup with
assumption that application is mounted at URL of '/sticky', but it can
be changed as necessary by changing WSGIScriptAlias and the rewrite
rules. If mounting at root of web site and only application in virtual
host, you could even remove the RewriteCond's which check the mount
point. The stickiness will be maintained for a period of 60 minutes
after last activity, but you can obviously also change that as well if
need be.

Obviously the downside of sticky sessions is that you loose the
benefit of request being taken up by whatever process is available and
are at the mercy of the specific process being used becoming
overloaded. Rather than just randomly selecting a process, you could
replace the 'rnd' RewriteMap with a 'prg' RewriteMap which uses some
executing program to work our which of the process groups is handling
the least number of active user sessions and route it to that.

# Define multiple process groups each with a single multithreaded
process.

WSGIDaemonProcess sticky01 processes=1 threads=10 display-name=%
{GROUP}
WSGIDaemonProcess sticky02 processes=1 threads=10 display-name=%
{GROUP}
WSGIDaemonProcess sticky03 processes=1 threads=10 display-name=%
{GROUP}
WSGIDaemonProcess sticky04 processes=1 threads=10 display-name=%
{GROUP}
WSGIDaemonProcess sticky05 processes=1 threads=10 display-name=%
{GROUP}

# Mount our WSGI application at the sub URL of '/sticky'.

WSGIScriptAlias /sticky /usr/local/sites/sticky/site.wsgi

# Lots of rewrite magic to follow.

RewriteEngine On

# Specify a rewrite map which randomly selects one of the process
groups.
# The contents of the file should be:
#
#    processes sticky01|sticky02|sticky03|sticky04|sticky05
#
# That is, an entry for each of the named process groups in
appropriate
# format for a random rewrite map.

RewriteMap sticky rnd:/Users/grahamd/Sites/sticky/processes.txt

# Extract the name of the process group from cookie sent in the
request.

RewriteCond %{REQUEST_URI} ^/sticky(/.*)?$
RewriteCond %{HTTP_COOKIE} process=([^;]+)
RewriteRule . - [E=PROCESS:%1,L]

# Validate the name of the process group and if not valid then set it
# to one of the process groups randomly.

RewriteCond %{REQUEST_URI} ^/sticky(/.*)?$
RewriteCond %{ENV:PROCESS} !^sticky0[12345]$
RewriteRule . - [E=PROCESS:${sticky:processes},L]

# Set the cookie so that life time of the cookie always pushed out
when
# active. The cookie will expire after defined number of minutes of
# inactvity and stickiness lost. Using a stickiness timeout of 60
minutes.

RewriteRule . - [CO=process:%{ENV:PROCESS}:%{HTTP_HOST}:60:/sticky]

# For the WSGI application, indicate that process group should be
selected
# based on value for the cookie or where appropriate as set randomly.
As
# extra security measure, even though we validate name above, limit
what
# process groups could be selected in case there might be others
configured
# for same server.

<Location /sticky>
WSGIRestrictProcess sticky01 sticky02 sticky03 sticky04 sticky05
WSGIProcessGroup %{ENV:PROCESS}
</Location>


Graham


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