Hey folks,
I've the following use case and I would like to hear your opinion on a limitation I faced once starting to tackle it.
I'm dealing with microservices architecture where N services would like to schedule periodic jobs (independently).
The services are compute distributed with centralized single DB instance (multi schema).
Meaning - each service creates a river client and set its internal scheduling jobs (worth to mention, each service defines its scheduling job kind).
In this scenario with the current leader election process there is a race between the services on the leadership ownership.
Let's assume service N_1 assigned to be the leader, as a result services N_2....,k schedule jobs will be starved (and actually won't run).
Are you aware of this limitation?
There is an alternative to achieve the requirements described aforementioned?
Thanks in advanced.
Hey folks,
I've the following use case and I would like to hear your opinion on a limitation I faced once starting to tackle it.
I'm dealing with microservices architecture where N services would like to schedule periodic jobs (independently).
The services are compute distributed with centralized single DB instance (multi schema).
Meaning - each service creates a river client and set its internal scheduling jobs (worth to mention, each service defines its scheduling job kind).
In this scenario with the current leader election process there is a race between the services on the leadership ownership.
Let's assume service N_1 assigned to be the leader, as a result services N_2....,k schedule jobs will be starved (and actually won't run).
Are you aware of this limitation?
There is an alternative to achieve the requirements described aforementioned?
Thanks in advanced.