Custom Load Balancer
This EIP allows you to use your own Load Balancer implementation.
The Custom Load Balancer eip supports 1 options, which are listed below.
Name | Description | Default | Type |
---|---|---|---|
ref | Required Refers to the custom load balancer to lookup from the registry. | String |
Example
An example using Java DSL:
-
Java
-
XML
from("direct:start")
// using our custom load balancer
.loadBalance(new MyLoadBalancer())
.to("seda:x")
.to("seda:y")
.to("seda:z")
.end();
<!-- this is the implementation of our custom load balancer -->
<bean id="myBalancer" class="com.foo.MyLoadBalancer"/>
<camelContext xmlns="http://camel.apache.org/schema/spring">
<route>
<from uri="direct:start"/>
<loadBalance>
<!-- refer to my custom load balancer -->
<customLoadBalancer ref="myBalancer"/>
<!-- these are the endpoints to balance -->
<to uri="seda:x"/>
<to uri="seda:y"/>
<to uri="seda:z"/>
</loadBalance>
</route>
</camelContext>
To implement a custom load balancer you can extend some support classes such as LoadBalancerSupport
and SimpleLoadBalancerSupport
. The former supports the asynchronous routing engine, and the latter does not. Here is an example of a custom load balancer implementation:
public static class MyLoadBalancer extends LoadBalancerSupport {
public boolean process(Exchange exchange, AsyncCallback callback) {
String body = exchange.getIn().getBody(String.class);
try {
if ("x".equals(body)) {
getProcessors().get(0).process(exchange);
} else if ("y".equals(body)) {
getProcessors().get(1).process(exchange);
} else {
getProcessors().get(2).process(exchange);
}
} catch (Throwable e) {
exchange.setException(e);
}
callback.done(true);
return true;
}
}