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Druid uses ZooKeeper (ZK) for management of current cluster state. The operations that happen over ZK are
- Master leader election
- Segment “publishing” protocol from Compute and Realtime
- Segment load/drop protocol between Master and Compute
Property Configuration
ZooKeeper paths are set via the runtime.properties
configuration file. Druid will automatically create paths that do not exist, so typos in config files is a very easy way to become split-brained.
There is a prefix path that is required and can be used as the only (well, kinda, see the note below) path-related zookeeper configuration parameter (everything else will be a default based on the prefix):
druid.zk.paths.base
You can also override each individual path (defaults are shown below):
druid.zk.paths.propertiesPath=${druid.zk.paths.base}/properties
druid.zk.paths.announcementsPath=${druid.zk.paths.base}/announcements
druid.zk.paths.servedSegmentsPath=${druid.zk.paths.base}/servedSegments
druid.zk.paths.loadQueuePath=${druid.zk.paths.base}/loadQueue
druid.zk.paths.masterPath=${druid.zk.paths.base}/master
druid.zk.paths.indexer.announcementsPath=${druid.zk.paths.base}/indexer/announcements
druid.zk.paths.indexer.tasksPath=${druid.zk.paths.base}/indexer/tasks
druid.zk.paths.indexer.statusPath=${druid.zk.paths.base}/indexer/status
druid.zk.paths.indexer.leaderLatchPath=${druid.zk.paths.base}/indexer/leaderLatchPath
NOTE: We also use Curator’s service discovery module to expose some services via zookeeper. This also uses a zookeeper path, but this path is not affected by druid.zk.paths.base
and must be specified separately. This property is
druid.zk.paths.discoveryPath
Master Leader Election
We use the Curator LeadershipLatch recipe to do leader election at path
${druid.zk.paths.masterPath}/_MASTER
Segment “publishing” protocol from Compute and Realtime
The announcementsPath
and servedSegmentsPath
are used for this.
All Compute and Realtime nodes publish themselves on the announcementsPath
, specifically, they will create an ephemeral znode at
${druid.zk.paths.announcementsPath}/${druid.host}
Which signifies that they exist. They will also subsequently create a permanent znode at
${druid.zk.paths.servedSegmentsPath}/${druid.host}
And as they load up segments, they will attach ephemeral znodes that look like
${druid.zk.paths.servedSegmentsPath}/${druid.host}/_segment_identifier_
Nodes like the Master and Broker can then watch these paths to see which nodes are currently serving which segments.
Segment load/drop protocol between Master and Compute
The loadQueuePath
is used for this.
When the Master decides that a Compute node should load or drop a segment, it writes an ephemeral znode to
${druid.zk.paths.loadQueuePath}/_host_of_compute_node/_segment_identifier
This node will contain a payload that indicates to the Compute node what it should do with the given segment. When the Compute node is done with the work, it will delete the znode in order to signify to the Master that it is complete.