brakes
Brakes is a circuit breaker library for Node. A circuit breaker provides latency and fault protection for distributed systems. Brakes will monitor your outgoing requests, and will trip an internal circuit if it begins to detect that the remote service is failing. Circuit protection allows you to redirect requests to sane fallbacks, and back-off the downstream services so they can recover. This module is largely based on Netflix's Hystrix
Requires Node 4.2.0 or higher
http://martinfowler.com/bliki/CircuitBreaker.html
https://github.com/Netflix/Hystrix/wiki/How-it-Works
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circuit_breaker_design_pattern
Bluebird and Promisify
Bluebird
This module utilizes bluebird promises. For more on the features of bluebird visit their site: http://bluebirdjs.com/. Brakes uses bluebird over native promises in order to provide more feature rich promises and because bluebird offers performance comparable to that of raw callbacks.
Promisify
If you pass an async function that relies on callback, brakes will promisify it into a bluebird promise. If you pass a promise to brakes, it will use that promise as is.
Note: brakes will only detect async callback functions that use callbacks with one of the following names: cb
, callback
, callback_
, or done
.
Examples
Promise
function promiseCall(foo){
return new Promise((resolve, reject) =>{
if (foo) resolve(foo);
else reject(foo);
});
}
const brake = new Brakes(promiseCall, {timeout: 150});
brake.exec('bar')
.then((result) =>{
console.log(`result: ${result}`);
})
.catch(err =>{
console.error(`error: ${err}`);
});
Callback
function asyncCall(foo, cb){
if (foo) cb(null, foo);
else cb(new Error(foo));
}
const brake = new Brakes(asyncCall, {timeout: 150});
brake.exec('bar')
.then((result) =>{
console.log(`result: ${result}`);
})
.catch(err =>{
console.error(`error: ${err}`);
});
Fallback
function promiseCall(foo){
return new Promise((resolve, reject) =>{
if (foo) resolve(foo);
else reject(foo);
});
}
function fallbackCall(foo){
return new Promise((resolve, reject) =>{
resolve('I always succeed');
});
}
const brake = new Brakes(promiseCall, {timeout: 150});
brake.fallback(fallbackCall)
brake.exec(false)
.then((result) =>{
console.log(`result: ${result}`);
})
.catch(err =>{
console.error(`error: ${err}`);
});
Health check
function promiseCall(foo){
return new Promise((resolve, reject) =>{
if (foo) resolve(foo);
else reject(foo);
});
}
function fallbackCall(foo){
return new Promise((resolve, reject) =>{
resolve('I always succeed');
});
}
function healthCheckCall(foo){
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
if (Math.random() > 0.8){
resolve('Health check success');
} else {
reject('Health check failed');
}
});
}
const brake = new Brakes(promiseCall, {timeout: 150});
brake.fallback(fallbackCall);
brake.healthCheck(healthCheckCall);
brake.exec(false)
.then((result) =>{
console.log(`result: ${result}`);
})
.catch(err =>{
console.error(`error: ${err}`);
});
Slave Circuits
Brakes exposes the ability to create a master Brakes instance
that can then contain slaveCircuits that all report to a central stats object. This allows all slaveCircuits to be tripped at the same time when the overall health of all the slaveCircuits crosses a defined threshold.
See examples/slave-circuit.js
for a more complete example.
function promiseCall(foo){
return new Promise((resolve, reject) =>{
if (foo) resolve(foo);
else reject(foo);
});
}
const brake = new Brakes({timeout: 150});
const slaveCircuit1 = brake.slaveCircuit(promiseCall);
const slaveCircuit2 = brake.slaveCircuit(promiseCall);
slaveCircuit1.exec('bar')
.then((result) =>{
console.log(`result: ${result}`);
})
.catch(err =>{
console.error(`error: ${err}`);
});
brake.on('snapshot', snapshot => {
console.log(`Stats received -> ${snapshot}`);
});
Demonstration
For a terminal based demonstration:
General Demo
npm install && node examples/example1.js
Fallback Demo
npm install && node examples/fallback-example.js
Health check Demo
npm install && node examples/healthCheck-example.js
Hystrix Stream Demo
npm install && node examples/hystrix-example.js
Slave Circuits
npm install && node examples/slave-circuit.js
Methods
Method | Argument(s) | Returns | Description |
---|
getGlobalStats | N/A | globalStats | Returns a reference to the global stats tracker |
static getGlobalStats | globalStats | N/A | Returns a reference to the global stats tracker |
exec | N/A | Promise | Executes the circuit |
fallback | function (must return promise or accept callback) | N/A | Registers a fallback function for the circuit |
healthCheck | function (must return promise or accept callback) | N/A | Registers a health check function for the circuit |
slaveCircuit | function (required), function (optional), opts (optional) | N/A | Create a new slave circuit that rolls up into the main circuit it is created under. |
on | eventName, function | N/A | Register an event listener |
destroy | N/A | N/A | Removes all listeners and deregisters with global stats tracker. |
isOpen | N/A | boolean | Returns true if circuit is open |
Events
Every brake is an instance of EventEmitter
that provides the following events:
- exec: Event on request start
- failure: Event on request failure
- success: Event on request success
- timeout: Event on request timeout
- circuitClosed: Event fired when circuit is closed
- circuitOpen: Event fired when circuit is open
- snapshot: Event fired on stats snapshot
- healthCheckFailed: Event fired on failure of each health check execution
Configuration
Available configuration options.
- name:
string
to use for name of circuit. This is mostly used for reporting on stats. - group:
string
to use for group of circuit. This is mostly used for reporting on stats. - bucketSpan: time in
ms
that a specific bucket should remain active - statInterval: interval in
ms
that brakes should emit a snapshot
event - percentiles:
array<number>
that defines the percentile levels that should be calculated on the stats object (i.e. 0.9 for 90th percentile) - bucketNum:
#
of buckets to retain in a rolling window - circuitDuration: time in
ms
that a circuit should remain broken - waitThreshold:
number
of requests to wait before testing circuit health - threshold:
%
threshold for successful calls. If the % of successful calls dips below this threshold the circuit will break - timeout: time in
ms
before a service call will timeout - isFailure: function that returns true if an error should be considered a failure (receives the error object returned by your command.) This allows for non-critical errors to be ignored by the circuit breaker
- healthCheckInterval: time in
ms
interval between each execution of health check function - healthCheck: function to call for the health check (can be defined also with calling
healthCheck
function) - fallback: function to call for fallback (can be defined also with calling
fallback
function) - isPromise:
boolean
to opt out of check for callback in function. This affects the passed in function, health check and fallback - isFunction:
boolean
to opt out of check for callback, always promisifying in function. This affects the passed in function, health check and fallback
Stats
Based on the opts.statInterval
an event will be fired at regular intervals that contains a snapshot of the running state of the application.
brake.on('snapshot', snapshot => {
console.log(`Stats received -> ${snapshot}`);
});
Example Stats Object
{ name: 'defaultBrake',
group: 'defaultBrakeGroup',
time: 1463297869298,
circuitDuration: 15000,
threshold: 0.5,
waitThreshold: 100,
stats:
{ failed: 0,
timedOut: 0,
total: 249,
shortCircuited: 0,
latencyMean: 100,
successful: 249,
percentiles:
{ '0': 100,
'1': 102,
'0.25': 100,
'0.5': 100,
'0.75': 101,
'0.9': 101,
'0.95': 102,
'0.99': 102,
'0.995': 102 }
}
}
Global Stats Stream
Brakes automatically tracks all created instances of brakes and provides a global stats stream for easy consumption and reporting on all brakes instances. These streams will aggregate all stat events into one single stream.
const globalStats = Brakes.getGlobalStats();
globalStats.getRawStream().on('data', (stats) =>{
console.log('received global stats ->', stats);
});
Hystrix Dashboard
Using the global stats stream with a special transform, brakes makes it incredibly easy to generate a SSE stream that is compliant with the hystrix dashboard and turbine.
Example:
const globalStats = Brakes.getGlobalStats();
http.createServer((req, res) => {
res.setHeader('Content-Type', 'text/event-stream;charset=UTF-8');
res.setHeader('Cache-Control', 'no-cache, no-store, max-age=0, must-revalidate');
res.setHeader('Pragma', 'no-cache');
globalStats.getHystrixStream().pipe(res);
}).listen(8081, () => {
console.log('---------------------');
console.log('Hystrix Stream now live at localhost:8081/hystrix.stream');
console.log('---------------------');
});
To aid in testing it might be useful to have a local instance of the hystrix dashboard running:
docker run -d -p 8080:8080 -p 9002:9002 --name hystrix-dashboard mlabouardy/hystrix-dashboard:latest
Additional Reading: Hystrix Metrics Event Stream, Turbine, Hystrix Dashboard
Development
We gladly welcome pull requests and code contributions. To develop brakes locally clone the repo and use the following commands to aid in development:
npm install
npm run test
npm run test:lint
npm run coverage
Change Log
See: https://github.com/awolden/brakes/releases
Copyright (c) 2016
Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all copies.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND THE AUTHOR DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.