Run an express server on multiple processes. This is meant to be dropped in directly to your main entry point without having to setup a separate script that manages workers.
This works with any EventListener that emits the "close"
event and has a
close()
method. If it's a server object (e.g. an express app, net.Server
or
http.Server
, ensure that you've invoked listen
before returning it).
By default the module will spawn os.cpus().length
workers. You should
configure this parameter for your workloads. You should pick the right number
for your server based on testing.
var express = require('express');
var cluster = require('express-cluster');
cluster(function(worker) {
var app = express();
app.get('/', function(req, res) {
res.send('hello from worker #' + worker.id);
});
return app.listen(0xbeef);
}, {count: 5})
express-cluster exports itself as a function that accepts config
and
workerFunctions
as arguments. These can be provided in either order:
cluster(config, workerFunction)
or cluster(workerFunction, config)
.
Once node executes cluster()
the current process will be forked the specified
number of times. You should guard any code that should only be run in the
master behind a check of process.env.NODE_UNIQUE_ID
or a call to node's
cluster.isMaster
This function is passed a worker
object. See the node documentation for
Worker for details.
This object should contain zero or more of these keys. Any other key/values are ignored.
{
count: 5, // number of workers: defaults to os.cpus().length
respawn: true, // respawn process on exit: defaults to true
verbose: false, // log what happens to console: defaults to false
// Attach the given function to each spawned worker. The function will
// be bound to the worker that sent the message so you can setup a two
// way message bus if you please. See examples/messaging.js for an
// example.
workerListener: function(){},
// When in verbose mode, use a following writable stream (supports
// the write function) instead of the default console
outputStream: writableStream
}