Discovery peers in a distributed system using regular dns and multicast dns.
npm install dns-discovery
var discovery = require('dns-discovery')
var disc1 = discovery()
var disc2 = discovery()
disc1.on('peer', function (name, peer) {
console.log(name, peer)
})
// announce an app
disc2.announce('test-app', 9090)
Create a new discovery instance. Options include:
{
server: 'discovery.example.com:9090', // put a centralized dns discovery server here
ttl: someSeconds, // ttl for records in seconds. defaults to Infinity.
limit: someLimit, // max number of records stored. defaults to 10000.
multicast: true, // use multicast-dns. defaults to true.
domain: 'my-domain.com', // top-level domain to use for records. defaults to dns-discovery.local
socket: someUdpSocket, // use this udp socket as the client socket
loopback: false // discover yourself over multicast
}
If you have more than one discovery server you can specify an array
{
server: [
'discovery.example.com:9090',
'another.discovery.example.com'
]
}
Do a lookup for a specific app name. When new peers are discovered for this name peer events will be emitted. The callback will be called when the query is complete.
disc.on('peer', function (name, peer) {
console.log(name) // app name this peer was discovered for (ie 'example')
console.log(peer) // {host: 'some-ip', port: 1234}
})
disc.lookup('example')
Announce a new port for a specific app name. Announce also does a lookup so you don't need to do that afterwards.
If you want to specify a public port (a port that is reachable from outside your firewall) you can set the publicPort: port
option. This will announce the public port to your list of dns servers and use the other port over multicast.
You can also set impliedPort: true
to announce the public port of the dns socket to the list of dns servers.
Stop announcing a port for an app. Has the same options as .announce
Listen for dns records on a specific port. You only need to call this if you want to turn your peer into a discovery server that other peers can use to store peer objects on.
var server = discovery()
server.listen(9090, function () {
var disc = discovery({server: 'localhost:9090'})
disc.announce('test-app', 8080) // will announce this record to the above discovery server
})
You can setup a discovery server to announce records on the internet as multicast-dns only works on a local network.
The port defaults to 53
which is the standard dns port. Additionally it tries to bind to 5300
to support networks that filter dns traffic.
Destroy the discovery instance. Will destroy the underlying udp socket as well.
Emitted after a successful listen()
.
Emitted after a successful destroy()
.
Emitted when a peer has been discovered.
- name The app name the peer was discovered for.
- host The address of the peer.
- port The port the peer is listening on.
Emitted after a successful announce()
.
- name The app name that was announced.
- port The port that was announced.
Emitted after a successful unannounce()
.
- name The app name that was unannounced.
- port The port that was unannounced.
Emitted when any kind of message event occurs. The type
will be prefixed with 'in:'
to indicate inbound, and 'out:'
to indicate outbound messages. This event is mostly useful for debugging.
Emitted when the internal secrets used to generate session tokens have been rotated. This event is mostly useful for debugging.
Emitted when networking errors occur, such as failures to bind the socket (EACCES, EADDRINUSE).
There is a cli tool available as well
npm install -g dns-discovery
dns-discovery help
To announce a service do
# will announce test-app over multicast-dns
dns-discovery announce test-app --port=8080
To look it up
# will print services when they are found
dns-discovery lookup test-app
To run a discovery server
# listen for services and store them with a ttl of 30s
dns-discovery listen --port=9090 --ttl=30
And to announce to that discovery server (and over multicast-dns)
# replace example.com with the host of the server running the discovery server
dns-discovery announce test-app --server=example.com:9090 --port=9090
And finally to lookup using that discovery server (and multicast-dns)
dns-discovery lookup test-app --server=example.com:9090
You can use any other dns client to resolve the records as well. For example using dig
.
# dig requires the discovery server to run on port 53
dig @discovery.example.com test-app SRV
MIT