Using JDG as External Cache Container for WildFly HTTP Session Replication: Difference between revisions

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Configuration details are available here: [[Infinispan Configuration]]. The external JDG cluster will be accessed by the WildFly instance over the HotRod protocol.
Configuration details are available here: [[Infinispan Configuration]]. The external JDG cluster will be accessed by the WildFly instance over the HotRod protocol.
Define a dedicated cache for each web application:
<pre>
<subsystem xmlns="urn:infinispan:server:core:6.4">
  <cache-container name="clustered" default-cache="default" statistics="true">
    <transport executor="infinispan-transport" lock-timeout="60000"/>
    <distributed-cache name="default" ...>
      ...
    </distributed-cache>
    <distributed-cache name="http-sessions" owners="2" mode="SYNC" start="EAGER"/>
  </cache-container>
  ...
</subsystem>
</pre>

Revision as of 00:22, 1 June 2016

External

Internal

Overview

JDG can be used as an external cache container for HTTP session data within WildFly. This allows scaling of the data layer independent of the application, and enables different WildFly clusters, that may reside in various domains, to access data from the same JDG cluster.

Setup the JDG Cluster

Configuration details are available here: Infinispan Configuration. The external JDG cluster will be accessed by the WildFly instance over the HotRod protocol.

Define a dedicated cache for each web application:

<subsystem xmlns="urn:infinispan:server:core:6.4">
  <cache-container name="clustered" default-cache="default" statistics="true">
    <transport executor="infinispan-transport" lock-timeout="60000"/>
    <distributed-cache name="default" ...>
      ...
    </distributed-cache>
    <distributed-cache name="http-sessions" owners="2" mode="SYNC" start="EAGER"/>
  </cache-container>
  ...
</subsystem>