Advanced Network Configuration
With the default configuration, Hazelcast members use a single server socket for all kinds of connections: cluster members, Hazelcast clients implementing the Open Binary Client Protocol and HTTP protocol clients connect to a single server socket that handles all the protocols.
You can also configure the Hazelcast members with separate server sockets using a different network configuration for different protocols. This configuration scheme allows more flexibility when deploying Hazelcast as described in the following cases:
-
For security, it is possible to bind the member protocol server socket on a protected internal network interface, while the client connections can be established on another network interface accessible by the Hazelcast clients.
-
Different kinds of network connections can be established with different socket options. For example varying send/receive window size to optimize the network usage, TLS for connections over WAN while member-to-member connections may remain unencrypted, etc.
In the following example we introduce the advanced network configuration for a
member to listen for member-to-member connections on the default port 5701
while
listening for client connections on the port 9090
:
Config config = new Config();
config.getAdvancedNetworkConfig().setEnabled(true);
config.getAdvancedNetworkConfig().setClientEndpointConfig(
new ServerSocketEndpointConfig().setPort(9090)
);
HazelcastInstance instance = Hazelcast.newHazelcastInstance(config);
System.out.println(instance.getCluster().getLocalMember().getAddressMap());
Running this example prints something similar to the following output, indicating that the member listens for the specified protocols on the respective configured ports:
{EndpointQualifier{type='CLIENT'}=[10.212.134.156]:9090, EndpointQualifier{type='MEMBER'}=[10.212.134.156]:5701}
The following is the equivalent declarative configuration:
<hazelcast>
...
<advanced-network enabled="true">
<member-server-socket-endpoint-config>
<port>5701</port>
</member-server-socket-endpoint-config>
<client-server-socket-endpoint-config>
<port>9090</port>
</client-server-socket-endpoint-config>
</advanced-network>
...
</hazelcast>
hazelcast:
advanced-network:
enabled: true
member-server-socket-endpoint-config:
port:
- 5701
client-server-socket-endpoint-config:
port:
- 9090
Setting Up Cluster Members for Advanced Network Configuration
Advanced network configuration and single-socket network configuration are
mutually exclusive: either an enabled AdvancedNetworkConfig
or the NetworkConfig
object is used to configure a member’s networking, including the joiner, discovery,
failure detectors, etc. as described in the previous sections of this chapter.
You cannot define both elements in the declarative configuration, i.e., the network
and advanced-network
elements cannot be configured at the same time. In the
programmatic configuration, an enabled AdvancedNetworkConfig
takes precedence over
the NetworkConfig
. AdvancedNetworkConfig
is disabled by default, therefore the
unisocket member configuration under NetworkConfig
is used in the default case.
When using the advanced network configuration, the following configurations are defined member-wide:
-
Joiner and cluster discovery (Multicast, TCP/IP, AWS, Azure, GCP, Kubernetes, Eureka, etc.)
-
MemberAddressProvider
configuration -
Failure detector configuration
In addition to the above, the advanced network configuration allows the
configuration of multiple endpoints: each endpoint configuration applies for a
specific protocol, e.g., MEMBER
and CLIENT
. An additional optional identifier
can be configured to separate the configuration of multiple WAN
protocol endpoints.
The supported protocols are as follows:
-
MEMBER
: A member server socket is required for Hazelcast to operate. The default advanced network configuration defines a member endpoint configuration listening on port 5701 (same as the single-socket Hazelcast member configuration). -
CLIENT
: A single server socket handling the Hazelcast Open Binary Client Protocol can be optionally configured. If no such endpoint is configured, then the clients will not be able to connect to the Hazelcast member. -
REST
: A REST server socket is optional. -
MEMCACHE
: When accessing a Hazelcast cluster over the Memcache text protocol, an endpoint listening toMEMCACHE
protocol must be defined. -
WAN
: Multiple WAN endpoint configurations can be defined to determine the network settings of outgoing connections (from the members of a source cluster to the target WAN cluster members) or to establish server sockets on which a target WAN member can listen for the incoming connections from the source cluster.
Server Socket Endpoint Configuration
The server socket endpoint configuration is common for all protocols. The elements comprising a server socket endpoint configuration are identical to their single-socket network configuration counterparts.
The following declarative configuration example includes all the common server socket endpoint elements:
<hazelcast>
...
<advanced-network enabled="true">
<member-server-socket-endpoint-config>
<port auto-increment="true" port-count="100">5701</port>
<outbound-ports>
<ports>33000-35000</ports>
<ports>37000,37001,37002,37003</ports>
<ports>38000,38500-38600</ports>
</outbound-ports>
<interfaces enabled="true">
<interface>10.10.1.*</interface>
</interfaces>
<ssl enabled="true">
<factory-class-name>com.hazelcast.examples.MySSLContextFactory</factory-class-name>
<properties>
<property name="foo">bar</property>
</properties>
</ssl>
<symmetric-encryption>
<algorithm>ALGO</algorithm>
<salt>SALT</salt>
<password>PASS</password>
<iteration-count>10000</iteration-count>
</symmetric-encryption>
<socket-interceptor enabled="true">
<class-name>com.hazelcast.examples.MySocketInterceptor</class-name>
<properties>
<property name="foo">bar</property>
</properties>
</socket-interceptor>
<socket-options>
<buffer-direct>true</buffer-direct>
<tcp-no-delay>true</tcp-no-delay>
<keep-alive>true</keep-alive>
<connect-timeout-seconds>64</connect-timeout-seconds>
<send-buffer-size-kb>25</send-buffer-size-kb>
<receive-buffer-size-kb>33</receive-buffer-size-kb>
<linger-seconds>99</linger-seconds>
</socket-options>
<public-address>dummy</public-address>
<reuse-address>true</reuse-address>
</member-server-socket-endpoint-config>
</advanced-network>
...
</hazelcast>
hazelcast:
advanced-network
enabled: true
member-server-socket-endpoint-config:
port:
auto-increment: true
port-count: 100
port: 5701
outbound-ports:
- 33000-35000
- 37000,37001,37002,37003
- 38000,38500-38600
interfaces:
enabled: true
interfaces:
- 10.10.1.*
ssl:
enabled: true
factory-class-name: com.hazelcast.examples.MySSLContextFactory
properties:
foo: bar
symmetric-encryption:
algorithm: ALGO
salt: SALT
password: PASS
iteration-count: 10000
socket-interceptor:
enabled: true
class-name: com.hazelcast.examples.MySocketInterceptor
properties:
foo: bar
socket-options:
buffer-direct: true
tcp-no-delay: true
keep-alive: true
connect-timeout-seconds: 64
send-buffer-size-kb: 25
receive-buffer-size-kb: 33
linger-seconds: 99
public-address: dummy
reuse-address: true
When using the declarative configuration, specific element names introduce the server socket endpoint configuration for each protocol:
-
member-server-socket-endpoint-config
forMEMBER
protocol -
client-server-socket-endpoint-config
forCLIENT
protocol -
rest-server-socket-endpoint-config
forREST
endpoint -
memcache-server-socket-endpoint-config
forMEMCACHE
endpoint -
wan-server-socket-endpoint-config
forWAN
endpoints
When using the programmatic configuration, corresponding methods set the respective server socket endpoint configuration:
config.getAdvancedNetworkConfig().setMemberEndpointConfig(
new ServerSocketEndpointConfig()
.setPort(5701)
.setPortAutoIncrement(false)
.setSSLConfig(new SSLConfig())
.setReuseAddress(true)
.setSocketTcpNoDelay(true)
);
Setting Up REST Server Socket Endpoint Configuration
In addition to the common server socket configuration described above, the REST endpoint configuration includes certain additional elements which are used to enable/disable the REST functionality groups.
config.getAdvancedNetworkConfig().setRestEndpointConfig(
new RestServerEndpointConfig()
.setPort(8080)
.setPortAutoIncrement(false)
.enableGroups(WAN, CLUSTER_READ, HEALTH_CHECK)
);
The following is the equivalent declarative configuration:
<hazelcast>
...
<advanced-network enabled="true">
<rest-server-socket-endpoint-config>
<port auto-increment="false">8080</port>
<endpoint-groups>
<endpoint-group name="WAN" enabled="true"/>
<endpoint-group name="CLUSTER_READ" enabled="true"/>
<endpoint-group name="HEALTH_CHECK" enabled="true"/>
</endpoint-groups>
</rest-server-socket-endpoint-config>
</advanced-network>
...
</hazelcast>
hazelcast:
advanced-network:
enabled: true
rest-server-socket-endpoint-config:
port:
auto-increment: false
port: 8080
endpoint-groups:
WAN:
enabled: true
CLUSTER_READ:
enabled: true
HEALTH_CHECK:
enabled: true
Setting Up WAN Endpoints Configuration
Multiple WAN endpoint configurations can be defined to configure the outgoing connections and server sockets, depending on the role of the member in the WAN replication. See the Securing the Connections for WAN Replication section for the configuration examples.
Advanced Network Configuration FAQ
-
Can I multiplex protocols on a single advanced network endpoint? For example, can I use a single server socket to listen for
MEMBER
andCLIENT
protocols?No, each endpoint configuration that defines a server socket must bind to a different socket address.
-
Can I mix unisocket and advanced network members in the same cluster?
No, the results will be undefined.
-
Can I configure multiple server socket endpoints for the same protocol?
You can only configure multiple server socket endpoints for
WAN
protocol. For other protocols (MEMBER
,CLIENT
,REST
,MEMCACHE
), a single server socket can be configured.