Parallel execution

Overview

Parallel execution lets services invoke an arbitrary number of other services providing a set of callback services to be executed after each of the targets completes.

Target services run in parallel, asynchronously, and are not notified of each other's execution progress. All of the callbacks configured also run asynchronously without blocking each other.

The diagram below depicts the feature in its full scope. Three target services are executed, each runs independently, each with a list of their completion callbacks.

Usage examples and API

Common usage

In the most common case, the usage will be as follows. A dictionary mapping targets and their requests along with a list of callbacks is provided to self.patterns.parallel.invoke. All of the targets are invoked in background and, once they all complete, each of the callbacks is invoked.

from zato.server.service import Service

class MyService(Service):

    def handle(self):

        # A dictionary of services to invoke along with requests they receive
        targets = {
            'service1': {'hello':'from-parallel-exec1'},
            'service2': {'hello':'from-parallel-exec2'},
        }

        # Callbacks to invoke when each of the services finishes
        callbacks = ['my.callback1', 'my.callback2']

        # On output a Correlation ID assigned to the call is returned
        cid = self.patterns.parallel.invoke(targets, callbacks)

User-defined Correlation IDs

Users can provide their own Correlation IDs to invoke the services with. It is user's responsibility to ensure the IDs are sufficiently enough and there will be no duplicates, should that happen - results are undefined.

from zato.server.service import Service

class MyService(Service):

    def handle(self):

        # A dictionary of services to invoke along with requests they receive
        targets = {
            'service1': {'hello':'from-parallel-exec1'},
            'service2': {'hello':'from-parallel-exec2'},
        }

        # Callbacks to invoke when both services above finish
        callbacks = ['my.callback1', 'my.callback2']

        # User-provided Correlation ID
        cid = '1632-5754-5628-5197'

        # CID returned is the one received on input
        cid = self.patterns.parallel.invoke(targets, callbacks, cid=cid)

Authoring callbacks

A callback is a regular Zato service that is invoked after each of the targets finishes execution, no matter if any raises an exception or not.

Each callback is invoked asynchronously, in isolation from any other callbacks defined.

Upon execution, each callback's self.channel attribute will be set to PARALLEL_EXEC_ON_TARGET.

On input, a callback's self.request.payload attribute will be a Python dictionary - the format of the dictionary is the same as in self.patterns.fanout.invoke.

Similarities to Fan-out/Fan-in

The feature is very similar to the Fan-out/Fan-in pattern - in addition to on-target callbacks from Parallel Execution, Fan-out/Fan-in adds callbacks that are executed only when all of the targets finish.

Integration patterns


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