layout | title | folder | permalink | categories | tags | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
pattern |
Ambassador |
ambassador |
/patterns/ambassador/ |
Structural |
|
Provide a helper service instance on a client and offload common functionality away from a shared resource.
Real world example
A remote service has many clients accessing a function it provides. The service is a legacy application and is impossible to update. Large numbers of requests from users are causing connectivity issues. New rules for request frequency should be implemented along with latency checks and client-side logging.
In plain words
Using the ambassador pattern, we can implement less-frequent polling from clients along with latency checks and logging.
Microsoft documentation states
An ambassador service can be thought of as an out-of-process proxy that is co-located with the client. This pattern can be useful for offloading common client connectivity tasks such as monitoring, logging, routing, security (such as TLS), and resiliency patterns in a language agnostic way. It is often used with legacy applications, or other applications that are difficult to modify, in order to extend their networking capabilities. It can also enable a specialized team to implement those features.
Programmatic Example
With the above example in mind we will imitate the functionality in a simple manner. We have an interface implemented by the remote service as well as the ambassador service:
interface RemoteServiceInterface {
long doRemoteFunction(int value) throws Exception;
}
A remote services represented as a singleton.
public class RemoteService implements RemoteServiceInterface {
private static final Logger LOGGER = LoggerFactory.getLogger(RemoteService.class);
private static RemoteService service = null;2
static synchronized RemoteService getRemoteService() {
if (service == null) {
service = new RemoteService();
}
return service;
}
private RemoteService() {}
@Override
public long doRemoteFunction(int value) {
long waitTime = (long) Math.floor(Math.random() * 1000);
try {
sleep(waitTime);
} catch (InterruptedException e) {
LOGGER.error("Thread sleep interrupted", e)
}
return waitTime >= 200 ? value * 10 : -1;
}
}
A service ambassador adding additional features such as logging, latency checks
public class ServiceAmbassador implements RemoteServiceInterface {
private static final Logger LOGGER = LoggerFactory.getLogger(ServiceAmbassador.class);
private static final int RETRIES = 3;
private static final int DELAY_MS = 3000;
ServiceAmbassador() {}
@Override
public long doRemoteFunction(int value) {
return safeCall(value);
}
private long checkLatency(int value) {
RemoteService service = RemoteService.getRemoteService();
long startTime = System.currentTimeMillis();
long result = service.doRemoteFunction(value);
long timeTaken = System.currentTimeMillis() - startTime;
LOGGER.info("Time taken (ms): " + timeTaken);
return result;
}
private long safeCall(int value) {
int retries = 0;
long result = -1;
for (int i = 0; i < RETRIES; i++) {
if (retries >= RETRIES) {
return -1;
}
if ((result = checkLatency(value)) == -1) {
LOGGER.info("Failed to reach remote: (" + (i + 1) + ")");
retries++;
try {
sleep(DELAY_MS);
} catch (InterruptedException e) {
LOGGER.error("Thread sleep state interrupted", e);
}
} else {
break;
}
}
return result;
}
}
A client has a local service ambassador used to interact with the remote service:
public class Client {
private ServiceAmbassador serviceAmbassador;
Client() {
serviceAmbassador = new ServiceAmbassador();
}
long useService(int value) {
long result = serviceAmbassador.doRemoteFunction(value);
LOGGER.info("Service result: " + result)
return result;
}
}
And here are two clients using the service.
Client host1 = new Client();
Client host2 = new Client();
host1.useService(12);
host2.useService(73);
Ambassador is applicable when working with a legacy remote service that cannot be modified or would be extremely difficult to modify. Connectivity features can be implemented on the client avoiding the need for changes on the remote service.
- Ambassador provides a local interface for a remote service.
- Ambassador provides logging, circuit breaking, retries and security on the client.
- Control access to another object
- Implement logging
- Implement circuit breaking
- Offload remote service tasks
- Facilitate network connection