Dmitriy Govorukhin, ServerImpl process TcpDiscoveryJoinRequestMessage, TcpDiscoveryStatusCheckMessage, TcpDiscoveryDiscardMessage and TcpDiscoveryRingLatencyCheckMessage while ClientImpl process TcpDiscoveryPingRequest. Thats the difference I see between server and client node message workers.
2017-06-28 13:52 GMT+03:00 Dmitry Pavlov <dpavlov....@gmail.com>: > Hi, > ok, if we have 3 type of nodes: - clients - servers - daemons. Let us merge > all types of daemons in one daemon type and remove unused code for server > daemon. Are there any concerns about this idea? > > Best Regards, > Dmitry Pavlov > > ср, 28 июн. 2017 г. в 12:19, Dmitriy Govorukhin < > dmitriy.govoruk...@gmail.com>: > > > What kind of messages are you talking about? Please, provide example. > > > > On Wed, Jun 28, 2017 at 11:54 AM, Дмитрий Рябов <somefire...@gmail.com> > > wrote: > > > Some messages don't go through clients. May be some daemon realization > > will > > > need them? > > > > > > 2017-06-28 11:22 GMT+03:00 Dmitriy Govorukhin < > > dmitriy.govoruk...@gmail.com> > > > : > > > > > >> Dmitriy, > > >> > > >> Why daemon node may be server or client? Why it is not just daemon? I > > >> guess if daemon " do not store data or > > >> execute computations " it must be always client daemon. For me, daemon > > >> server, very strange. > > >> > > >> On Wed, Jun 28, 2017 at 1:25 AM, Dmitriy Setrakyan > > >> <dsetrak...@apache.org> wrote: > > >> > Daemon nodes are nodes that join the cluster, but do not store data > or > > >> > execute computations or perform any other of the Ignite API-based > > >> > functionality. Visor node is a good example of a daemon node, > because > > it > > >> > wants to join the cluster and receive metrics from other nodes, but > > does > > >> > not need to participate in computation or data related > functionality. > > >> > > > >> > D. > > >> > > > >> > On Tue, Jun 27, 2017 at 2:49 AM, Dmitriy Govorukhin < > > >> > dmitriy.govoruk...@gmail.com> wrote: > > >> > > > >> >> Hi Igniters, > > >> >> > > >> >> Can somebody explain what does mean daemon node? I thought that > > exist > > >> >> only client and server node, but node may can be daemon (server > > daemon > > >> >> or client daemon). As is can see, command line visor join in > > topology > > >> >> as server daemon. Can this be an outdated functionality? > > >> >> > > >> > > >