How to do Blue Green Deployments on Azure ServiceFabric

0 votes

I'm using the ReliableActors framework to build an application on Azure ServiceFabric. Now, as we are scaling up, I'm looking at doing blue/green deployments. I understand that we can do this using a stateless system. But is there any way I can do this using statefull actors?

Apr 5, 2019 in Azure by sabby
• 4,370 points
753 views

1 answer to this question.

0 votes

The thing is Service Fabric is all about rolling upgrades how do you do blue/green deployments when upgrades are always rolling upgrades?

Service Fabric has this concept of versioned application types from which application instances can be created. So, you don't need to have two "environments" that can hold two running applications. 

Here is an example that might help you understand better:

Let's say I want to make an application called Foo. My Foo application is defined as an application type, call it FooType. This is similar to defining a class in C#. And like class in C#, I can create instances of my type. Each instance has a unique name, similar to how each object instance of a class has a unique variable name. But unlike classes in C#, my FooType has a version number. Then I can "register" the application type and version in my cluster:

FooType 1.0

With that registered, I can create an instance of that application:

"fabric:/FooApp" of FooType 1.0

Now, let's say I develop version 2.0 of my application. So I register version 2.0 of my FooType in the cluster:

FooType 1.0
FooType 2.0

Now I have both versions of FooType registered, and I still have an instance of 1.0 running:

"fabric:/FooApp" of FooType 1.0

Here's where it gets fun. I can do some interesting things:

I can take "fabric:/FooApp" - an instance of FooType 1.0 - and upgrade it to FooType 2.0. This will be a rolling upgrade of that running application.

Or.. I can leave "fabric:/FooApp" alone, and create a new instance of my version 2.0 application:

"fabric:/FooApp" of FooType 1.0
"fabric:/FooAppv2Test" of FooType 2.0

Now I have two applications, running side-by-side, in the same cluster. One is an instance of 1.0, and the other is an instance of 2.0. With some configuring of ports and application endpoints, I can ensure users are still going to the 1.0 instance while I test out the 2.0 instance.

Great, so all my tests pass against the 2.0 instance, so now I can safely take the 1.0 instance and upgrade it to 2.0 of FooType. Again, this is a rolling upgrade of that instance (fabric:/FooApp), it's not migrating users to the new instance (fabric:/FooAppv2Test). Later I'll go and delete fabric:/FooAppv2Test because that was just for testing.

One of the benefits of blue/green though is being able to swap back to the other deployment if the new one fails. Well, you still have both 1.0 and 2.0 of FooType registered. So if your application started misbehaving after the upgrade from 1.0 to 2.0, you can just "upgrade" it back to 1.0! In fact, you can "upgrade" an application instance between as many different versions of its application type as you want! And you don't need to have instances of all your application versions running like you do in a swapping environment, you just have the different versions registered and a single application instance that can "upgrade" between versions.

I mentioned caveats with stateful services. The big thing to remember with stateful services is that the application state - your users' data - is contained in the application instance (fabric:/FooApp), so for your users to see their data you need to keep them on that instance. That's why we do rolling upgrades instead of deployment swaps.

Hope this helps.

answered Apr 5, 2019 by Prerna
• 1,960 points

Related Questions In Azure

+1 vote
4 answers

How do Connect to Azure website via FTP?

First set up your FTP credentials are ...READ MORE

answered Oct 23, 2018 in Azure by abc
4,411 views
+1 vote
2 answers

How do I establish an connection to Azure IoT Hub? Say a connection like MQTT/AMQP using Python.

Azure IoT Hub comes with 3 SDK's: Service SDK Device ...READ MORE

answered Apr 13, 2018 in Azure by null_void
• 3,220 points
2,209 views
0 votes
1 answer

How to upload a file on to Azure Blob storage without writing a code?

You can find the below tools useful ...READ MORE

answered Apr 13, 2018 in Azure by club_seesharp
• 3,450 points
1,593 views
0 votes
1 answer

How to install Windows Azure Storage Emulator?

There may be an issue with the ...READ MORE

answered Mar 7, 2019 in Azure by Prerna
• 1,960 points
2,789 views
0 votes
1 answer

Azure Storage Emulator shows error.

Check if you are running BitTorrent/uTorrent or similar ...READ MORE

answered Mar 16, 2019 in Azure by Prerna
• 1,960 points
1,709 views
0 votes
1 answer

Friendly filename when downloading Azure blob.

Azure blobs can be downloaded in four ...READ MORE

answered Mar 16, 2019 in Azure by Prerna
• 1,960 points
3,767 views
0 votes
1 answer

How to debug Azure 500 internal server error?

You can simply turn off custom error in ...READ MORE

answered Mar 29, 2019 in Azure by Prerna
• 1,960 points
4,844 views
0 votes
1 answer

How to set default Web page for a website on Microsoft Windows Azure?

This blog post should resolve your issue: http://blogs.msdn.com/b/cesardelatorre/archive/2010/07/22/how-to-set-a-default-page-to-a-windows-azure-web-role-app-silverlight-asp-net-etc.aspx Look ...READ MORE

answered Mar 27, 2019 in Azure by Prerna
• 1,960 points
2,961 views
0 votes
1 answer

How do point my domain name to an Azure Website?

It is possible to have a CNAME directed ...READ MORE

answered Apr 12, 2019 in Azure by Prerna
• 1,960 points
825 views
webinar REGISTER FOR FREE WEBINAR X
REGISTER NOW
webinar_success Thank you for registering Join Edureka Meetup community for 100+ Free Webinars each month JOIN MEETUP GROUP