https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rendezvous_hashing.
npm install hrw-hash
import { hrwHash } from 'hrw-hash'
// or const { hrwHash } = require('hrw-hash')
const servers = ['image-server-1.example.com', 'image-server-2.example.com']
const domainToUse = hrwHash('example.png', servers)[0] // always 'image-server-2.example.com'
Advantage of this hashing over other sticky load balancing algorithms is that:
- it does not use a shared lookup table / ring
- it is independent of the order of destinations (hrwHash('john', ['a', 'b']) is same as hrwHash('john', ['b', 'a']))
- it distributes keys evenly (probabilistically) when a destination is added or removed
Disadvantage of this hashing method:
- Replacing a destination with another one will re-route keys unnecessarily as the algo is order insensitive
The implementation is small (0.5 kb minified) and with no 3rd party dependencies. It uses bigint, unescape and encodeURIComponent, so it supports modern browsers, node.js >= 12.5.0 and cloudflare workers.
It uses mulberry32(fnv1a32('key'))
as hash function internally for the random hash. In my tests, this gives better distribution than fnv1a-32 alone and still keeps the implementation fast and small.
// for advanced use cases you can import the hash function
import { hashFunc } from 'hrw-hash'
hashFunc('string') // returns positive integer < 2^32
Test the types against https://arethetypeswrong.github.io
- Removed minified dist files (dist/*.min.js). If you want minified build for browser, then use
import { hrwHash } from 'https://esm.sh/hrw-hash'
- Removed UMD build
- Changed minimum node.js version requirement from >= v12.0.0 to >= 12.5.0