What is load balancing?
Load balancing is the method of distributing network traffic equally across a pool of resources that support an application. Modern applications must process millions of users simultaneously and return the correct text, videos, images, and other data to each user in a fast and reliable manner. To handle such high volumes of traffic, most applications have many resource servers with duplicate data between them. A load balancer is a device that sits between the user and the server group and acts as an invisible facilitator, ensuring that all resource servers are used equally.
What are the benefits of load balancing?
Load balancing directs and controls internet traffic between the application servers and their visitors or clients. As a result, it improves an application’s availability, scalability, security, and performance.
Application availability
Server failure or maintenance can increase application downtime, making your application unavailable to visitors. Load balancers increase the fault tolerance of your systems by automatically detecting server problems and redirecting client traffic to available servers. You can use load balancing to make these tasks easier:
- Run application server maintenance or upgrades without application downtime
- Provide automatic disaster recovery to backup sites
- Perform health checks and prevent issues that can cause downtime
Application scalability
You can use load balancers to direct network traffic intelligently among multiple servers. Your applications can handle thousands of client requests because load balancing does the following:
- Prevents traffic bottlenecks at any one server
- Predicts application traffic so that you can add or remove different servers, if needed
- Adds redundancy to your system so that you can scale with confidence
Application security
Load balancers come with built-in security features to add another layer of security to your internet applications. They are a useful tool to deal with distributed denial of service attacks, in which attackers flood an application server with millions of concurrent requests that cause server failure. Load balancers can also do the following:
- Monitor traffic and block malicious content
- Automatically redirect attack traffic to multiple backend servers to minimize impact
- Route traffic through a group of network firewalls for additional security
Application performance
Load balancers improve application performance by increasing response time and reducing network latency. They perform several critical tasks such as the following:
- Distribute the load evenly between servers to improve application performance
- Redirect client requests to a geographically closer server to reduce latency
- Ensure the reliability and performance of physical and virtual computing resources
What are load balancing algorithms?
A load balancing algorithm is the set of rules that a load balancer follows to determine the best server for each of the different client requests. Load balancing algorithms fall into two main categories.
Static load balancing
Static load balancing algorithms follow fixed rules and are independent of the current server state. The following are examples of static load balancing.
Round-robin method
Servers have IP addresses that tell the client where to send requests. The IP address is a long number that is difficult to remember. To make it easy, a Domain Name System maps website names to servers. When you enter aws.amazon.com into your browser, the request first goes to our name server, which returns our IP address to your browser.
In the round-robin method, an authoritative name server does the load balancing instead of specialized hardware or software. The name server returns the IP addresses of different servers in the server farm turn by turn or in a round-robin fashion.
Weighted round-robin method
In weighted round-robin load balancing, you can assign different weights to each server based on their priority or capacity. Servers with higher weights will receive more incoming application traffic from the name server.
IP hash method
In the IP hash method, the load balancer performs a mathematical computation, called hashing, on the client IP address. It converts the client IP address to a number, which is then mapped to individual servers.
Dynamic load balancing
Dynamic load balancing algorithms examine the current state of the servers before distributing traffic. The following are some examples of dynamic load balancing algorithms.
Least connection method
A connection is an open communication channel between a client and a server. When the client sends the first request to the server, they authenticate and establish an active connection between each other. In the least connection method, the load balancer checks which servers have the fewest active connections and sends traffic to those servers. This method assumes that all connections require equal processing power for all servers.
Weighted least connection method
Weighted least connection algorithms assume that some servers can handle more active connections than others. Therefore, you can assign different weights or capacities to each server, and the load balancer sends the new client requests to the server with the least connections by capacity.
Least response time method
The response time is the total time that the server takes to process the incoming requests and send a response. The least response time method combines the server response time and the active connections to determine the best server. Load balancers use this algorithm to ensure faster service for all users.
Resource-based method
In the resource-based method, load balancers distribute traffic by analyzing the current server load. Specialized software called an agent runs on each server and calculates usage of server resources, such as its computing capacity and memory. Then, the load balancer checks the agent for sufficient free resources before distributing traffic to that server.
How does load balancing work?
Companies usually have their application running on multiple servers. Such a server arrangement is called a server farm. User requests to the application first go to the load balancer. The load balancer then routes each request to a single server in the server farm best suited to handle the request.
Load balancing is like the work done by a manager in a restaurant. Consider a restaurant with five waiters. If customers were allowed to choose their waiters, one or two waiters could be overloaded with work while the others are idle. To avoid this scenario, the restaurant manager assigns customers to the specific waiters who are best suited to serve them.
What are the types of load balancing?
We can classify load balancing into three main categories depending on what the load balancer checks in the client request to redirect the traffic.
Application load balancing
Complex modern applications have several server farms with multiple servers dedicated to a single application function. Application load balancers look at the request content, such as HTTP headers or SSL session IDs, to redirect traffic.
For example, an ecommerce application has a product directory, shopping cart, and checkout functions. The application load balancer sends requests for browsing products to servers that contain images and videos but do not need to maintain open connections. By comparison, it sends shopping cart requests to servers that can maintain many client connections and save cart data for a long time.
Network load balancing
Network load balancers examine IP addresses and other network information to redirect traffic optimally. They track the source of the application traffic and can assign a static IP address to several servers. Network load balancers use the static and dynamic load balancing algorithms described earlier to balance server load.
Global server load balancing
Global server load balancing occurs across several geographically distributed servers. For example, companies can have servers in multiple data centers, in different countries, and in third-party cloud providers around the globe. In this case, local load balancers manage the application load within a region or zone. They attempt to redirect traffic to a server destination that is geographically closer to the client. They might redirect traffic to servers outside the client’s geographic zone only in case of server failure.
DNS load balancing
In DNS load balancing, you configure your domain to route network requests across a pool of resources on your domain. A domain can correspond to a website, a mail system, a print server, or another service that is made accessible through the internet. DNS load balancing is helpful for maintaining application availability and balancing network traffic across a globally distributed pool of resources.
What are the types of load balancing technology?
Load balancers are one of two types: hardware load balancer and software load balancer.
Hardware load balancers
A hardware-based load balancer is a hardware appliance that can securely process and redirect gigabytes of traffic to hundreds of different servers. You can store it in your data centers and use virtualization to create multiple digital or virtual load balancers that you can centrally manage.
Software load balancers
Software-based load balancers are applications that perform all load balancing functions. You can install them on any server or access them as a fully managed third-party service.
Comparison of hardware balancers to software load balancers
Hardware load balancers require an initial investment, configuration, and ongoing maintenance. You might also not use them to full capacity, especially if you purchase one only to handle peak-time traffic spikes. If traffic volume increases suddenly beyond its current capacity, this will affect users until you can purchase and set up another load balancer.
In contrast, software-based load balancers are much more flexible. They can scale up or down easily and are more compatible with modern cloud computing environments. They also cost less to set up, manage, and use over time.
How can AWS help with load balancing?
Elastic Load Balancing (ELB) is a fully managed load balancing service that automatically distributes incoming application traffic to multiple targets and virtual appliances across AWS and on-premises resources. You can use it to scale modern applications without complex configurations or API gateways. You can use ELB to set up four different types of software load balancers.
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An Application Load Balancer routes traffic for HTTP-based requests.
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A Network Load Balancer routes traffic based on IP addresses. It is ideal for balancing TCP and User Datagram Protocol (UDP)-based requests.
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A Gateway Load Balancer routes traffic to third-party virtual appliances. It is ideal for incorporating a third-party appliance, such as a network firewall, into your network traffic in a scalable and easy-to-manage way.
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A Classic Load Balancer routes traffic to applications in the Amazon EC2-Classic network—a single, flat network that you share with other customers.
You can select the load balancer based on your requirements. For example, Terminix, a global pest control brand, uses Gateway Load Balancer to handle 300% more throughput. Second Spectrum, a company that provides artificial intelligence-driven tracking technology for sports broadcasts, uses AWS Load Balancer Controller to reduce hosting costs by 90%. Code.org, a nonprofit dedicated to expanding access to computer science in schools, uses Application Load Balancer to handle a 400% spike in traffic efficiently during online coding events.
Get started with load balancing by creating an AWS account today!