I\'ve a problem which is giving me some hard time trying to figure it out the ideal solution and, to better explain it, I\'m going to expose my scenario here.
I think you're going in the right direction with a master job distributor and workers. I would have them communicate via HTTP.
I would choose C, C++, or Java to be clients, as they have capabilities to run scripts (execvp in C, System.Desktop.something in Java). Jobs could just be the name of a script and arguments to that script. You can have the clients return a status on the jobs. If the jobs failed, you could retry them. You can have the clients poll for jobs every minute (or every x seconds and make the server sort out the jobs)
PHP would work for the server.
MySQL would work fine for the database. I would just make two timestamps: start and end. On the server, I would look for WHEN SECONDS==0
Gearman seems like the perfect candidate for this scenario, you might even want to virtualize you windows machines to multiple worker nodes per machine depending on how much computing power you need.
Also the persistent queue system in gearman prevents jobs getting lost when a worker or the gearman server crashes. After a service restart the queue just continues where it has left off before crash/reboot, you don't have to take care of all this in your application and that is a big advantage and saves alot of time/code
Working out a custom solution might work but the advantages of gearman especially the persistent queue seem to me that this might very well be the best solution for you at the moment. I don't know about a windows binary for gearman though but i think it should be possible.
Rather than re-inventing the queuing wheel via SQL, you could use a messaging system like RabbitMQ or ActiveMQ as the core of your system. Each of these systems provides the AMQP protocol and has hard-disk backed queues. On the server you have one application that pushes new jobs into a "worker" queue according to your schedule and another that writes results from a "result" queue into the database (or acts on it some other way).
All the workers connect to RabbitMQ or ActiveMQ. They pop the work off the work queue, do the job and put the response into another queue. After they have done that, they ACK the original job request to say "its done". If a worker drops its connection, the job will be restored to the queue so another worker can do it.
Everything other than the queues (job descriptions, client details, completed work) can be stored in the database. But anything realtime should be put somewhere else. In my own work I'm streaming live power usage data and having many people hitting the database to poll it is a bad idea. I've written about live data in my system.
A simpler solution would be to have a single database with multiple php-nodes connected. If you use a proper RDBMS (MSql + InnoDB will do), you can have one table act as a queue. Each worker will then pull tasks from that to work on and write it back into the database upon completion, using transactions and locking to synchronise. This depends a bit on the size of input/output data. If it's large, this may not be the best scheme.
The setup of a master server and several workers looks right in your case.
On the master server I would install MySQL (Percona InnoDB version is stable and fast) in master-master replication so you won't have a single point of failure. The master server will host an API which the workers will pull at every N seconds. The master will check if there is a job available, if so it has to flag that the job has been assigned to the worker X and return the appropriate input to the worker (all of this via HTTP). Also, here you can store all the script files of the workers.
On the workers, I would strongly suggest you to install a Linux distro. On Linux it's easier to set up scheduled tasks and in general I think it's more appropriate for the job. With Linux you can even create a live cd or iso image with a perfectly configured worker and install it fast and easy on all the machines you want. Then set up a cron job that will RSync with the master server to update/modify the scripts. In this way you will change the files in just one place (the master server) and all the workers will get the updates.
In this configuration you don't care of the IPs or the number of workers because the workers are connecting to the master, not vice-versa.
The worker job is pretty easy: ask the API for a job, do it, send back the result via API. Rinse and repeat :-)
It looks like you're on the verge of recreating Gearman. Here's the introduction for Gearman:
Gearman provides a generic application framework to farm out work to other machines or processes that are better suited to do the work. It allows you to do work in parallel, to load balance processing, and to call functions between languages. It can be used in a variety of applications, from high-availability web sites to the transport of database replication events. In other words, it is the nervous system for how distributed processing communicates.
You can write both your client and the back-end worker code in PHP.
Re your question about a Gearman Server compiled for Windows: I don't think it's available in a neat package pre-built for Windows. Gearman is still a fairly young project and they may not have matured to the point of producing ready-to-run distributions for Windows.
Sun/MySQL employees Eric Day and Brian Aker gave a tutorial for Gearman at OSCON in July 2009, but their slides mention only Linux packages.
Here's a link to the Perl CPAN Testers project, that indicates that Gearman-Server can be built on Win32 using the Microsoft C compiler (cl.exe
), and it passes tests: http://www.nntp.perl.org/group/perl.cpan.testers/2009/10/msg5521569.html But I'd guess you have to download source code and build it yourself.