I want to create a UI to see all the messages that are flowing through all exchanges in RabbitMQ server (of course other than the management console).
I am also using Mass Transit over rabbit but i am not sure if this matters.
Is this at all possible without having to code a consumer for each one of them one by one? If yes, any starting points?
The message exchanges used for publishing, as well as sending, are all bound to an exchange that has the same name as the queue for message delivery. So you could bind your own wire tap exchange on the broker to any queue exchange, and wiretap the messages to another queue of your choosing.
You can view the RabbitMQ topology layout in the documentation.
It was specifically done this way to make it easy to wiretap any endpoint, since all messages flow through a single fanout exchange.
This is a pretty broad question because it's not entirely obvious what you mean by "see", but regardless, you could create an observer on your bus. It's documented here and I think it's fairly straightforward: https://masstransit-project.com/MassTransit/usage/observers.html
In the observer you can handle various events when any message hits the MT message bus, and perform some kind of operation (like print the message, add logging, metrics, etc). If you have a microservice scenario it might be a good idea to add an observer to your shared library and add it to the bus in your individual applications.
Related
I have a hard time understanding the basic concepts of RabbitMQ. I find the online documentation not perfectly clear.
So far I understand, what a channel, a queue, a binding etc. is.
But how would the following use case be implemented:
Use Case: Sender posts to one exchange with different topics. On the receiver side, depending on the topic, different receivers should be notified.
So the following should somehow be feasible with a topic exchange:
create a channel
within this channel, create a topic exchange
for each topic to be subscribed to, create a queue and a queue binding with this topic as property
My difficulty is that the callback would be related to the channel, not to the queue or the queue binding. I am not 100 % sure if I am right here.
So that's my question: in order to have multiple callbacks, IOW: different message handlers, depending on the subscribed topic - do you have to create multiple channels, one for each "different message handling"? All these channels should grab the same exchange and define their own queue + queue binding for that specific topic?
Please confirm if this is correct or if I am straying from the canonic path of AMPQ ... "queue" sounds so light-weight, so I intuitively thought of a queue or a queue binding as the right point to attach a consuming event handler to, but it seems that, instead, channel is my friend in this. Right?
Another aspect of my question:
If I really have to use multiple channels for this, do I have to declare the same exchange (exchange name and exchange type of "topic") for each channel? I hoped there was something like:
define the exchange with this name and the type of "topic" once
for each channel, "grab" this predefined exchange and use it by adding queues and queue bindings to this exchange
I find it helpful to think about the roles of the broker (RabbitMQ) and the clients (your applications) separately.
The broker, RabbitMQ, will receive messages from your publishers, route them to queues, and eventually send them to consumers. The message routing can be simple or complex. In your case, the routing is topic based with a few different queues.
You haven't said much about the publishers, likely because their job is simple. They send messages with a routing key to RabbitMQ.
The consumer side is where things can get interesting. At the simplest level, a consumer subscribes to a queue, receives messages from RabbitMQ, and processes them. The consumer opens a connection to RabbitMQ and will use a channel for a particular use (e.g., subscribing to a queue). The power of message brokers is that they allow designers to break up processes into separate apps if desired.
You don't give much insight into your application, other than the presence of different message topics. An important design choice for you to make is how to define the application(s). Are the different topics suitable for separate applications, or will a single application handle all types of messages.
For the former case, you would have one application for each queue. A single channel that subscribes to the queue is probably the most sensible decision unless your application needs to be threaded. For threaded applications, each thread would have its own channel and all threads can be subscribed to the same queue. Each application would have its own callback function for processing that type of message.
For the latter case (single application with multiple queues), the best approach would be to have at least one channel per queue. It sounds like each queue would require its own callback function, and you would assign the functions to the channels according to its subscription. You might have multiple channels per queue if your application can process multiple messages (of each topic) simultaneously.
Regarding your question about declaring exchanges, queues, and bindings, these items only need to be created once. But it is reasonable practice to have your clients declare them at connection time. Advantages of declaring them are that they will be created again if they were deleted and that any discrepancies between your declaration and what is on the broker will trigger errors.
I have implemented the example from the RabbitMQ website:
RabbitMQ Example
I have expanded it to have an application with a button to send a message.
Now I started two consumer on two different computers.
When I send the message the first message is sent to computer1, then the second message is sent to computer2, the thrid to computer1 and so on.
Why is this, and how can I change the behavior to send each message to each consumer?
Why is this
As noted by Yazan, messages are consumed from a single queue in a round-robin manner. The behavior your are seeing is by design, making it easy to scale up the number of consumers for a given queue.
how can I change the behavior to send each message to each consumer?
To have each consumer receive the same message, you need to create a queue for each consumer and deliver the same message to each queue.
The easiest way to do this is to use a fanout exchange. This will send every message to every queue that is bound to the exchange, completely ignoring the routing key.
If you need more control over the routing, you can use a topic or direct exchange and manage the routing keys.
Whatever type of exchange you choose, though, you will need to have a queue per consumer and have each message routed to each queue.
you can't it's controlled by the server check Round-robin dispatching section
It decides which consumer turn is. i'm not sure if there is a set of algorithms you can pick from, but at the end server will control this (i think round robin algorithm is default)
unless you want to use routing keys and exchanges
I would see this more as a design question. Ideally, producers should create the exchanges and the consumers create the queues and each consumer can create its own queue and hook it up to an exchange. This makes sure every consumer gets its message with its private queue.
What youre doing is essentially 'worker queues' model which is used to distribute tasks among worker nodes. Since each task needs to be performed only once, the message is sent to only one node. If you want to send a message to all the nodes, you need a different model called 'pub-sub' where each message is broadcasted to all the subscribers. The following link shows a simple pub-sub tutorial
https://www.rabbitmq.com/tutorials/tutorial-three-python.html
I have a service that consumes messages from a RabbitMQ queue (posting to the queue is done through a topic exchange). Assuming that the service can theoretically fail and lose its state, possibility to back up all the messages for disaster recovery would come in handy.
The first idea that comes to mind is adding another binding for the topic exchange so that the messages are also posted to another queue, and creating a custom service for backing up messages that would listen on that queue. But this sounds much like a potential reinvention of the wheel. Is there a simpler way to do this with RabbitMQ (plugin/existing service/etc)?
Found out that it's possible to do with a combination of a firehose and a tracing plugin.
RabbitMQ cluster, as specified in Clustering Guide and Highly Available Queues will do what you want in the right way.
I need to build a system that uses a Publish/Subscribe bus (e.g. Mule, ZeroMQ, RabbitMQ), but the literature all implies that subscriber applications are reliably available to receive messages from topics to which they subscribe as soon as the Pub/Sub bus is able to deliver the message.
I have a system where some of the applications will be reliably connected to the Publish/Subscribe bus, but other applications will not be active or connected to the bus all the time.
The obvious solution is to have some sort of "presence" protocol between the unreliable application and the Publish/Subscribe bus so that "present" applications get their messages delivered immediately, and "not present" applications have their messages queued up in a persistent buffer of some kind, and as soon as they complete the "presence handshake", the queued messages are delivered to the newly present application.
Are there any Publish/Subscribe buses which have this kind of feature built in, or are there any open-source add-ons which do this? Can you point me to any URLs which describe this?
You can achieve this behaviour quite easily with any AMQP-compliant broker (such as RabbitMQ).
Choose the correct exchange type for your usage model. You'll want to use a direct exchange if you're always sending to absolutely named destinations, something like chat.messages.
If you want to do pattern-based routing, you'll want to use topic exchange. Then you can route based on patterns such a chat.messages.*.
Routing is described in more detail in the RabbitMQ Tutorials.
To create the kind of persistent subscription that you mention, have each subscriber create a queue that is private to that subscriber. The queue is then bound to the relevant routing keys on your chosen exchange.
Since each subscriber has its own queue, messages will be consumed by the subscriber when active and stored when subscriber is inactive or disconnected.
You haven't mentioned your language of choice, but in Java you can accomplish this with JMS using durable subscribers. Any implementation of JMS (there are many, including the aforementioned RabbitMQ) will support this feature.
Pretty new to RabbitMQ and we're still in the investigation stage to see if it's a good fit for our use cases--
We've readily come to the conclusion that our desired topology would have us deploying a few topic based exchanges, and then filtering from there to specific queues. For example, let's say we have a user and an upload exchange, where the user queue might receive messages where the topic is "new-registration" or "friend-request" and the upload exchange might receive messages like "video-upload" or "picture-upload".
Creating the queues, getting them routed to the appropriate queue, and then building listeners to handle the messages for the various queues has been quite straight forward.
What's unclear to me however is if it's possible to do a fanout on a topic exchange?
I.e. I have named queues that are bound to my topic exchange, but I'd like to be able to just throw tons of instances of my listeners at those queues to prevent single points of failure. But to the best of my knowledge, RabbitMQ treats these listeners in a straight forward round robin fashion--e.g. every Nth message always go to the same Nth listener rather than dispatching messages to the first available consumer. This is generally acceptable to us but given the load we anticipate, we'd like to avoid the possibility of hot spots developing amongst our consumer farm.
So, is there some way, either in the queue or exchange configuration or in the consumer code, where we can point our listeners to a topic queue but have the listeners treated in a fanout fashion?
Yes, by having the listeners bind using different queue names, they will be treated in a fanout fashion.
Fanout is 1:N though, i.e. each task can be delivered to multiple listeners like pub-sub. Note that this isn't restricted to a fanout exchange, but also applies if you bind multiple queues to a direct or topic exchange with the same binding key. (Installing the management plugin and looking at the exchanges there may be useful to visualize the bindings in effect.)
Your current setup is a task queue. Each task/message is delivered to exactly one worker/listener. Throw more listeners at the same queue name, and they will process the tasks round-robin as you say. With "fanout" (separate queues for a topic) you will process a task multiple times.
Depending on your platform there may be existing work queue solutions that meet your requirements, such as Resque or DelayedJob for Ruby, Celery for Python or perhaps Octobot or Akka for the JVM.
I don't know for a fact, but I strongly suspect that RabbitMQ will skip consumers with unacknowledged messages, so it should never bottleneck on a single stuck consumer. The comments on their FAQ seem to suggest that RabbitMQ will make an effort to keep things chugging along even in the presence of troublesome consumers.
This is a late answer, but in case others come across this question...
It sounds like what you want is fair dispatch rather than a fan out model (which would publish a given message to every queue).
Fair dispatch will give a message to the next available worker rather than using a simple round-robin approach. This should avoid the "hotspots" you are concerned about, without delivering the same message to multiple consumers.
If this is what you are looking for, then see the "Fair Dispatch" section on this page in the Rabbit docs. A prefetch count of 1 is the key here.