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Roger, Rabbit

amqp with automagic redials

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Repo Documentation Go Reference

Basic Overview

Roger, Rabbit is a wrapper and drop-in replacement for streadway/amqp that offers the following enhancements:

  • Automatic Connection Recoveries: Both Connection and Channel objects will automatically recover from unexpected broker disconnections, and restore their states and settings so you don't miss a beat.
  • Custom Middleware: For all methods and events.
  • Testing utilities: Force reconnects, and Testify helpers for common setup requirements.
  • Convenience Types:
    • Confirmation Producers: handles broker confirmation on publish before returning.
    • Consumer Framework: Register http-like handlers to consume from queues, with nack-on-error, max concurrent worker, and other boilerplate.

Getting Started

This package assumes you are familiar with RabbitMQ and the streadway/amqp package. It does not offer a tutorial of basic functionality, instead highlighting what sets it apart from the officially sanctioned driver.

The official tutorials use streadway/amqp in their Go walkthroughs. Users are encouraged to start there. You can still follow along using this package by changing "github.com/streadway/amqp" import statements to "github.com/peake100/rogerRabbit-go/pkg/amqp".

If you find any examples that do NOT work after such a replacement, please open a PR!

For quickstart and guides: read the docs.

For full API documentation: pkg.go.dev.

For library development guide, read the docs.

Demo

Survive a Disconnection Event Using the amqp Package:

    // Get a new connection to our test broker.
    //
    // DialCtx is a new function that allows the Dial function to keep attempting
    // re-dials to the broker until the passed context expires.
    connection, err := amqp.DialCtx(context.Background(), amqptest.TestDialAddress)
    if err != nil {
        panic(err)
    }
    
    // Get a new channel from our robust connection.
    channel, err := connection.Channel()
    if err != nil {
        panic(err)
    }

    // We can use the Test method to return a testing harness with some additional
    // methods. ForceReconnect force-closes the underlying streadway Channel, causing
    // the robust Channel to reconnect.
    //
    // We'll use a dummy *testing.T object here. These methods are designed for tests
    // only and should not be used in production code.
    channel.Test(new(testing.T)).ForceReconnect(context.Background())
    
    // We can see here our channel is still open.
    fmt.Println("IS CLOSED:", channel.IsClosed())
    
    // We can even declare a queue on it
    queue, err := channel.QueueDeclare(
        "example_channel_reconnect", // name
        false,                       // durable
        true,                        // autoDelete
        false,                       // exclusive
        false,                       // noWait
        nil,                         // args
    )
    if err != nil {
        panic(err)
    }
    
    // Here is the result
    fmt.Printf("QUEUE    : %+v\n", queue)
    
    // Explicitly close the connection. This will also close all child channels.
    err = connection.Close()
    if err != nil {
        panic(err)
    }
    
    // Now that we have explicitly closed the connection, the channel will be closed.
    fmt.Println("IS CLOSED:", channel.IsClosed())
    
    // IS CLOSED: false
    // QUEUE    : {Name:example_channel_reconnect Messages:0 Consumers:0}
    // IS CLOSED: true

Effortless Publishing with Confirmations using the roger Package:

    // Get a new connection to our test broker.
    connection, err := amqp.DialCtx(context.Background(), amqptest.TestDialAddress)
    if err != nil {
        panic(err)
    }
    defer connection.Close()

    // Get a new channel from our robust connection for publishing. This channel will
    // be put into confirmation mode by the producer.
    channel, err := connection.Channel()
    if err != nil {
        panic(err)
    }

    // Declare a queue to produce to
    queue, err := channel.QueueDeclare(
        "example_confirmation_producer", // name
        false,                           // durable
        true,                            // autoDelete
        false,                           // exclusive
        false,                           // noWait
        nil,                             // args
    )

    // Create a new producer using our channel. Passing nil to opts will result in
    // default opts being used. By default, a Producer will put the passed channel in
    // confirmation mode, and each time publish is called, will block until a
    // confirmation from the server has been received.
    producer := rproducer.New(channel, nil)
    producerComplete := make(chan struct{})

    // Run the producer in it's own goroutine.
    go func() {
        // Signal this routine has exited on exit.
        defer close(producerComplete)

        err = producer.Run()
        if err != nil {
            panic(err)
        }
    }()

    messagesPublished := new(sync.WaitGroup)
    for i := 0; i < 10; i++ {

        messagesPublished.Add(1)

        // Publish each message in it's own goroutine The producer handles the
        // boilerplate of tracking publication tags and receiving broker confirmations.
        go func() {
            // Release our WaitGroup on exit.
            defer messagesPublished.Done()

            ctx, cancel := context.WithTimeout(context.Background(), 5*time.Second)
            defer cancel()

            // Publish a message, this method will block until we get a publication
            // confirmation from the broker OR ctx expires.
			err = producer.Publish(
				ctx,
				"", // exchange
				queue.Name, // queue
				true, // mandatory
				false, // immediate
				amqp.Publishing{
					Body: []byte("test message"),
				},
			)

            fmt.Println("Message Published and Confirmed!")

            if err != nil {
                panic(err)
            }
        }()
    }

    // Wait for all our messages to be published
    messagesPublished.Wait()

    // Start the shutdown of the producer
    producer.StartShutdown()

    // Wait for the producer to exit.
    <-producerComplete

    // exit.

    // Message Published and Confirmed!
    // Message Published and Confirmed!
    // Message Published and Confirmed!
    // Message Published and Confirmed!
    // Message Published and Confirmed!
    // Message Published and Confirmed!
    // Message Published and Confirmed!
    // Message Published and Confirmed!
    // Message Published and Confirmed!
    // Message Published and Confirmed!

Motivations

AMQP is a messaging protocol most commonly used by RabbitMQ.

streadway/amqp, the sanctioned RabbitMQ driver for Go, is an excellent library with a great API but limited scope. It offers a full implementation of the AMQP spec, but comes with very few additional quality-of-life features.

From its documentation:

Goals

  • Provide a functional interface that closely represents the AMQP 0.9.1 model targeted to RabbitMQ as a server. This includes the minimum necessary to interact the semantics of the protocol.

Things not intended to be supported:

  • Auto reconnect and re-synchronization of client and server topologies.

    • Reconnection would require understanding the error paths when the topology cannot be declared on reconnect. This would require a new set of types and code paths that are best suited at the call-site of this package. AMQP has a dynamic topology that needs all peers to agree. If this doesn't happen, the behavior is undefined. Instead of producing a possible interface with undefined behavior, this package is designed to be simple for the caller to implement the necessary connection-time topology declaration so that reconnection is trivial and encapsulated in the caller's application code.

Without a supplied way to handle reconnections, bespoke solutions abound.

Most of these solutions are overly-fitted to a specific problem (consumer vs producer or involve domain-specific logic), are prone to data races (can you spot them in the first link?), are cumbersome to inject into a production code (do we abort the business logic on an error or try to recover in-place?), and have bugs (each solution has its own redial bugs rather than finding them in a single lib where fixes can benefit everyone and community code coverage is high).

Nome of this is meant to disparage the above solutions -- they likely work great in the code they were created for -- but they point to a need that is not being filled by the sanctioned driver. The nature of the default *Channel API encourages solutions that are ill-suited to stateless handlers OR require you to handle retries every place you must interact with the broker. Such implementation details can be annoying when writing higher-level business logic and can lead to either unnecessary error returns, bespoke solutions in every project, or messy calling code at sites which need to interact with an AMQP broker.

Roger, Rabbit is inspired by aio-pika's robust connections and channels which abstract away connection management with an identical API to their non-robust counterparts, allowing robust AMQP broker interactions with minimal fuss and very few limitations.

NOTE:

Roger, Rabbit is not meant to supplant streadway/amqp (We build on top of it!), but an extension with quality-of-life features. Roger, Rabbit would not be possible without the amazing groundwork laid down by streadway/amqp.

Goals

The goals of the Roger, Rabbit package are as follows:

  • Offer a Drop-in Replacement for streadway/amqp: API's may be extended (adding fields to amqp.Config or additional methods to *amqp.Channel, for instance) but must not break existing code unless absolutely necessary.

  • Add as few Additional Error Paths as Possible: Errors may be extended with additional information concerning disconnect scenarios, but new error type returns from *Connection or *amqp.Channel should be an absolute last resort.

  • Be Highly Extensible: Roger, Rabbit seeks to offer a high degree of extensibility via features like middleware, in an effort to reduce the balkanization of amqp client solutions.

Current Limitations & Warnings

  • Performance: Roger, Rabbit has not been extensively benchmarked against streadway/amqp. To see preliminary benchmarks, take a look at the next section.

  • Transaction Support: Roger, Rabbit does not currently support amqp Transactions, as the author does not use them. Draft PR's with possible implementations are welcome!

  • Reliability: While the author uses this library in production, it is still early days, and more battle-testing will be needed before this library is promoted to version 1.0. PR's are welcome for Bug Fixes, code coverage, or new features.

Benchmarks

Because of Roger, Rabbit's middleware-driven design, some overhead is expected vs streadway proper. However, initial benchmarks are promising, and show only minimal impact. For most applications, the overhead cost is likely worth the cost for ease of development and flexibility.

Still, if absolute peak throughput is critical to an application, a less general and more tailored approach may be warranted.

Benchmarks can be found in ./amqp/benchmark_test.go.

Machine: Intel(R) Core(TM) i9-8950HK CPU @ 2.90GHz

OPERATION LIB EXECUTIONS NS/OP COMPARISON
QueueInspect sw 2,838 812,594 --
rr 2,470 813,269 +0.1%
Publish sw 74,559 28,882 --
rr 70,665 30,031 +4.0%
Publish & Confirm sw 34,528 59,703 --
rr 35,481 62,198 +4.2%
Consume (QoS 100) sw 75,433 27,206 --
rr 73,957 29,846 +9.7%

The above numbers were calculated by running each benchmark 4 times, then taking the fastest result for each library.

The benchmarks were run with the following command:

go test -p 1 -count 4 -bench=Comparison -run=NoTests -benchtime=2s ./...

Acknowledgements

This library is built on top of streadway/amqp and would not be possible without such an amazing foundation.

Prerequisites

Golang 1.6+

Attributions

Logo made by monkik from www.flaticon.com