transport-rabbit

0.9.0 • Public • Published

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Usage

This is an example of low-level API implemented by this library

const transport = queueTransport({ url: 'amqp://localhost:5672/' });

// on server
transport.server({
    consume: {
        queue: {
            exchange: 'log',
            routes: [ 'warn', 'info', 'error' ],
            options: {
                durable: true
            }
        }
    },
    handler: {
        warn: msg => console.warn(msg),
        info: msg => console.info(msg),
        error: msg => console.error(msg)
    }
});

// on client
const send = transport.client({
    produce: {
        queue: {
            exchange: 'log',
            routes: [ 'warn', 'info', 'error' ],
            options: {
                durable: true
            }
        }
    }
});

transport.getReady()
    .then(() => {
        send('Hello World', 'warn');
    });

But low level API only good for understanding how things actually work under the hood. It is recommended to use higher level API which predefine some messaging patterns such as pubsub, RPC or basic producer-consumer queues.

An example of higher-level API

const transport = queueTransport({ url: 'amqp://localhost:5672' });

// A: producer
const send = transport.createCommandSender('multiply-by-2');
transport.getReady().then(() => send(10));

// B: consumer
transport.createCommandServer('multiply-by-2', param => {
    return param * 2;
});

// C: consumer of results produced by consumer (B)
transport.createCommandResultRecipient('task', {
    result: num => console.log('got result %d', num),
    error: err => console.log('got error', err)
});

Higher level API implements most common scenarios of messaging between nodes and use lower level API internally.

Why not just use amqplib?

What problem this library is trying to solve? API provided by amqplib is awesome, but it requires some boilerplate code to be written every time we want to connect to the queue server. Usual workflow looks like that:

  1. open connection
  2. create channel
  3. set prefetch for channel (if we're going to consume some queues)
  4. assert exchanges
  5. assert queues
  6. bind exchanges to queues
  7. start consuming / producing messages from asserted queues / exchanges

In applications we usually interested only in messaging and not in all accidental complexity coming along with amqp protocol. Even if this is necessary to be able to use multiple channels, configure prefetch and handle logic of reconnecting in case of disconnects this should not be concern of our code, because if should be written every time in every node we want to connect to the queue.

Tests

npm run docker-test

check ./test/README.md for more details on testing

Readme

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Install

npm i transport-rabbit

Weekly Downloads

14

Version

0.9.0

License

MIT

Last publish

Collaborators

  • anatoliy
  • inca