You know it and you like it. Using Rails you can just declare your routes and create a controller. That's all you need to process requests.
With Msgr you can do the same for asynchronous AMQP messaging. Just define your routes, create your consumer and watch your app processing messages.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'msgr', '~> 1.5'
And then execute:
bundle
Or install it yourself as:
gem install msgr
After adding 'msgr' to your Gemfile create a config/rabbitmq.yml
like this:
common: &common
uri: amqp://localhost/
test:
<<: *common
development:
<<: *common
production:
<<: *common
Specify your messaging routes in config/msgr.rb
:
route 'local.test.index', to: 'test#index'
route 'local.test.another_action', to: 'test#another_action'
Create your consumer in app/consumers
:
class TestConsumer < Msgr::Consumer
def index
data = { fuubar: 'abc' }
publish data, to: 'local.test.another_action'
end
def another_action
puts "#{payload.inspect}"
end
end
Use Msgr.publish
in to publish a message:
class TestController < ApplicationController
def index
@data = { abc: 'abc' }
Msgr.publish @data, to: 'local.test.index'
render nothing: true
end
end
Run client daemon with bundle exec msgr
.
Per default messages are automatically acknowledged, if no (n)ack is sent explicitly by the consumer. This can be disabled by setting the auto_ack
attribute to false
.
class TestConsumer < Msgr::Consumer
self.auto_ack = false
def index
data = { fuubar: 'abc' }
publish data, to: 'local.test.another_action'
end
end
Per default each message queue has a prefetch count of 1. This value can be changed when specifying the messaging routes:
route 'local.test.index', to: 'test#index', prefetch: 42
test:
<<: *common
pool_class: Msgr::TestPool
raise_exceptions: true
The Msgr::TestPool
pool implementation executes all consumers synchronously.
By enabling the raise_exceptions
configuration flag, we can ensure that exceptions raised in a consumer will not be swallowed by dispatcher (which it usually does in order to retry consuming the message).
In your spec_helper.rb
:
config.after(:each) do
# Flush the consumer queue
Msgr.client.stop delete: true
Msgr::TestPool.reset
end
In a test:
before { Msgr.client.start }
it 'executes the consumer' do
# Publish an event on our queue
Msgr.publish 'payload', to: 'msgr.queue.my_queue'
# Let the TestPool handle exactly one event
Msgr::TestPool.run count: 1
# And finally, assert that something happened
expect(actual).to eq expected
end
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request