needle-project / laravel-rabbitmq
Simple rabbitmq integration for Laravel
Installs: 57 466
Dependents: 2
Suggesters: 0
Security: 0
Stars: 34
Watchers: 5
Forks: 18
Open Issues: 7
Requires
- php: 7.*|8.*
- php-amqplib/php-amqplib: >=2.7|3.*
Requires (Dev)
- laravel/framework: 7.*|8.*|9.*|10.*
- phpcompatibility/php-compatibility: ^9.3
- phpmd/phpmd: @stable
- phpstan/phpstan: ^1.10
- phpunit/phpunit: 9.*|10.*
- squizlabs/php_codesniffer: 3.7.*
This package is auto-updated.
Last update: 2024-10-31 11:36:26 UTC
README
Laravel RabbitMQ
A simple rabbitmq library for laravel based on Publish–Subscribe pattern where the subscriber is the Consumer.
Table of Contents
-
2.1. Connections
2.2. Queues
2.3. Exchanges
2.4. Publishers
2.5. Consumers
-
3.1. Publishing a message
3.2. Consuming a message
-
5.2 Required Help
1. Install
Run:
composer require needle-project/laravel-rabbitmq
For Laravel version 5.5 or higher the library should be automatically loaded via Package discovery.
For Laravel versions below 5.5 you need to add the service provider to app.php
:
<?php return [ // ... 'providers' => [ // ... NeedleProject\LaravelRabbitMq\Providers\ServiceProvider::class, ], // ... ];
2. Configure
- Create a new file called
laravel_rabbitmq.php
inside your Laravel's config directory. (Or useartisan vendor:publish
- Read more here) - Fill out the config based on your needs.
The configuration files has 5 main nodes: connections, exchanges, queues, publishers, consumers.
They are used in the following mode:
Example config:
return [ 'connections' => [ 'connectionA' => [/** Connection A attributes */], 'connectionB' => [/** Connection B attributes */], ], 'exchanges' => [ 'exchangeA' => [ // Tells that the exchange will use the connection A 'connection' => 'connectionA', /** Exchange A Attributes */ ], 'exchangeB' => [ // Tells that the exchange will use the connection B 'connection' => 'connectionB', /** Exchange B Attributes */ ] ], 'queues' => [ 'queueA' => [ // Tells that the queue will use the connection alias A 'connection' => 'connectionA', /** Queue A Attributes */ ] ], 'publishers' => [ 'aPublisherName' => /** will publish to exchange defined by alias */ 'exchangeA' ], 'consumers' => [ 'aConsumerName' => [ // will read messages from 'queue' => 'queueA', // and will send the for processing to an "NeedleProject\LaravelRabbitMq\Processor\MessageProcessorInterface" 'message_processor' => \NeedleProject\LaravelRabbitMq\Processor\CliOutputProcessor::class ] ] ]
2.1. Connections
Connection attributes:
- All attributes are optional, if not defined the defaults will be used.
2.2. Queues
Queue main nodes:
Queue attributes
Example 1:
[ ['exchange' => 'first.exchange', 'routing_key' => '*'], ['exchange' => 'second.exchange', 'routing_key' => 'foo_bar'], ]
2.3. Exchanges
Exchange main nodes:
Exchange attributes
Example 2:
[ ['queue' => 'first.exchange', 'routing_key' => '*'], ['queue' => 'second.exchange', 'routing_key' => 'foo_bar'], ]
2.4. Publishers
A publisher push a message on an exchange (but it can also push it on a queue). Defining a publishers:
'publishers' => [ 'myFirstPublisher' => 'echangeAliasName', 'mySecondPublisher' => 'queueAliasName' // and many as you need ]
2.5. Consumers
A consumer will always get message from a queue. Define a consumer:
'consumers' => [ 'myConsumerName' => [ 'queue' => 'queueAliasName', 'prefetch_count' => 1, 'message_processor' => \NeedleProject\LaravelRabbitMq\Processor\CliOutputProcessor::class ] ]
3. Usage
After configuring, you should end up with a configuration file laravel_rabbitmq.php
similar to this one:
return [ 'connections' => [ 'connectionA' => [], ], 'exchanges' => [ 'exchangeA' => [ 'connection' => 'connectionA', 'name' => 'foo_bar', 'attributes' => [ 'exchange_type' => 'topic' ] ] ], 'queues' => [ 'queueB' => [ 'connection' => 'connectionA', 'name' => 'foo_bar_listener', 'attributes' => [ 'bind' => [ ['exchange' => 'foo_bar', 'routing_key' => '*'] ] ] ] ], 'publishers' => [ 'aPublisherName' => 'exchangeA' ], 'consumers' => [ 'aConsumerName' => [ 'queue' => 'queueB', 'message_processor' => \NeedleProject\LaravelRabbitMq\Processor\CliOutputProcessor::class ] ] ]
3.1. Publishing a message
Example of usage in code:
<?php /** * @var $app \Illuminate\Contracts\Container\Container * @var $publisher \NeedleProject\LaravelRabbitMq\PublisherInterface */ $publisher = $app->makeWith(PublisherInterface::class, ['aPublisherName']); $message = [ 'title' => 'Hello world', 'body' => 'Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.', ]; $routingKey = '*'; $publisher->publish(json_encode($message), /* optional */$routingKey);
Optional, there is a command that can be used to publish a message.
php artisan rabbitmq:publish aPublisherName MyMessage
Note: At the moment, routing key in CLI is not supported.
3.2. Consuming a message
Consuming message should be done by running a command in deamon mode. While PHP is not intended to do that, you can use supervisor for that.
The flow of the consumer is rather simple:
CLI Consumers -> Get message -> Passes it to the message_processor
key from configuration.
A message processor is a class that implements NeedleProject\LaravelRabbitMq\Processor
interface. If you do no want to handle acknowledgement you can extend \NeedleProject\LaravelRabbitMq\Processor\AbstractMessageProcessor
which require implementation of processMessage(AMQPMessage $message): bool
method.
You message_processor
key is runned by laravel's app
command for build of the class.
Start the message consumer/listener:
php artisan rabbitmq:consume aConsumerName
Running consumers with limit (it will stop when one of the limits are reached)
php artisan rabbitmq:consume aConsumerName --time=60 --messages=100 --memory=64
This tells the consumer to stop if it run for 1 minute or consumer 100 messages or has reached 64MB of memory usage.
3.3. Available commands
When running php artisan
a new namespace will be present:
3.4. Custom Message Processor
At the current moment there is the possibility to either implement the MessageProcessorInterface
class or extend the AbstractMessageProcessor
.
When using the AbstractMessageProcessor
, you will have access to extra API than can be used in your processMessage()
:
protected function ack(AMQPMessage $message); protected function nack(AMQPMessage $message, bool $redeliver = true);
5. Contribute
You are free to contribute by submitting pull request or reporting any issue in Github. At the current stage of the project, no contribution procedure is defined.
5.1 Local Development
Run composer install (with ignore-platform-reqs to avoid missing extensions):
docker run --rm -v $(pwd):/app jitesoft/phpunit:8.1 composer install --ignore-platform-req=ext-sockets
Run unit tests via Docker:
docker run --rm -v $(pwd):/app jitesoft/phpunit:8.1 phpunit --configuration phpunit.xml
5.2. Required Help
There are multiple topics for which the library needs help
- CI Pipeline: There is a need for a configuration of scrutinizer (or any other tool) that can cover running tests for all supported PHP Versions and Laravel Framework versions
- Documentation: Any improvement to easy the use of the library it's welcome
- Examples: A section of examples that proves the library's different real-world scenario examples
6. Special "Thank you"
Special "Thank you" goes out to the library contributors.