I Message Queue (imq)
Simple JSON-based messaging queue for inter service communication
Features
With current implementation on RedisQueue:
- Fast unwarranted message delivery (if consumer grab the message and dies
message will be lost). Up to ~35-40k of 1Kb messages per second on i7 core by
benchmarks.
- Fast warranted message delivery (only 1.5-2 times slower than
unwarranted). If consumer grab a message and dies it will be re-scheduled
in queue. Up to ~20-25K of 1Kb messages per second on i7 core by benchmarks.
- No timers or constant redis polling used for implementation, as result -
no delays in delivery and low CPU usage on application workers. When idling
it does not consume resources!
- Supports gzip compression for messages (decrease traffic usage, but
slower).
- Concurrent workers model supported, the same queue can have multiple
consumers.
- Delayed messages supported, fast as ~10K of 1Kb messages per second on i7
core by benchmarks.
- Safe predictable scaling of queues. Scaling number of workers does not
influence traffic usage.
- Round-robin message balancing between several redis instances. This
allows easy messaging queue redis horizontal scaling.
- TypeScript included!
Requirements
Currently this module have only one available adapter which is Redis server
related. So redis-server > 3.8+ is required.
If config command is disabled on redis it will be required to turn on manually
keyspace notification events (actual on use with ElasticCache on AWS), like:
notify-keyspace-events Ex
Further, more adapters will be added... if needed.
Install
npm i --save imq
Usage
import IMQ, { IMessageQueue, IJson } from 'imq';
(async () => {
const queueOne: IMessageQueue = IMQ.create('QueueOne');
const queueTwo: IMessageQueue = IMQ.create('QueueTwo');
await queueOne.start();
await queueTwo.start();
queueOne.on('message', (message: IJson, id: string, fromQueue: string) => {
console.log('queueOne message received:', message, id, fromQueue);
if (message.delay) {
queueOne.destroy();
queueTwo.destroy();
}
});
queueTwo.on('message', (message: IJson, id: string, fromQueue: string) => {
console.log('queueTwo message received:', message, id, fromQueue);
});
await queueOne.send('QueueTwo', { hello: 'two' });
await queueTwo.send('QueueOne', { hello: 'one' });
const delay = 1000;
await queueOne.send('QueueOne', { delay }, delay);
})();
Benchmarking
First of all make sure redis-server is running on the localhost. Current
version of benchmark supposed to have redis running localhost because
it is going to measure it's CPU usage stats.
All workers during benchmark test will have their dedicated CPU affinity
to make sure collected stats as accurate as possible.
git clone git@github.com:Mikhus/imq.git
cd imq
node benchmark -c 4 -m 10000
Other possible benchmark options:
node benchmark -h
Options:
--version Show version number [boolean]
-h, --help Show help [boolean]
-c, --children Number of children test process to fork
-d, --delay Number of milliseconds to delay message delivery
for delayed messages. By default delayed
messages is of and this argument is equal to 0.
-m, --messages Number of messages to be sent by a child process
during test execution.
-z, --gzip Use gzip for message encoding/decoding.[boolean]
-s, --safe Use safe (guaranteed) message delivery
algorithm. [boolean]
-e, --example-message Path to a file containing JSON of example
message to use during the tests.
-p, --port Redis server port to connect to.
-t, --message-multiply-times Increase sample message data given number of
times.
Number of child workers running message queues are limited to a max number
of CPU in the system -2. First one, which is CPU0 is reserved for OS tasks and
for stats collector process. Second, which is CPU1 is dedicated to redis
process running on a local machine, All others are safe to run queue workers.
For example, if there is 8 cores on a machine it is safe to run up to 6 workers.
For 4-core machine this number is limited to 2.
If there is less cores results will not give good visibility of load.
NOTE: paragraphs above this note are Linux-only related! On MacOS
there is no good way to set process affinity to a CPU core, Windows support is
not tested and is missing for the moment in benchmarking. I does not mean
benchmark will not work on Mac & Win but the results won't be accurate and
predictable.
Running Unit Tests
git clone git@github.com:Mikhus/imq.git
cd imq
npm test
License
ISC