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Set up your rabbit instance using a declarative yaml file.

Project description

RoboRabbit

RoboRabbit is a simple to use, opinionated, asynchronous abstraction over amqp/RabbitMQ (using aio_pika) and configuration CLI.

Features

  • Create/assert Queues, Exchanges, and Bindings on connection
  • Declarative Queue, Exchange, Binding, and Connection configuration using YAML
  • Very straight forward async message handling
  • Command line interface for bootstrapping rabbit from your roborabbit yaml config file.

Installation

pip

$ pip install roborabbit

poetry

$ poetry add roborabbit

Handle queue messages

The simplest worker possible. Connection information is in the roborabbit.yaml file. The method run() takes an dictionary with a key/value pair:

  • key: queue - string, the name of the queue to listen to
  • value: handler - function, the callback function messages will be sent to

Notes

  • Dead letter exchanges/queues are created and bound for you. (default is {queue_name}_dlq and {queue_name}_dlx)
  • Messages are rejected and pushed into the dead letter queue when an exception is thrown.
  • Messages are nacked and returned to queue when disconnected (asyncio.CancelledError).
  • Messages are acked automatically after the callback has run without exception.
  • Multiple queues can be listened to at the same time.
  • Connection is honored in the following order
    • The Connection() class
    • Connection parameters defined in your roborabbit.yaml file
    • Environment variables (see environment variables section)
    • Default RabbitMQ connection values

environment variables

  • RABBIT_HOST default 'localhost'
  • RABBIT_USER default 'guest'
  • RABBIT_PASS default 'guest'
  • RABBIT_PORT default 5432
  • RABBIT_VIRTUALHOST default '/'
  • RABBIT_PREFETCH default 10

Basic Example

from roborabbit.roborabbit import RoboRabbit
from pathlib import Path

config_path = Path('roborabbit.yaml')
robo = RoboRabbit(config_path)

async def queue_handler(msg):
    print(msg)  # your logic here

await robo.run({'queue_1', queue_handler})

Explicit connection example

If you want control over the configuration, you can pass in the roborabbit connection object.

from roborabbit.connection import Connection
from roborabbit.roborabbit import RoboRabbit
from pathlib import Path

config_path = Path('roborabbit.yaml')
connection = Connection(
    host='not.localhost.com',
    username='bob',
    password='pas123',
    port=4499,
    virtualhost='/')

robo = RoboRabbit(config_path, connection)

async def queue_handler(msg):
    print(msg)  # your logic here

async def work():
    await robo.run({'queue_1', queue_handler})

Command

roborabbit --config path/to/roborabbit.yaml

info

Usage: roborabbit [OPTIONS]

  import yaml config file and creates a dictionary from it

Options:
  --config TEXT       Path to rabbit config yaml file
  --host TEXT         RabbitMQ host
  --port TEXT         RabbitMQ port
  --virtualhost TEXT  RabbitMQ virtualhost
  --username TEXT     RabbitMQ username
  --password TEXT     RabbitMQ password
  --help              Show this message and exit.

Override environment variables

RABBIT_USER=guest
RABBIT_PASS=guest
RABBIT_HOST=localhost
RABBIT_PORT=5672
RABBIT_VHOST=/

Example yaml files

Simple declare queue, exchange, and bind

host: localhost
username: guest
password: guest
virtualhost: /
port: 5672
exchanges:
  - name: exchange_1
    type: topic
queues:
  - name: queue_1
bindings:
  - from:
      type: exchange
      name: exchange_1
    to:
      type: queue
      name: queue_1
    routing_keys:
      - records.created

Header exchange declaration and binding

host: localhost
username: guest
password: guest
virtualhost: /
port: 5672
exchanges:
  - name: exchange_2
    type: headers
queues:
  - name: queue_2
bindings:
  - from:
      type: exchange
      name: exchange_2
    to:
      type: queue
      name: queue_1
    bind_options:
      - x-match: all
        hw-action: header-value

All Values Available

# Connection info
host: localhost
username: guest
password: guest
virtualhost: /
port: 5672

# Exchange declarations
exchanges:
  - name: string
    type: topic|headers|direct|fanout # topic is default
    durable: false # default
    auto_delete: true # default

# queue declarations
queues:
  - name: string
    type: quorum # Not required. This is the default and currently only option available (For us, all our queues are quorum. We manually create the queue that needs other requirements). MR welcome
    dlq: string # default {queue_name}_dlq
    dlx: string # default {queue_name}_dlx
    durable: true # default
    robust: true # default
    auto_delete: false # default
    exclusive: false # default
    auto_delete_delay: 0 # default
    arguments: # rabbit specific key/value pairs
      key_1: value_1
      key_2: value_2

# bindings
bindings:
  - from:
      type: exchange
      name: string
    to:
      type: exchange|queue
      name: string
    routing_keys:
      - record.created  # list of string, required, unless bind_options is defined
    bind_options: # list of `x-match` and `header-key`, required if binding to a header exchange
      - x-match: all|any # header type of matcher
        header-key: string # header topic to be matched

Planned features:

  • Simple message publishing
  • Expose the underlying channel so you can drop right into aio_pika if you want.

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