A pika-based python RabbitMQ client for use in the CLIMB-tree project
Project description
Varys - A python RabbitMQ client for CLIMB-TRE
TODO:
- Test SSL support with CA-signed certificates
Installation
Pip or Conda installation will be simplest for most users, and can be achieved with the following commands:
pip install varys-client
or
conda install -c conda-forge varys
Alternatively, varys can be installed directly from this repository by doing the following:
git clone https://github.com/CLIMB-TRE/varys.git
cd varys
pip install .
Configuration
Varys uses a JSON format configuration file to provide credentials to connect to RabbitMQ, the path to this configuration file should either be provided with the VARYS_CFG environmental variable or using config_path argument when instantiating varys, this will override an environmental variable.
If you wish to use TLS (highly recommended) you should provide a ca certificates file, a client certificate, and a client key to the client, this can be achieved in one of two ways, via the config file or via environmental variables (the config file will always override environmental variables), the environmental variables are as follows:
VARYS_CA_CERTIFICATE-> the ca certificate pathVARYS_CLIENT_CERTIFICATE-> the client certificateVARYS_CLIENT_KEY-> the client key These must match the certificates and keys which belong to the server, if you are using this within the context of CLIMB-TRE the certificates / keys will already be present within a jupyter notebook with the appropriate environmental variables pointing to them.
An example of the configuration file format is available here.
Basic Usage
First the varys object must be instantiated, like so:
from varys import Varys
varys_client = Varys(
profile="test_user",
logfile="/var/log/varys_test.log",
log_level="DEBUG"
)
Profile will control which set of credentials the client will read from the config file.
By default Varys will automatically acknowledge received messages instantly however if this is not the desired behaviour then the argument auto_acknowledge can be set to False, it is important that messages are later acknowledged if this setting is turned off or you risk the RabbitMQ server deciding that you have timed out and closing the connection, see more in the "Message Acknowledgement" section below.
Once the base object has been instantiated you are ready to send or receive messages from the RabbitMQ server:
The queue_suffix argument must be provided the first time a message is sent or receeived to/from a queue after varys is instantiated so that the varys may create or bind the queue (exchange + . + queue_suffix) if it already exists.
Sending
message = {"foo": "bar"}
varys_client.send(message=message,
exchange="test_exchange",
queue_suffix="test_suffix"
)
Messages must be a python object that can be serialised into JSON format using json.dumps() which includes the following types: dict, list, tuple, str, int, float, True, False, None.
Receiving one message at a time
import json
message = varys_client.receive(exchange="test_exchange",
queue_suffix="test_suffix",
block=True,
)
deserialised_message = json.loads(message.body)
print(deserialised_message)
This will block execution until a message is received unless the block argument is set to False, in this case if there are no messages to be received the return value will be None object.
If a message is received it will be a varys_message object which has the following attributes:
basic_deliver -> A pika.spec.Basic.Deliver Should be irrelevant for normal usage but documentation available at this link.
properties -> A pika.BasicProperties object, containing header information about the message if provided when sending. Should be irrelevant for normal usage.
body -> The message body in serialised JSON format, generally a user will wish to convert this to a python object equivalent for ease of use with json.loads()
Message acknowledgement
Where auto_acknowledge is set to False when instantiating varys, messages must be acknowledged after being received manually like so:
message = varys_client.receive(exchange="test_exchange",
queue_suffix="test_suffix",
block=True
)
varys_client.acknowledge_message(message)
If you wish to instead reject the message meaning that it will be pushed back onto the first position of the queue, you can nack a message:
message = varys_client.receive(exchange="test_exchange",
queue_suffix="test_suffix",
block=True
)
varys_client.nack_message(message)
Prefetch count
If auto_acknowledge is not set, another useful argument is the prefetch_count this allows the user to change the number of messages which will be made available to the user at any given time; when a message is acknowledged another message will be made available to maintain this number so long as there are messages available in the rabbitMQ queue. This setting is particularly useful where messages may be acted on in parallel; for example: if 5 messages can be proccessed at a time then the appropriate prefetch_count would be 5, if 10 messages may be processed in parallel then the appropriate prefetch_count would be 10.
Receiving multiple messages at a time
import json
messages = varys_client.receive_batch(exchange="test_exchange",
queue_suffix="test_suffix",
)
for message in messages:
deserialised_message = json.loads(message.body)
print(deserialised_message)
This will never block execution and will always return a python list object containing all available messages as varys_message objects which should then be iterated through and treated as above. In the case of there being no messages available, this list will be empty and will evaluate to False.
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