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AMQP 1.0 support for RabbitMQ

This plugin adds AMQP 1.0 support to RabbitMQ.

Despite the name, AMQP 0-9-1 and 1.0 are very much different protocols and thus 1.0 is treated as a separate protocol supported by RabbitMQ, not a revision of the original protocol that will eventually supersede it.

This plugin is several years old and is moderately mature. It may have certain limitations with its current architecture but most major AMQP 1.0 features should be in place.

This plugin supports 0-9-1 and 1.0 client interoperability with certain limitations.

Configuration

This plugin ships with modern versions of RabbitMQ.

It will listen on the standard AMQP port, 5672. To reconfigure this, do so as you would for 0-9-1. Clients connecting with 0-9-1 will continue to work on the same port.

The following two configuration options (which are specific to the AMQP 1.0 adapter) are accepted in the rabbitmq_amqp1_0 section of the configuration file.

AMQP 1.0 conceptually allows connections that are not authenticated with SASL (i.e. where no username and password is supplied). By default these will connect as the "guest" user. To change this, set default_user to a string with the name of the user to use, or the atom none to prevent unauthenticated connections.

{default_user, "guest"}

The default virtual host can be specified using the default_vhost setting. See the "Virtual Hosts" section below for a description.

{default_vhost, <<"/">>}

The protocol_strict_mode setting controls how strictly peers must conform to the specification. The default is not to enforce strictness, which allows non-fatal byte-counts in frames and inaccuracies in flow-control from peers.

{protocol_strict_mode, false}

Configuration example using sysctl config format (currently only available in RabbitMQ master):

amqp1_0.default_user  = guest
amqp1_0.default_vhost = /
amqp1_0.protocol_strict_mode = false

Clients we have tested

The current field of AMQP 1.0 clients is somewhat limited. Therefore we have not achieved as much interoperability as we might like.

We have tested against:

  • SwiftMQ Java client [1] We have done most of our testing against this client and things seem to work.

  • QPid / Proton C client [2] We have successfully tested against the "proton" command line tool this client ships with.

  • QPid / Proton Java client [2] We have not been able to get this client to get as far as opening a network connection (tested against 0.2 and 0.4).

  • Windows Azure Service Bus [3] It seems that the URI scheme used by this client assumes that it is connecting to Azure; it does not seem to be possible to get it to connect to another server.

[1] http://www.swiftmq.com/products/router/swiftlets/sys_amqp/client/index.html

[2] http://qpid.apache.org/proton/

[3] http://www.windowsazure.com/en-us/develop/net/how-to-guides/service-bus-amqp/

As new clients appear we will of course work on interoperability with them.

Interoperability with AMQP 0-9-1

Message payloads

This implementation as a plugin aims for useful interoperability with AMQP 0-9-1 clients. AMQP 1.0 messages can be far more structured than AMQP 0-9-1 messages, which simply have a payload of bytes.

The way we deal with this is that an AMQP 1.0 message with a single data section will be transcoded to an AMQP 0-9-1 message with just the bytes from that section, and vice versa. An AMQP 1.0 with any other payload will keep exactly that payload (i.e., encoded AMQP 1.0 sections, concatenated), and for AMQP 0-9-1 clients the type field of the basic.properties will contain the value "amqp-1.0".

Thus, AMQP 0-9-1 clients may receive messages that they cannot understand (if they don't have an AMQP 1.0 codec handy, anyway); however, these will at least be labelled. AMQP 1.0 clients shall receive exactly what they expect.

Message properties, annotations, headers, etc.

The headers and properties map as follows:

AMQP 1.0                                 AMQP 0-9-1
Header                                   Properties
  durable              <--------------->   delivery-mode   [1]
  priority             <--------------->   priority
  ttl                  <--------------->   expiration      [2]
  first-acquirer                                           [3]
  delivery-count                                           [4]
Properties
  message-id           <--------------->   message-id      [5]
  user-id              <--------------->   user-id
  to                                                       [6]
  subject                                                  [6]
  reply-to             <--------------->   reply-to        [6]
  correlation-id       <--------------->   correlation-id
  content-type         <--------------->   content-type
  content-encoding     <--------------->   content-encoding
  absolute-expiry-time                                     [7]
  creation-time        <--------------->   timestamp
Application headers    <-------/------->   headers         [8]

[1] durable is true if and only if delivery-mode is 2.

[2] expiration is a shortstr; since RabbitMQ will expect this to be an encoded string, we translate a ttl to the string representation of its integer value.

[3] first-acquirer is true if and only if the basic.deliver field redelivered is false.

[4] delivery-count is left null.

[5] AMQP 0-9-1 expects this to be a shortstr.

[6] See Routing and Addressing below.

[7] absolute-expiry-time has no corresponding field in AMQP 0-9-1, and is not supported in RabbitMQ in any case.

[8] The application headers section and the basic.properties field headers are natural analogues. However, rather than try to transcode an AMQP 1.0 map to an AMQP 0-9-1 field-table, currently we discard application headers (of AMQP 1.0 messages) and headers (of AMQP 0-9-1 messages sent through to AMQP 1.0). In other words, the (AMQP 1.0) application headers section is only available to AMQP 1.0 clients, and the (AMQP 0-9-1) headers field is only available to AMQP 0-9-1 clients.

Note that properties (in both AMQP 1.0 and AMQP 0-9-1) and application properties (in AMQP 1.0) are immutable; however, this can only apply when the sending and receiving clients are using the same protocol.

Routing and Addressing

In AMQP 1.0 source and destination addresses are opaque values, and each message may have a subject field value.

For targets, addresses are:

= "/exchange/"  X "/" RK  Publish to exchange X with routing key RK
| "/exchange/"  X         Publish to exchange X with message subject as routing key
| "/topic/"     RK        Publish to amq.topic with routing key RK
| "/amq/queue/" Q         Publish to default exchange with routing key Q
| "/queue/"     Q         Publish to default exchange with routing key Q
| Q (no leading slash)    Publish to default exchange with routing key Q
| "/queue"                Publish to default exchange with message subj as routing key

For sources, addresses are:

= "/exchange/"  X "/" RK  Consume from temp queue bound to X with routing key RK
| "/topic/"     RK        Consume from temp queue bound to amq.topic with routing key RK
| "/amq/queue/" Q         Consume from Q
| "/queue/"     Q         Consume from Q
| Q (no leading slash)    Consume from Q

The intent is that the source and destination address formats should be mostly the same as those supported by the STOMP plugin, to the extent permitted by AMQP 1.0 semantics.

Virtual Hosts

AMQP 1.0 has no equivalent of AMQP 0-9-1 virtual hosts. A virtual host on the broker may be addressed when opening an AMQP 1.0 connection by setting the hostname field, prefixing with "vhost:". Setting the hostname field to "vhost:/" addresses the default virtual host. If the hostname field does not start with "vhost:" then the default_vhost configuration setting will be consulted.

Limitations and unsupported features

At the minute, the RabbitMQ AMQP 1.0 adapter does not support:

  • "Exactly once" delivery [9]
  • Link recovery [9]
  • Full message fragmentation [10]
  • Resuming messages
  • "Modified" outcome
  • Filters [11]
  • Transactions
  • Source/target expiry-policy other than link-detach and timeout other than 0
  • Max message size for links
  • Aborted transfers
  • TLS negotiation via the AMQP2100 handshake (although SSL is supported)

[9] We do not deduplicate as a target, though we may resend as a source (messages that have no settled outcome when an outgoing link is detached will be requeued).

[10] We do fragment messages over multiple frames; however, if this would overflow the session window we may discard or requeue messages.

[11] In principle, filters for consuming from an exchange could translate to AMQP 0-9-1 bindings. This is not implemented, so effectively only consuming from fanout exchanges and queues is useful currently.

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