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############################################## | ||
carrot - AMQP Messaging Framework for Python | ||
############################################## | ||
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:Version: 0.5.1 | ||
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**NOTE** This release contains backward-incompatible changes. | ||
Please read the `Changelog`_ for more information. | ||
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.. _`Changelog`: http://ask.github.com/carrot/changelog.html | ||
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Introduction | ||
------------ | ||
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`carrot` is an `AMQP`_ messaging queue framework. AMQP is the Advanced Message | ||
Queuing Protocol, an open standard protocol for message orientation, queuing, | ||
routing, reliability and security. | ||
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The aim of `carrot` is to make messaging in Python as easy as possible by | ||
providing a high-level interface for producing and consuming messages. At the | ||
same time it is a goal to re-use what is already available as much as possible. | ||
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`carrot` has pluggable messaging back-ends, so it is possible to support | ||
several messaging systems. At the time of release, the `py-amqplib`_ based | ||
backend is considered suitable for production use. | ||
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Several AMQP message broker implementations exists, including `RabbitMQ`_, | ||
`ZeroMQ`_ and `Apache ActiveMQ`_. You'll need to have one of these installed, | ||
personally we've been using `RabbitMQ`_. | ||
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Before you start playing with ``carrot``, you should probably read up on | ||
AMQP, and you could start with the excellent article about using RabbitMQ | ||
under Python, `Rabbits and warrens`_. For more detailed information, you can | ||
refer to the `Wikipedia article about AMQP`_. | ||
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.. _`RabbitMQ`: http://www.rabbitmq.com/ | ||
.. _`ZeroMQ`: http://www.zeromq.org/ | ||
.. _`AMQP`: http://amqp.org | ||
.. _`Apache ActiveMQ`: http://activemq.apache.org/ | ||
.. _`Django`: http://www.djangoproject.com/ | ||
.. _`Rabbits and warrens`: http://blogs.digitar.com/jjww/2009/01/rabbits-and-warrens/ | ||
.. _`py-amqplib`: http://barryp.org/software/py-amqplib/ | ||
.. _`Wikipedia article about AMQP`: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AMQP | ||
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Documentation | ||
------------- | ||
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Carrot is using Sphinx, and the latest documentation is available at GitHub: | ||
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http://github.com/ask/carrot/ | ||
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Installation | ||
============ | ||
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You can install ``carrot`` either via the Python Package Index (PyPI) | ||
or from source. | ||
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To install using ``pip``,:: | ||
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$ pip install carrot | ||
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To install using ``easy_install``,:: | ||
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$ easy_install carrot | ||
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If you have downloaded a source tarball you can install it | ||
by doing the following,:: | ||
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$ python setup.py build | ||
# python setup.py install # as root | ||
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Terminology | ||
=========== | ||
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There are some concepts you should be familiar with before starting: | ||
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* Publishers | ||
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Publishers sends messages to an exchange. | ||
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* Exchanges | ||
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Messages are sent to exchanges. Exchanges are named and can be | ||
configured to use one of several routing algorithms. The exchange | ||
routes the messages to consumers by matching the routing key in the | ||
message with the routing key the consumer provides when binding to | ||
the exchange. | ||
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* Consumers | ||
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Consumers declares a queue, binds it to a exchange and receives | ||
messages from it. | ||
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* Queues | ||
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Queues receive messages sent to exchanges. The queues are declared | ||
by consumers. | ||
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* Routing keys | ||
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Every message has a routing key. The interpretation of the routing | ||
key depends on the exchange type. There are four default exchange | ||
types defined by the AMQP standard, and vendors can define custom | ||
types (so see your vendors manual for details). | ||
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These are the default exchange types defined by AMQP/0.8: | ||
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* Direct exchange | ||
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Matches if the routing key property of the message and | ||
the ``routing_key`` attribute of the consumer are identical. | ||
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* Fan-out exchange | ||
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Always matches, even if the binding does not have a routing | ||
key. | ||
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* Topic exchange | ||
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Matches the routing key property of the message by a primitive | ||
pattern matching scheme. The message routing key then consists | ||
of words separated by dots (``"."``, like domain names), and | ||
two special characters are available; star (``"*"``) and hash | ||
(``"#"``). The star matches any word, and the hash matches | ||
zero or more words. For example ``"*.stock.#"`` matches the | ||
routing keys ``"usd.stock"`` and ``"eur.stock.db"`` but not | ||
``"stock.nasdaq"``. | ||
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Examples | ||
======== | ||
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Creating a connection | ||
--------------------- | ||
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You can set up a connection by creating an instance of | ||
``carrot.messaging.AMQPConnection``, with the appropriate options for | ||
your AMQP server: | ||
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>>> from carrot.connection import AMQPConnection | ||
>>> amqpconn = AMQPConnection(hostname="localhost", port=5672, | ||
... userid="test", password="test", | ||
... vhost="test") | ||
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If you're using Django you can use the | ||
``carrot.connection.DjangoAMQPConnection`` class instead, which loads the | ||
connection settings from your ``settings.py``:: | ||
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AMQP_SERVER = "localhost" | ||
AMQP_PORT = 5672 | ||
AMQP_USER = "test" | ||
AMQP_PASSWORD = "secret" | ||
AMQP_VHOST = "/test" | ||
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Then create a connection by doing: | ||
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>>> from carrot.connection import DjangoAMQPConnection | ||
>>> amqpconn = DjangoAMQPConnection() | ||
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Receiving messages using a Consumer | ||
----------------------------------- | ||
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First we open up a Python shell and start a message consumer. | ||
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This consumer declares a queue named ``"feed"``, receiving messages with | ||
the routing key ``"importer"`` from the ``"feed"`` exchange. | ||
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The example then uses the consumers ``wait()`` method to go into consume | ||
mode, where it continuously polls the queue for new messages, and when a | ||
message is received it passes the message to all registered callbacks. | ||
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>>> from carrot.messaging import Consumer | ||
>>> consumer = Consumer(connection=amqpconn, queue="feed", | ||
... exchange="feed", routing_key="importer") | ||
>>> def import_feed_callback(message_data, message) | ||
... feed_url = message_data["import_feed"] | ||
... print("Got feed import message for: %s" % feed_url) | ||
... # something importing this feed url | ||
... # import_feed(feed_url) | ||
... message.ack() | ||
>>> consumer.register_callback(import_feed_callback) | ||
>>> consumer.wait() # Go into the consumer loop. | ||
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Sending messages using a Publisher | ||
---------------------------------- | ||
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Then we open up another Python shell to send some messages to the consumer | ||
defined in the last section. | ||
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>>> from carrot.messaging import Publisher | ||
>>> publisher = Publisher(connection=amqpconn, | ||
... exchange="feed", routing_key="importer") | ||
>>> publisher.send({"import_feed": "http://cnn.com/rss/edition.rss"}) | ||
>>> publisher.close() | ||
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Look in the first Python shell again (where ``consumer.wait()`` is running), | ||
where the following text has been printed to the screen:: | ||
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Got feed import message for: http://cnn.com/rss/edition.rss | ||
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Serialization of Data | ||
----------------------- | ||
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By default every message is encoded using `JSON`_, so sending | ||
Python data structures like dictionaries and lists works. | ||
`YAML`_ and Python's built-in ``pickle`` module is also supported, | ||
and if needed you can register any custom serialization scheme you | ||
want to use. | ||
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.. _`JSON`: http://www.json.org/ | ||
.. _`YAML`: http://yaml.org/ | ||
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Each option has its advantages and disadvantages. | ||
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``json`` -- JSON is supported in many programming languages, is now | ||
a standard part of Python (since 2.6), and is fairly fast to | ||
decode using the modern Python libraries such as ``cjson or | ||
``simplejson``. | ||
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The primary disadvantage to ``JSON`` is that it limits you to | ||
the following data types: strings, unicode, floats, boolean, | ||
dictionaries, and lists. Decimals and dates are notably missing. | ||
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Also, binary data will be transferred using base64 encoding, which | ||
will cause the transferred data to be around 34% larger than an | ||
encoding which supports native binary types. | ||
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However, if your data fits inside the above constraints and | ||
you need cross-language support, the default setting of ``JSON`` | ||
is probably your best choice. | ||
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``pickle`` -- If you have no desire to support any language other than | ||
Python, then using the ``pickle`` encoding will gain you | ||
the support of all built-in Python data types (except class instances), | ||
smaller messages when sending binary files, and a slight speedup | ||
over ``JSON`` processing. | ||
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``yaml`` -- YAML has many of the same characteristics as ``json``, | ||
except that it natively supports more data types (including dates, | ||
recursive references, etc.) | ||
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However, the Python libraries for YAML are a good bit slower | ||
than the libraries for JSON. | ||
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If you need a more expressive set of data types and need to maintain | ||
cross-language compatability, then ``YAML`` may be a better fit | ||
than the above. | ||
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To instruct carrot to use an alternate serialization method, | ||
use one of the following options. | ||
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1. Set the serialization option on a per-Publisher basis: | ||
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>>> from carrot.messaging import Publisher | ||
>>> publisher = Publisher(connection=amqpconn, | ||
... exchange="feed", routing_key="importer", | ||
... serializer="yaml") | ||
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2. Set the serialization option on a per-call basis | ||
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>>> from carrot.messaging import Publisher | ||
>>> publisher = Publisher(connection=amqpconn, | ||
... exchange="feed", routing_key="importer") | ||
>>> publisher.send({"import_feed": "http://cnn.com/rss/edition.rss"}, | ||
... serializer="pickle") | ||
>>> publisher.close() | ||
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Note that ``Consumer``s do not need the serialization method specified in | ||
their code. They can auto-detect the serialization method since we supply | ||
the ``Content-type`` header as part of the AMQP message. | ||
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Sending raw data without Serialization | ||
--------------------------------------- | ||
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In some cases, you don't need your message data to be serialized. If you | ||
pass in a plain string or unicode object as your message, then carrot will | ||
not waste cycles serializing/deserializing the data. | ||
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You can optionally specify a ``content_type`` and ``content_encoding`` | ||
for the raw data: | ||
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>>> from carrot.messaging import Publisher | ||
>>> publisher = Publisher(connection=amqpconn, | ||
... exchange="feed", | ||
routing_key="import_pictures") | ||
>>> publisher.send(open('~/my_picture.jpg','rb').read(), | ||
content_type="image/jpeg", | ||
content_encoding="binary") | ||
>>> publisher.close() | ||
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The ``message`` object returned by the ``Consumer`` class will have a | ||
``content_type`` and ``content_encoding`` attribute. | ||
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Receiving messages without a callback | ||
-------------------------------------- | ||
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You can also poll the queue manually, by using the ``fetch`` method. | ||
This method returns a ``Message`` object, from where you can get the | ||
message body, de-serialize the body to get the data, acknowledge, reject or | ||
re-queue the message. | ||
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>>> consumer = Consumer(connection=amqpconn, queue="feed", | ||
... exchange="feed", routing_key="importer") | ||
>>> message = consumer.fetch() | ||
>>> if message: | ||
... message_data = message.payload | ||
... message.ack() | ||
... else: | ||
... # No messages waiting on the queue. | ||
>>> consumer.close() | ||
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Sub-classing the messaging classes | ||
---------------------------------- | ||
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The ``Consumer``, and ``Publisher`` classes can also be subclassed. Thus you | ||
can define the above publisher and consumer like so: | ||
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>>> from carrot.messaging import Publisher, Consumer | ||
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>>> class FeedPublisher(Publisher): | ||
... exchange = "feed" | ||
... routing_key = "importer" | ||
... | ||
... def import_feed(self, feed_url): | ||
... return self.send({"action": "import_feed", | ||
... "feed_url": feed_url}) | ||
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>>> class FeedConsumer(Consumer): | ||
... queue = "feed" | ||
... exchange = "feed" | ||
... routing_key = "importer" | ||
... | ||
... def receive(self, message_data, message): | ||
... action = message_data["action"] | ||
... if action == "import_feed": | ||
... # something importing this feed | ||
... # import_feed(message_data["feed_url"]) | ||
message.ack() | ||
... else: | ||
... raise Exception("Unknown action: %s" % action) | ||
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>>> publisher = FeedPublisher(connection=amqpconn) | ||
>>> publisher.import_feed("http://cnn.com/rss/edition.rss") | ||
>>> publisher.close() | ||
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>>> consumer = FeedConsumer(connection=amqpconn) | ||
>>> consumer.wait() # Go into the consumer loop. | ||
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Getting Help | ||
============ | ||
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Mailing list | ||
------------ | ||
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Join the `carrot-users`_ mailing list. | ||
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.. _`carrot-users`: http://groups.google.com/group/carrot-users/ | ||
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Bug tracker | ||
=========== | ||
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If you have any suggestions, bug reports or annoyances please report them | ||
to our issue tracker at http://github.com/ask/carrot/issues/ | ||
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Contributing | ||
============ | ||
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Development of ``carrot`` happens at Github: http://github.com/ask/carrot | ||
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You are highly encouraged to participate in the development. If you don't | ||
like Github (for some reason) you're welcome to send regular patches. | ||
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License | ||
======= | ||
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This software is licensed under the ``New BSD License``. See the ``LICENCE`` | ||
file in the top distribution directory for the full license text. |
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"""AMQP Messaging Framework for Python""" | ||
VERSION = (0, 5, 0) | ||
VERSION = (0, 5, 1) | ||
__version__ = ".".join(map(str, VERSION)) | ||
__author__ = "Ask Solem" | ||
__contact__ = "[email protected]" | ||
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