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https://github.com/peterfraedrich/consulmq

Use k/v stores as message queues!
https://github.com/peterfraedrich/consulmq

consul-kv filesystem golang in-memory kubernetes message-queue redis task-queue

Last synced: 25 days ago
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Use k/v stores as message queues!

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# ConsulMQ is changing to KVMQ!
### I am working on a new branch of ConsulMQ that allows for different KV backends, not just Consul; please update your code appropriately.
![ConsulMq](consulmq.png)

Docs -- [https://pkg.go.dev/github.com/peterfraedrich/consulmq](https://pkg.go.dev/github.com/peterfraedrich/consulmq)

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ConsulMQ allows you to use [Hashicorp Consul](https://consul.io) as a messaging queue. The idea is that you're already using Consul for configuration, monitoring, key-value DB, service-mesh, and a host of other functions, it would be nice to be able to have a simple message queue also running in Consul and eliminate the need for extra infrastrucutre (like RabbitMQ or Kafka, etc.).

## Features
* Durable, distributed task/message queue
* ConsulMQ nodes register with Consul, providing real-time visibility into how many nodes are connected
* Simple, easy-to-use API
* Based on well-established devops/infrastructure tools

## TL;DR

```go
package main

import (
"fmt"

"github.com/peterfraedrich/consulmq"
)

func main() {

mq, err := consulmq.Connect(consulmq.Config{
Address: "172.17.0.2:8500",
Datacenter: "dc1",
Token: "",
MQName: "cmq",
})
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}

i := 0
for i <= 100 {
// Put and item on the queue
qo, err := mq.Push([]byte("Hello, is it me you're looking for?"))
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
fmt.Println(qo.ID)
i++
}
fmt.Println("++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++")
x := 0
for x <= 100 {
// Pop an item off the queue
_, qo, err := mq.Pop()
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
fmt.Println(qo.ID)
x++
}
}
```

## How it works
ConsulMQ uses Consul's key/value store as a messaging queue. Each queue consists of an `index` and the queued messages. The `_index` record is a JSON list holds the order and mapping for all of the messages in the queue. The queued messages are represented by a unique ID and stored under that ID as the message's key. When an operation is requested (`Push`, `Pop`, etc.), the index is updated with the changes and the message ID used to locate the appropriate message.

## Pro/Con

### Pros
* Using a tool that's already in production eliminates the need for spinning up yet-another-tool
* Consul is a well-known entity
* Changes are distributed to all Consul nodes which eliminates a single point of failure

### Cons
* Consul wasn't really designed to do this
* The use of locks means that only one node can write to an index at a time
* Will not be as performant as a dedicated message broker or stream platform (AMQP, Kafka, etc.)

## Roadmap

* Enforce TTL's
* Consul Enterprise Namespace compatibility
* Logging & Monitoring
* Additional operations
* Search
* PushAtIndex
* PopFromindex
* Drain
* ClearQueue

### License: MIT