Question

I've been learning RabbitMQ various topologies, however, I couldn't find any reference to dynamic queue creation (aka Declare Queue) emitted from a producer. The idea would be to create queues dynamically depending on a particular event (e.g a HTTP request). The queue would be temporary with a TTL set and named after the event ID. A consumer could then, subscribe to the topic "event.*" and merge all the messages related to it.

Example:

  1. HTTP POST "Create user" received
  2. producer creates a queue user.ID
  3. push all the subsequent messages concerning the user in his queue (e.g "Add username", "Add email" ...)
  4. worker gets assigned to a random queue "user.*" and merges everything into a user account
  5. queue is automatically deleted after the TTL expired

Now, is this scenario feasible with RabbitMQ ?

Was it helpful?

Solution

Essentially, what you want to do is use RabbitMQ to buffer messages waiting in a set of queues (which is what a message queuing system does by definition). :)

Assuming you know what your queues are from the consuming side, you won't have any issues. There is no constraint that a producer can't create a queue. As a caveat, when queues expire, all messages in the queue are discarded (or optionally, they can be set to go to a dead-letter queue).

What code have you tried?

Edit

Upon further clarification (from your comment) - you are looking for "wildcard consuming" vs wildcard publishing. RabbitMQ does not support such a topology at the present time (this post asks for a similar feature).

What you would need to do is periodically enumerate the queues (using the RabbitMQ API); following that, your app could decide which ones to consume from. When a queue is deleted, the consumer is automatically closed.

Special Note It should be understood that what is being asked here is an anti-pattern. The typical behavior of a system using queues is to route messages to queues based upon content. Thus, a properly-orchestrated system would have a set of workers operating on one or more statically-defined queues. Different workers may take different queues, depending upon specialization. When a series of interactions results in messages being published to the queue, the workers assigned to the queues will handle the messages in a first-come-first-served fashion (but, as this post discusses, order cannot be guaranteed with multiple consumers). The desired system behavior then emerges as a composition of workers performing various functions operating on queues.

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