@cloudamqp/amqp-client

AMQP 0-9-1 client, both for browsers (WebSocket) and node (TCP Socket)

Usage no npm install needed!

<script type="module">
  import cloudamqpAmqpClient from 'https://cdn.skypack.dev/@cloudamqp/amqp-client';
</script>

README

amqp-client.js

AMQP 0-9-1 TypeScript client both for Node.js and browsers (using WebSocket). This library is intended to replace all other Node.js AMQP libraries.

API documentation.

This library is Promise-based and hence works very well with async/await. It's secure by default, for instance, publishes aren't fulfilled until either the data has been sent on the wire (so that back propagation is respected), or if the channel has Publish Confirms enabled, it isn't fulfilled until the server has acknowledged that the message has been enqueued.

The library was developed so to make it easy for developers who already are familiar with AMQP to write browser apps that communicates directly with an AMQP server over WebSocket.

Support

The library is developed and supported by CloudAMQP, the largest hosted RabbitMQ provider in the world.

Install

npm install @cloudamqp/amqp-client --save

Start node with --enable-source-maps to get proper stacktraces as the library is transpiled from TypeScript.

Example usage

Using AMQP in Node.js:

import { AMQPClient } from '@cloudamqp/amqp-client'

async function run() {
  try {
    const amqp = new AMQPClient("amqp://localhost")
    const conn = await amqp.connect()
    const ch = await conn.channel()
    const q = await ch.queue()
    const consumer = await q.subscribe({noAck: true}, async (msg) => {
      console.log(msg.bodyToString())
      await consumer.cancel()
    })
    await q.publish("Hello World", {deliveryMode: 2})
    await consumer.wait() // will block until consumer is canceled or throw an error if server closed channel/connection
    await conn.close()
  } catch (e) {
    console.error("ERROR", e)
    e.connection.close()
    setTimeout(run, 1000) // will try to reconnect in 1s
  }
}

run()

WebSockets

This library can be used in the browser to access an AMQP server over WebSockets. For servers such as RabbitMQ that doesn't (yet?) support WebSockets natively a WebSocket TCP relay have to be used as a proxy. More information can be found in this blog post.

For web browsers a compiled and rolled up version is available at https://github.com/cloudamqp/amqp-client.js/releases.

Using AMQP over WebSockets in a browser:

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
  <head>
    <script type=module>
      import { AMQPWebSocketClient } from './js/amqp-websocket-client.mjs'

      const textarea = document.getElementById("textarea")
      const input = document.getElementById("message")

      const tls = window.location.scheme === "https:"
      const url = `${tls ? "wss" : "ws"}://${window.location.host}`
      const amqp = new AMQPWebSocketClient(url, "/", "guest", "guest")

      async function start() {
        try {
          const conn = await amqp.connect()
          const ch = await conn.channel()
          attachPublish(ch)
          const q = await ch.queue("")
          await q.bind("amq.fanout")
          const consumer = await q.subscribe({noAck: false}, (msg) => {
            console.log(msg)
            textarea.value += msg.bodyToString() + "\n"
            msg.ack()
          })
        } catch (err) {
          console.error("Error", err, "reconnecting in 1s")
          disablePublish()
          setTimeout(start, 1000)
        }
      }

      function attachPublish(ch) {
        document.forms[0].onsubmit = async (e) => {
          e.preventDefault()
          try {
            await ch.basicPublish("amq.fanout", "", input.value, { contentType: "text/plain" })
          } catch (err) {
            console.error("Error", err, "reconnecting in 1s")
            disablePublish()
            setTimeout(start, 1000)
          }
          input.value = ""
        }
      }

      function disablePublish() {
        document.forms[0].onsubmit = (e) => { alert("Disconnected, waiting to be reconnected") }
      }

      start()
    </script>
  </head>
  <body>
    <form>
      <textarea id="textarea" rows=10></textarea>
      <br/>
      <input id="message"/>
      <button type="submit">Send</button>
    </form>
  </body>
</html>

Performance

Messages with a 1-byte body, no properties:

Client Publish rate Consume rate
amqp-client.js 300.000 msgs/s 512.000 msgs/s
amqplib 172.000 msgs/s 519.000 msgs/s

Messages with a 1-byte body, and all properties, except headers:

Client Publish rate Consume rate
amqp-client.js 144.000 msgs/s 202.000 msgs/s
amqplib 110.000 msgs/s 251.000 msgs/s

Messages with a 1-byte body, and all properties, including headers:

Client Publish rate Consume rate
amqp-client.js 70.000 msgs/s 89.000 msgs/s
amqplib 60.000 msgs/s 99.000 msgs/s

The reason amqp-client is somewhat slower to consume is that to maintain browser compatibility for the websocket client, DataView are used for parsing the binary protocol instead of Buffer.

Module comparison

Client Runtime dependencies Lines of code
amqp-client.js 0 1743
amqplib 14 6720 (w/o dependencies)