- Use Go channels transparently over a messaging queue technology of your choice (Currently NATS, Redis or NSQ, Amazon SQS)
- Swap
vice.Transport
to change underlying queueing technologies transparently - Write idiomatic Go code instead of learning queue specific APIs
- Develop against in-memory implementation before putting it into the wild
- Independent unit tests (no need for running queue technology)
PROJECT STATUS: v1 released
This code receives names on the |names|
queue, and sends greetings on the |greetings|
queue:
// get a Go channel that will receive messages on the
// |names| queue
names := transport.Receive("names")
// get a Go channel that will send messages on the
// |greetings| queue
greetings := transport.Send("greetings")
// respond to |names| messages with |greetings|
for name := range names {
greetings <- []byte("Hello " + string(name))
}
- The code above is illustrative, be sure to read the design patterns
- Always stop the Transport, some technologies register and deregister their interest in the queues (this means trapping signals and gracefully shutting down services before exiting)
- Use
Send
andReceive
methods to get channels, which you can then use as normal - Be sure to always handle the
ErrChan()
error channel to make sure the underlying queue technology is healthy
- Write your services with unit tests using normal Go channels (see our design patterns)
- Install Vice with
go get github.com/matryer/vice/...
- Select a messaging queue technology
- Build a command to run your service
Read the blog post: Introducing vice: Go channels across many machines
Special thanks go to David Hernandez, Jason Hancock and Piotr Rojek for their support on this project.