|
| 1 | +Message Priority |
| 2 | +================ |
| 3 | + |
| 4 | +By default messenger uses the first in, first out principle: messages will be |
| 5 | +received in the same order they were sent (except the delayed ones). |
| 6 | + |
| 7 | +Basic priority can be achieved by using :doc:`prioritized transports </messenger>`, |
| 8 | +but only for different message types. |
| 9 | + |
| 10 | +With AMQP and Beanstalkd transports, you can have a priority queue for messages |
| 11 | +of the same type:: |
| 12 | + |
| 13 | + use Symfony\Component\Messenger\Envelope; |
| 14 | + use Symfony\Component\Messenger\Stamp\PriorityStamp; |
| 15 | + |
| 16 | + $bus->dispatch( |
| 17 | + (new Envelope($message))->with(new PriorityStamp(255)) |
| 18 | + ); |
| 19 | + |
| 20 | +.. tip:: |
| 21 | + |
| 22 | + Priorities between ``0`` (lowest) and ``255`` (highest) are supported. |
| 23 | + |
| 24 | +Priority can be used together with delay:: |
| 25 | + |
| 26 | + use Symfony\Component\Messenger\Envelope; |
| 27 | + use Symfony\Component\Messenger\Stamp\DelayStamp; |
| 28 | + use Symfony\Component\Messenger\Stamp\PriorityStamp; |
| 29 | + |
| 30 | + $bus->dispatch( |
| 31 | + (new Envelope($message))->with( |
| 32 | + new PriorityStamp(255), |
| 33 | + new DelayStamp(5000) |
| 34 | + ) |
| 35 | + ); |
| 36 | + |
| 37 | +When the time comes, if other messages in queue have lower priority, this one |
| 38 | +will be delivered first. |
| 39 | + |
| 40 | +Using with Beanstalkd transport |
| 41 | +------------------------------- |
| 42 | + |
| 43 | +Beanstalkd does not require any additional configuration. You can start using priority |
| 44 | +stamp right away. |
| 45 | + |
| 46 | +.. note:: |
| 47 | + |
| 48 | + Internally Beanstalkd uses a different priority system, where priority |
| 49 | + can take values between ``2^32 - 1`` and ``0``, with zero being the highest priority. |
| 50 | + Messenger handles the transformation internally. |
| 51 | + |
| 52 | +Using with AMQP transport |
| 53 | +------------------------- |
| 54 | + |
| 55 | +With AMQP transport, you need to enable priority for the queue in configuration: |
| 56 | + |
| 57 | +.. configuration-block:: |
| 58 | + |
| 59 | + .. code-block:: yaml |
| 60 | +
|
| 61 | + # config/packages/messenger.yaml |
| 62 | + framework: |
| 63 | + messenger: |
| 64 | + transports: |
| 65 | + async: |
| 66 | + dsn: "%env(MESSENGER_TRANSPORT_DSN)%" |
| 67 | + options: |
| 68 | + queues: |
| 69 | + messenger: |
| 70 | + arguments: |
| 71 | + x-max-priority: 255 |
| 72 | +
|
| 73 | + .. code-block:: xml |
| 74 | +
|
| 75 | + <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?> |
| 76 | + <container xmlns="http://symfony.com/schema/dic/services" |
| 77 | + xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" |
| 78 | + xmlns:framework="http://symfony.com/schema/dic/symfony" |
| 79 | + xsi:schemaLocation="http://symfony.com/schema/dic/services |
| 80 | + https://symfony.com/schema/dic/services/services-1.0.xsd |
| 81 | + http://symfony.com/schema/dic/symfony |
| 82 | + https://symfony.com/schema/dic/symfony/symfony-1.0.xsd"> |
| 83 | +
|
| 84 | + <framework:config> |
| 85 | + <framework:messenger> |
| 86 | + <framework:transport name="async" |
| 87 | + dsn="%env(MESSENGER_TRANSPORT_DSN)%" |
| 88 | + > |
| 89 | + <framework:options> |
| 90 | + <framework:queues> |
| 91 | + <framework:messenger> |
| 92 | + <framework:arguments> |
| 93 | + <framework:x-max-priority>255</framework:x-max-priority> |
| 94 | + </framework:arguments> |
| 95 | + </framework:messenger> |
| 96 | + </framework:queues> |
| 97 | + </framework:options> |
| 98 | + </framework:transport> |
| 99 | + </framework:messenger> |
| 100 | + </framework:config> |
| 101 | + </container> |
| 102 | +
|
| 103 | + .. code-block:: php |
| 104 | +
|
| 105 | + // config/packages/messenger.php |
| 106 | + use Symfony\Config\FrameworkConfig; |
| 107 | +
|
| 108 | + return static function (FrameworkConfig $framework) { |
| 109 | + $messenger = $framework->messenger(); |
| 110 | +
|
| 111 | + $messenger->transport('async') |
| 112 | + ->dsn('%env(MESSENGER_TRANSPORT_DSN)%') |
| 113 | + ->options([ |
| 114 | + 'queues' => [ |
| 115 | + 'messenger' => [ |
| 116 | + 'arguments' => [ |
| 117 | + 'x-max-priority' => 255, |
| 118 | + ], |
| 119 | + ] |
| 120 | + ] |
| 121 | + ]); |
| 122 | + }; |
| 123 | +
|
| 124 | +.. caution:: |
| 125 | + |
| 126 | + It's not safe to set ``x-max-priority`` for an existing queue. |
| 127 | + RabbitMQ can not change existing queue's configuration. Messenger will |
| 128 | + fail to auto-setup and priorities won't work. |
| 129 | + |
| 130 | +.. note:: |
| 131 | + |
| 132 | + `RabbitMQ manual recommends`_ using up to 10 different priority levels. |
| 133 | + For example, you may use 255 for high, 127 for medium and 0 for low priority. |
| 134 | + Having more levels may have an impact on performance. |
| 135 | + |
| 136 | +.. _`RabbitMQ manual recommends`: https://www.rabbitmq.com/priority.html |
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