BunnyPHP
Performant pure-PHP AMQP (RabbitMQ) sync/async (ReactPHP) library
Requirements
BunnyPHP requires PHP 7.1 and newer.
Installation
Add as Composer dependency:
$ composer require bunny/bunny:@dev
Comparison
You might ask if there isn't a library/extension to connect to AMQP broker (e.g. RabbitMQ) already. Yes, there are multiple options:
- ext-amqp - PHP extension
- php-amqplib - pure-PHP AMQP protocol implementation
- react-amqp - ext-amqp binding to ReactPHP
Why should you want to choose BunnyPHP instead?
-
You want nice idiomatic PHP API to work with (I'm looking at you, php-amqplib). BunnyPHP interface follows PHP's common coding standards and naming conventions. See tutorial.
-
You can't (don't want to) install PECL extension that has latest stable version in 2014. BunnyPHP isn't as such marked as stable yet. But it is already being used in production.
-
You have both classic CLI/FPM and ReactPHP applications and need to connect to RabbitMQ. BunnyPHP comes with both synchronous and asynchronous clients with same PHP-idiomatic interface. Async client uses react/promise.
Apart from that BunnyPHP is more performant than main competing library, php-amqplib. See benchmark/
directory
and php-amqplib's benchmark/
.
Benchmarks were run as:
$ php benchmark/producer.php N & php benchmark/consumer.php
Library | N (# messages) | Produce sec | Produce msg/sec | Consume sec | Consume msg/sec |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
php-amqplib | 100 | 0.0131 | 7633 | 0.0446 | 2242 |
bunnyphp | 100 | 0.0128 | 7812 | 0.0488 | 2049 |
bunnyphp +/- | +2.3% | -8.6% | |||
php-amqplib | 1000 | 0.1218 | 8210 | 0.4801 | 2082 |
bunnyphp | 1000 | 0.1042 | 9596 | 0.2919 | 3425 |
bunnyphp +/- | +17% | +64% | |||
php-amqplib | 10000 | 1.1075 | 9029 | 5.1824 | 1929 |
bunnyphp | 10000 | 0.9078 | 11015 | 2.9058 | 3441 |
bunnyphp +/- | +22% | +78% | |||
php-amqplib | 100000 | 20.7005 | 4830 | 69.0360 | 1448 |
bunnyphp | 100000 | 9.7891 | 10215 | 35.7305 | 2789 |
bunnyphp +/- | +111% | +92% |
Tutorial
Connecting
When instantiating the BunnyPHP Client
accepts an array with connection options:
$connection = [
'host' => 'HOSTNAME',
'vhost' => 'VHOST', // The default vhost is /
'user' => 'USERNAME', // The default user is guest
'password' => 'PASSWORD', // The default password is guest
];
$bunny = new Client($connection);
$bunny->connect();
Connecting with SSL/TLS
Options for SSL-connections should be specified as array ssl
:
$connection = [
'host' => 'HOSTNAME',
'vhost' => 'VHOST', // The default vhost is /
'user' => 'USERNAME', // The default user is guest
'password' => 'PASSWORD', // The default password is guest
'ssl' => [
'cafile' => 'ca.pem',
'local_cert' => 'client.cert',
'local_pk' => 'client.key',
],
];
$bunny = new Client($connection);
$bunny->connect();
For options description - please see SSL context options.
Note: invalid SSL configuration will cause connection failure.
See also common configuration variants.
Publish a message
Now that we have a connection with the server we need to create a channel and declare a queue to communicate over before we can publish a message, or subscribe to a queue for that matter.
$channel = $bunny->channel();
$channel->queueDeclare('queue_name'); // Queue name
Publishing a message on a virtual host with quorum queues as a default
From RabbitMQ 4 queues will be standard defined as Quorum queues, those are by default durable, in order to connect to them you should use the queue declare method as follows. In the current version of RabbitMQ 3.11.15 this is already supported, if the virtual host is configured to have a default type of Quorum.
$channel = $bunny->channel();
$channel->queueDeclare('queue_name', false, true); // Queue name
With a communication channel set up, we can now publish a message to the queue:
$channel->publish(
$message, // The message you're publishing as a string
[], // Any headers you want to add to the message
'', // Exchange name
'queue_name' // Routing key, in this example the queue's name
);
Subscribing to a queue
Subscribing to a queue can be done in two ways. The first way will run indefinitely:
$channel->run(
function (Message $message, Channel $channel, Client $bunny) {
$success = handleMessage($message); // Handle your message here
if ($success) {
$channel->ack($message); // Acknowledge message
return;
}
$channel->nack($message); // Mark message fail, message will be redelivered
},
'queue_name'
);
The other way lets you run the client for a specific amount of time consuming the queue before it stops:
$channel->consume(
function (Message $message, Channel $channel, Client $client){
$channel->ack($message); // Acknowledge message
},
'queue_name'
);
$bunny->run(12); // Client runs for 12 seconds and then stops
Pop a single message from a queue
$message = $channel->get('queue_name');
// Handle message
$channel->ack($message); // Acknowledge message
Prefetch count
A way to control how many messages are prefetched by BunnyPHP when consuming a queue is by using the channel's QOS method. In the example below only 5 messages will be prefetched. Combined with acknowledging messages this turns into an effective flow control for your applications, especially asynchronous applications. No new messages will be fetched unless one has been acknowledged.
$channel->qos(
0, // Prefetch size
5 // Prefetch count
);
Asynchronous usage
Bunny supports both synchronous and asynchronous usage utilizing ReactPHP. The following example shows setting up a client and consuming a queue indefinitely.
(new Async\Client($eventLoop, $options))->connect()->then(function (Async\Client $client) {
return $client->channel();
})->then(function (Channel $channel) {
return $channel->qos(0, 5)->then(function () use ($channel) {
return $channel;
});
})->then(function (Channel $channel) use ($event) {
$channel->consume(
function (Message $message, Channel $channel, Async\Client $client) use ($event) {
// Handle message
$channel->ack($message);
},
'queue_name'
);
});
AMQP interop
There is amqp interop compatible wrapper(s) for the bunny library.
Testing
Create client/server SSL certificates by running:
$ cd test/ssl && make all && cd -
You need access to a RabbitMQ instance in order to run the test suite. The easiest way is to use the provided Docker Compose setup to create an isolated environment, including a RabbitMQ container, to run the test suite in.
Docker Compose
-
Use Docker Compose to create a network with a RabbitMQ container and a PHP container to run the tests in. The project directory will be mounted into the PHP container.
$ docker-compose up -d
To test against different SSL configurations (as in CI builds), you can set environment variable
CONFIG_NAME=rabbitmq.ssl.verify_none
before runningdocker-compose up
. -
Optionally use
docker ps
to display the running containers.$ docker ps --filter name=bunny [...] bunny_rabbit_node_1_1 [...] bunny_bunny_1
-
Enter the PHP container.
$ docker exec -it bunny_bunny_1 bash
-
Within the container, run:
$ vendor/bin/phpunit
Contributing
-
Large part of the PHP code (almost everything in
Bunny\Protocol
namespace) is generated from spec in filespec/amqp-rabbitmq-0.9.1.json
. Look forDO NOT EDIT!
in doc comments.To change generated files change
spec/generate.php
and run:$ php ./spec/generate.php
Broker compatibility
Works well with RabbitMQ
Does not work with ActiveMQ because it requires AMQP 1.0 which is a completely different protocol (Bunny is implementing AMQP 0.9.1)
License
BunnyPHP is licensed under MIT license. See LICENSE
file.