NanoMQ MQTT Broker (NanoMQ) is a lightweight and blazing-fast MQTT Broker for the IoT Edge platform.
NanoMQ bases on NNG's asynchronous I/O threading model, with an extension of MQTT support in the protocol layer and reworked transport layer, plus an enhanced asynchronous IO mechanism maximizing the overall capacity.
NanoMQ currently supports MQTT V3.1.1 and partially supports MQTT V5.0.
For more information, please visit NanoMQ homepage.
- Cost-effective on an embedded platform;
- Fully base on native POSIX. High Compatibility;
- Pure C/C++ implementation. High portability;
- Fully asynchronous I/O and multi-threading;
- Good support for SMP;
- Low latency & High handling capacity.
NanoMQ broker usage
nanomq broker start -url <url>
nanomq broker stop
nanomq broker restart -url <url>
POSIX message queue usage
nanomq broker mq start
nanomq broker mq stop
Incoming feature: NanoMQ Zmq usage
nanomq sp req -port 5555
nanomq sp rep -port 5555
Note: NanoMQ provides several ways of configurations so that user can achieve better performance on different platforms, check here for details.
NanoMQ dedicates to delivering a simple but powerful Messaging Hub on various edge platforms.
With this being said, NanoMQ can run on different architectures such like x86_64 and ARM with minor migration efforts.
docker run -d --name nanomq nanomq/nanomq:0.3.5
To build NanoMQ, requires a C99 & C++11 compatible compiler and CMake (version 3.13 or newer).
-
It is recommended to compile with Ninja:
git clone https://github.com/nanomq/nanomq.git cd nanomq mkdir build & cd build cmake -G Ninja .. ninja
-
Or to compile without Ninja:
git clone https://github.com/nanomq/nanomq.git cd nanomq mkdir build & cd build cmake .. make
Note for Mac users: mq (one of the features) is not supported on Mac, please disable it before compiling.
cmake -G Ninja -DCFG_METHOD=CMAKE_CONFIG -DMQ=0 ..
ninja
Note (optional): nanolib & nanonng are dependencies of NanoMQ that can be compiled independently.
To compile nanonng (nanonng is the fork of nng repository with MQTT support):
cd nng/build
cmake -G Ninja ..
ninja
To compile nanolib:
cd nanolib/build
cmake -G Ninja ..
ninja
NanoMQ as an MQTT broker with good compatibility and portability, it provides several options for optimizing performance according to your system.
With CMake, NanoMQ allows user to have broker natively tuned/configured when building from source. Please kindly find the parameters as follows:
To use CMake configuration, navigating to ./nanomq/build
and typing the following command :
cmake -DCFG_METHOD=CMAKE_CONFIG ..
Be aware that, CMake configuration is enabled by default, If you leave all parameters empty, the default value will take effect.
-
Limiting the number of threads by specifying the number of and the max number of taskq threads:
Recommendation: equal to your CPU cores
cmake -G Ninja -DCFG_METHOD=CMAKE_CONFIG -DNNG_NUM_TASKQ_THREADS=<num> .. cmake -G Ninja -DCFG_METHOD=CMAKE_CONFIG -DNNG_MAX_TASKQ_THREADS=<num> ..
-
Setting the number of concurrent resolver threads:
Recommendation: 1
cmake -G Ninja -DCFG_METHOD=CMAKE_CONFIG -DNNG_RESOLV_CONCURRENCY=<num> ..
Inherited from NNG
-
For debugging, NanoMQ has a debugging system that logs all information from all threads. Which is aligned with syslog standard. Enabling or disabling the debugging messages by (Mac users should disable it before compilation):
Default: disabled (1)
cmake -G Ninja -DCFG_METHOD=CMAKE_CONFIG -DNOLOG=0 .. cmake -G Ninja -DCFG_METHOD=CMAKE_CONFIG -DNOLOG=1 ..
-
Enabling or disabling messaging queue function
Default: enabled (1)
cmake -G Ninja -DCFG_METHOD=CMAKE_CONFIG -DMQ=1 .. cmake -G Ninja -DCFG_METHOD=CMAKE_CONFIG -DMQ=0 ..
-
Setting the logical concurrency limitation:
Default: 32
cmake -G Ninja -DCFG_METHOD=CMAKE_CONFIG -DPARALLEL=<num> ..
In the root directory of NanoMQ(./nanomq
), there is a file named 'config.cmake.in'. It provides bunch of modifiable configurations (same as the parameters above).
navigating to ./nanomq/build
, then:
cmake -DCFG_METHOD=FILE_CONFIG ..
ninja
to make your modification effective.
Users can also change the configuration parameters of NanoMQ while booting. However, part of the parameters is excluded in this method.
In the etc
directory of NanoMQ (./nanomq/etc/nanomq.conf
), there is a 'nanomq.conf' configuration file. This file is different from 'config.cmake.in'. This 'nanomq.conf' allows you to configure broker when booting. Please be noted that if you start NanoMQ in the project's root directory, this file will be read automatically.
You can also write your own configuration file. Be sure to start NanoMQ in this fashion to specify an effective configuration file:
nanomq broker start -conf <$FILE_PATH>
The same configuration can be achieved by adding some command-line arguments when you start NanoMQ broker. There are a few arguments for you to play with. And the general usage is:
nanomq broker {{start|restart -url <url> [-conf <$FILE_PATH>] [-daemon] [-tq_thread <num>] [-max_tq_thread <num>] [-parallel <num>] [-qos_timer <num>] }|stop}
-
start
,restart
, andstop
command is mandatory as it indicates whether you want to start a new broker, or replace an existing broker with a new one, or stop a running broker;If
stop
is chosen, no other arguments are needed, and an existing running broker will be stopped:nanomq broker stop
All arguments are useful when
start
andrestart
are chosen. An URL is mandatory (unless an URL is specified in the 'nanomq.conf', or in your configuration file), as it indicates on which the host and port a broker is listening:nanomq broker start|restart -url <url> nanomq broker start|restart ## only if an url is specified in 'nanomq.conf' nanomq broker start|restart -conf <$FILE_PATH> ## only if an url is specified in your conf file
-
Telling broker that it should read your configuration file.
Be aware that command line arguments always has a higher priority than both 'nanomq.conf' and your configuration file:
nanomq broker start|restart -conf <$FILE_PATH>
-
Running broker in daemon mode:
nanomq broker start|restart -url <url> -daemon
-
Limiting the number of threads by specifying the number of and the max number of taskq threads:
nanomq broker start|restart -url <url> -tq_thread <num> nanomq broker start|restart -url <url> -max_tq_thread <num>
-
Limiting the maximum number of logical threads:
nanomq broker start|restart -url <url> -parallel <num>
-
Setting the max property size for MQTT packet:
Default: 32 bytes
nanomq broker start|restart -url <url> -property_size <num>
-
Setting the queue length for a resending message:
Default: 64 bytes
nanomq broker start|restart -url <url> -msq_len <num>
-
Setting the interval of the qos timer (Also a global timer interval for session keeping):
Default: 30 seconds
nanomq broker start|restart -url <url> -qos_timer <num>
For tuning NanoMQ according to different hardware, please check the Doc.
Visit our official website to have a good grasp on NanoMQ MQTT broker and see how it can be applied in current industries.
This test report shows how extraordinary and competitive the NanoMQ is in Edge Computing.
Currently the benchmark is for 0.2.5, the updated one with ver 0.3.5 is coming soon
NanoMQ is fully open-sourced!
The Github Discussions provides a place for you to ask questions and share your ideas with users around the world.
You could join us on Slack. We now share a workspace with the entire EMQ X team. After joining, find your channel!
#nanomq
: is a channel for general usage, where for asking question or sharing using experience;#nanomq-dev
: is a channel for MQTT lover and developer, your great thoughts are what we love to hear;#nanomq-nng
: is a channel for guys who are interested in NNG, one of our fabulous dependencies.
The EMQ X team.