Promiscuous is a pub-sub framework for easily replicating data across your Ruby applications. Promiscuous guarantees that a subscriber never sees out of order updates and that all updates are eventually replicated.
Benefits over database replication
- Hetrogenous replication. e.g. replicate from Mongo -> Postgres | ElasticSearch | Redis ...
- "Remote observers". The ability to observe model changes in one application from another.
- Publish virtual attributes
We need a few things for the promiscuous tutorial:
- The AMQP broker RabbitMQ up and running.
- The key-value storage system Redis (at least 2.6) up and running.
- Two Rails applications with the promiscuous gem installed.
- Both applications must be running on separate databases.
- Both applications must have a User model (ActiveRecord or Mongoid) with two attributes name and email.
By including the Promiscuous publisher mixin, we can publish the model attributes:
# app/models/user.rb on the publisher app
class User
include Promiscuous::Publisher
publish :name, :email
end
Similarly to the publisher app, we can subscribe to the attributes:
# app/models/user.rb on the subscriber app
class User
include Promiscuous::Subscriber
subscribe :name, :email
after_create { Rails.logger.info "Hi #{name}!" }
end
The subscriber must listen for new data to arrive. Promiscuous has a worker that we can launch with the following command:
bundle exec promiscuous subscribe
You should start the subscriber first, otherwise the appropriate queues will not be created. From now on, you should see the queue in the RabbitMQ web admin page. Create a new user in the publisher's Rails console with:
User.create(:name => 'Yoda')`
You should see the message "Hi Yoda!" appearing in the log file of the subscriber.
- Attributes
- Ephemerals & Observers
- Polymorphism
- Embedded Documents
- Foreign Keys
- Namespace Mapping
- Promiscuous DSL