nodemailer-amqp-example | An example of using Nodemailer with RabbitMQ | Messaging library
kandi X-RAY | nodemailer-amqp-example Summary
kandi X-RAY | nodemailer-amqp-example Summary
This is an example of using RabbitMQ (amqplib) for queueing Nodemailer email messages. This allows you to push messages from your application quickly to delivery queue and let Nodemailer handle the actual sending asynchronously from a background process. This example also demonstrates using different credentials for different messages using the same Nodemailer transport.
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Community Discussions
Trending Discussions on Messaging
QUESTION
I'm facing some issue in the firebase phone authentication OTP sender name means when the user receives the Firebase OTP the Sender Name shows as CloudOTP. More details please check the screenshot.
Current User Receive OTP with name
I want to show number like below screenshot.
Question: How to change sender name?
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks in advance.
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Nov-17 at 15:07The name or number that is shown with the text message that contains the OTP is determined by the provider and your phone. As far as I know there is no way for you to control that.
QUESTION
I am trying to formulate a query to select a conversation based on members passed in, this can be many participants.
Users can have multiple conversation with the same users in, and they can rename conversations.
Here is my messages members table:
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Mar-19 at 04:08I'm not a php guy, but something like this would return only conversations involving user_id 1 and user_id 3:
QUESTION
I am writing a service using Go and using RabbitMQ for messaging. I need to add information in the header that should contain where the message flows through, it should add the exchange
name or the queue
name in the message header as and when it enters one.
Can someone tell me how this can be done?
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Mar-08 at 18:03Every delivered message has a set of properties. Two of these are the exchange used to route the message, and the routing key. Depending on the type of exchange you can also figure out the queue name based on this information.
https://www.rabbitmq.com/amqp-0-9-1-quickref.html
If you need to know when a message is published you can use this plugin - https://github.com/rabbitmq/rabbitmq-message-timestamp
NOTE: the RabbitMQ team monitors the rabbitmq-users
mailing list and only sometimes answers questions on StackOverflow.
QUESTION
I am attempting to use Quarkus' AMQP (reactive-messaging-amqp
) extension to decouple work from the original REST request. The idea being the REST call would kick off a long running action and could later come back to get the result.
However, it seems that in my code, Quarkus runs each step in the same thread, completing the work before returning from the original sendNewLRA()
call. I would have assumed that the message would be sent through AMQP, thus decoupling the process after the message was sent. Why isn't this the case? I currently don't have any AMQP/messaging specific configuration, and just letting the default run from its own TestContainer (managed by Quarkus)
REST handler:
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Feb-22 at 16:52Found the answer, or at least a fix...
Adding @Blocking
to the second step in the messaging chain seems to have decoupled the process:
QUESTION
I want to understand the behavior I'm seeing with the following code. Using the RabbitMQ.Client library version 6.2.2.
Expected behavior: Connections are created quickly and the process does not slow down.
Actual behavior: First 6 connections are created quickly, after that there is a significant slowdown and connections are created one by done (1s apart).
Note; starting the program multiple times shows similar behavior. That leads me to believe that the bottleneck is per-process rather than RabbitMQ or system resources.
Note 2; system resources are not the bottleneck (AFAIK).
Does anybody know what is causing the observed behavior? RabbitMQ installed on Windows 10 with default settings.
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Feb-21 at 15:25The .NET client uses the ThreadPool
which probably doesn't have enough threads out of the box. You need to increase the amount available:
See issues and discussion here:
https://github.com/rabbitmq/rabbitmq-dotnet-client/search?q=threadpool
NOTE: the RabbitMQ team monitors the rabbitmq-users
mailing list and only sometimes answers questions on StackOverflow.
QUESTION
Som I'm currently looking into updating our very simple service bus service to the latest version (Asure.Messaging.Servicebus) and I'm running into a smaller problem here.
The thing is I want to complete or abandon received or peaked messages manually by delegating the message back to methods in my service class to handle the job.
Here is my simple class so far, exposed by an interface.
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Feb-17 at 14:57Service Bus associates a message lock with the AMQP link from which the message was received. For the SDK, this means that you must settle the message with the same ServiceBusReceiver
instance that you used to receive it.
In your code, you're creating a new receiver for ReceiveMessage
call - so when you attempt to complete or abandon the message, you're using a link for which the message is not valid if any other call to ReceiveMessage
has taken place.
Generally, you want to avoid the pattern of creating short-lived Service Bus client objects. They're intended to be long-lived and reused over the lifetime of the application. In your code, you're also implicitly abandoning the senders/receivers without closing them. This is going to orphan the AMQP link until the service force-closes it for being idle after 20 minutes.
I'd recommend pooling your senders/receivers and keeping each as a singleton for the associated queue. Each call to SendMessage
or ReceiveMessage
should for a given queue should use the same sender/receiver instance.
When your application closes, be sure to close or dispose the ServiceBusClient
, which will ensure that all of its child senders/receivers are also cleaned up appropriately.
I'd also very strongly recommend refactoring your class to be async. The sync-over-async pattern that you're using is going to put additional pressure on the thread pool and is likely to result in thread starvation and/or deadlocks under load.
UPDATE
To add some additional context, I'd advise not wrapping Service Bus operations but, instead, have a factory that focuses on managing clients and letting callers interact directly with them.
This ensures that clients are pooled and their lifetimes are managed correctly, while also giving flexibility to callers to hold onto the sender/receiver reference and use for multiple operations rather than paying the cost to retrieve it.
As an example, the following is a simple factory class that you'd create and manage as a singleton in your application. Callers are able to request a sender/receiver for a specific queue/topic/subscription and they'll be created as needed and then pooled for reuse.
QUESTION
I am deciding if I should use MSK (managed kafka from AWS) or a combination of SQS + SNS to achieve a pub sub model?
Background
Currently, we have a micro service architecture but we don't use any messaging service and only use REST apis (dont ask why - related to some 3rd party vendors who designed the architecture). Now, I want to revamp it and start using messaging for communication between micro-services.
Initially, the plan is to start publishing entity events for any other micro service to consume - these events will also be stored in data lake in S3 which will also serve as a base for starting data team.
Later, I want to move certain features from REST to async communication.
Anyway, the main question I have is - should I decide to go with MSK or should I use SQS + SNS for the same? ( I already understand the basic concepts but wanted to understand from fellow community if there are some other pros and cons)?
Thanks in advance
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Feb-09 at 17:58MSK VS SQS+SNS is not really 1:1 comparison. The choice depends on various use cases. Please find out some of specific difference between two
- Scalability -> MSK has better scalability option because of inherent design of partitions that allow parallelism and ordering of message. SNS has limitation of 300 publish/Second, to achieve same performance as MSK, there need to have higher number of SNS topic for same purpose.
Example : Topic: Order Service in MSK -> one topic+ 10 Partitions SNS -> 10 topics
if client/message producer use 10 SNS topic for same purpose, then client needs to have information of all 10 SNS topic and distribution of message. In MSK, it's pretty straightforward, key needs to send in message and kafka will allocate the partition based on Key value.
Administration/Operation -> SNS+SQS setup is much simpler compare to MSK. Operational challenge is much more with MSK( even this is managed service). MSK needs more in depth skills to use optimally.
SNS +SQS VS SQS -> I believe you have multiple subscription(fanout) for same message thats why you have refer SNS +SQS. If you have One Subscription for one message, then only SQS is also sufficient.
Replay of message -> MSK can be use for replaying the already processed message. It will be tricky for SQS, though can be achieve by having duplicate queue so that can be use for replay.
QUESTION
In my UML model I have a system and its subcomponents that talk to each other. For Example, I have a computer and a RC robot where they talk via Bluetooth. Currently in the diagrams the flow is something like:
"Computer" triggers "setVelocity()" function of "RC car".
At this point, I want to refine the communication by saying that
- computer sends "Movement" message
- with velocity field is set to 100 and direction field is set to 0
- which is acknowledged by RC car by sending ACK message
- with message id "Movement" and sequence number X.
How do I do that?
EDIT: Clarification
Normally this is what my diagram looks like without protocol details:
But when I tried to add messages, there are at least 2 problems:
- It seems like Computer first triggered the setVelocity() funciton and then sendBluetoothMessage() sequentially which are not sequential . The followings of setVelocity() are actually what happens inside that.
- sendBluetoothMessage() is actually a function of Computer. But here it belongs to RC Car. (or am I wrong?) And the same things for ACK.
Thanks for the responses. You are gold!
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Jan-29 at 17:48There are two main ways of representing the sending of a movement message between two devices:
A
movement()
operation on the target device, with parameters for the velocity and direction. You would typically show the exchange in a sequence diagram, with a call arrow from the sender to the receiver. The return message could just be label as ACK.A
«signal» Movement
: Signals correspond to event messages. In a class diagram, they are represented like a class but with the«signal»
keyword:velocity
anddirection
would be attributes of that signal.ACK
would be another signal. The classes that are able to receive the signals show it as reception (looks like an operation, but again with «signal» keyword).
In both cases, you would show the interactions of your communication protocol with an almost identical sequence diagram. But signals are meant for asynchronous communication and better reflect imho the nature of the communication. It's semantic is more suitable for your needs.
If you prefer communication diagram over interaction diagrams, the signal approach would be clearer, since communication diagrams don't show return messages.
Why signals is what you need (your edit)With the diagrams, your edited question is much clearer. My position about the use of signals is unchanged: signals would correspond to the information exchanged between the computer and the car. So in a class diagram, you could document the «signal»Movement
as having attributes id
, velocity
and direction
:
In your sequence diagram, you'd then send and arrow with Movement (X,100,0)
. Signal allows to show the high level view of the protocol exchanges, without getting lost on the practical implementation details:
The implementation details could then be shown in a separate diagram. There are certainly several classes involved on the side of the computer (one diagram, the final action being some kind of sending) and on the side of the car (another diagram: how to receive and dispatch the message, and decode its content). I do not provide examples because it would very much look like your current diagram, but the send functions would probably be implemented by a communication controller.
If you try to put the protocol and its implementation in the same diagram, as in your second diagram, it gets confusing because of the lack of separation of concerns: here you say the computer is calling a send function on the car, which is not at all what you want. The reader has then difficulty to see what's really required by the protocol, and what's the implementation details. For instance, I still don't know according to your diagram, if setVelocity
is supposed to directly send something to the car, or if its a preparatory step for sending the movement message with a velocity.
Last but not least, keep in mind that the sequence diagram represents just a specific scenario. If you want to formally define a protocol in UML, you'd need to create as well a protocol state machine that tells the valid succession of messages. When you use signals, you can use their name directly as state transition trigger/event.
QUESTION
Essentially what the subject says.
I'm wondering if JetStream can be queried in a way that allows us to refetch either the last 15 messages of subject "foo.*" or the messages that JetStream received on subject "foo.*" in the last 1.5 seconds.
If that's possible any code-samples or links to code-samples are appreciated.
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Jan-21 at 03:47According to the official docs
- It is possible to grab message starting from a certain time: in the last 1.5 seconds.
DeliverByStartTime
When first consuming messages, start with messages on or after this time. The consumer is required to specify OptStartTime, the time in the stream to start at. It will receive the closest available message on or after that time.
- The other requirement, the last 15 messages, I think it's not possible
QUESTION
I try to persist messages from activeMQ messaging in a postgres databases. This first step was easy. I added this CLI
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Jan-03 at 17:27I don't believe WildFly supports a suffix or prefix for the JDBC table names so you'll need to manually set the table names for the journal
configuration. Here's the list of attributes:
messages-table
bindings-table
jms-bindings-table
large-messages-table
node-manager-store-table
page-store-table
These will need to be unique for each server.
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