Parent

AMQP::Channel

h2. What are AMQP channels

To quote {files.travis-ci.org/docs/amqp/0.9.1/AMQP091Specification.pdf AMQP 0.9.1 specification}:

AMQP is a multi-channelled protocol. Channels provide a way to multiplex a heavyweight TCP/IP connection into several light weight connections. This makes the protocol more “firewall friendly” since port usage is predictable. It also means that traffic shaping and other network QoS features can be easily employed. Channels are independent of each other and can perform different functions simultaneously with other channels, the available bandwidth being shared between the concurrent activities.

h2. Opening a channel

*Channels are opened asynchronously*. There are two ways to do it: using a callback or pseudo-synchronous mode.

@example Opening a channel with a callback

# this assumes EventMachine reactor is running
AMQP.connect("amqp://guest:guest@dev.rabbitmq.com:5672") do |client|
  AMQP::Channel.new(client) do |channel, open_ok|
    # when this block is executed, channel is open and ready for use
  end
end

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Unless your application needs multiple channels, this approach is recommended. Alternatively, AMQP::Channel can be instantiated without a block. Then returned channel is not immediately open, however, it can be used as if it was a synchronous, blocking method:

@example Instantiating a channel that will be open eventually

# this assumes EventMachine reactor is running
AMQP.connect("amqp://guest:guest@dev.rabbitmq.com:5672") do |client|
  channel  = AMQP::Channel.new(client)
  exchange = channel.default_exchange

  # ...
end

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Even though in the example above channel isn't immediately open, it is safe to declare exchanges using it. Exchange declaration will be delayed until after channel is open. Same applies to queue declaration and other operations on exchanges and queues. Library methods that rely on channel being open will be enqueued and executed in a FIFO manner when broker confirms channel opening. Note, however, that *this "pseudo-synchronous mode" is easy to abuse and introduce race conditions AMQP gem cannot resolve for you*. AMQP is an inherently asynchronous protocol and AMQP gem embraces this fact.

h2. Key methods

Key methods of Channel class are

refer to documentation for those methods for usage examples.

Channel provides a number of convenience methods that instantiate queues and exchanges of various types associated with this channel:

h2. Error handling

It is possible (and, indeed, recommended) to handle channel-level exceptions by defining an errback using on_error:

@example Queue declaration with incompatible attributes results in a channel-level exception

AMQP.start("amqp://guest:guest@dev.rabbitmq.com:5672") do |connection, open_ok|
  AMQP::Channel.new do |channel, open_ok|
    puts "Channel ##{channel.id} is now open!"

    channel.on_error do |ch, close|
      puts "Handling channel-level exception"

      connection.close {
        EM.stop { exit }
      }
    end

    EventMachine.add_timer(0.4) do
      # these two definitions result in a race condition. For sake of this example,
      # however, it does not matter. Whatever definition succeeds first, 2nd one will
      # cause a channel-level exception (because attributes are not identical)
      AMQP::Queue.new(channel, "amqpgem.examples.channel_exception", :auto_delete => true, :durable => false) do |queue|
        puts "#{queue.name} is ready to go"
      end

      AMQP::Queue.new(channel, "amqpgem.examples.channel_exception", :auto_delete => true, :durable => true) do |queue|
        puts "#{queue.name} is ready to go"
      end
    end
  end
end

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When channel-level exception is indicated by the broker and errback defined using on_error is run, channel is already closed and all queue and exchange objects associated with this channel are reset. The recommended way to recover from channel-level exceptions is to open a new channel and re-instantiate queues, exchanges and bindings your application needs.

h2. Closing a channel

Channels are opened when objects is instantiated and closed using {close} method when application no longer needs it.

@example Closing a channel your application no longer needs

# this assumes EventMachine reactor is running
AMQP.connect("amqp://guest:guest@dev.rabbitmq.com:5672") do |client|
  AMQP::Channel.new(client) do |channel, open_ok|
    channel.close do |close_ok|
      # when this block is executed, channel is successfully closed
    end
  end
end

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h2. RabbitMQ extensions.

AMQP gem supports several RabbitMQ extensions that extend Channel functionality. Learn more in {file:docs/VendorSpecificExtensions.textile}

@see files.travis-ci.org/docs/amqp/0.9.1/AMQP091Specification.pdf AMQP 0.9.1 specification (Section 2.2.5)

Attributes

auto_recovery[RW]

@return [Boolean] true if this channel is in automatic recovery mode @see auto_recovering?

conn[R]

AMQP connection this channel is part of @return [Connection]

connection[R]

AMQP connection this channel is part of @return [Connection]

status[R]

Status of this channel (one of: :opening, :closing, :open, :closed) @return [Symbol]

Public Class Methods

channel_id_mutex() click to toggle source

@private @api private

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 1197
def self.channel_id_mutex
  @channel_id_mutex ||= Mutex.new
end
default() click to toggle source

@private @deprecated

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 1278
def self.default
  # TODO: clear this when connection is closed
  Thread.current[:mq] ||= AMQP::Channel.new
end
error(msg = nil, &block) click to toggle source

Defines a global callback to be run on channel-level exception across all channels. Consider using Channel#on_error instead. This method is here for sake of backwards compatibility with 0.6.x and 0.7.x releases.

@param [String] msg Error message that passed to previously defined handler

@deprecated @api public @private

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 1124
def self.error(msg = nil, &block)
  if block
    @global_error_handler = block
  else
    @global_error_handler.call(msg) if @global_error_handler && msg
  end
end
id() click to toggle source

unique identifier of the default thread-local channel @deprecated @private

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 1272
def self.id
  Thread.current[:mq_id] ||= "#{`hostname`.strip}-#{Process.pid}-#{Thread.current.object_id}"
end
initialize_channel_id_allocator() click to toggle source

@private

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 1243
def self.initialize_channel_id_allocator
  # TODO: ideally, this should be in agreement with agreed max number of channels of the connection,
  #       but it is possible that value either not yet available. MK.
  max_channel     =  (1 << 16) - 1
  @int_allocator ||= IntAllocator.new(1, max_channel)
end
method_missing(meth, *args, &blk) click to toggle source

Allows for calls to all MQ instance methods. This implicitly calls AMQP::Channel.new so that a new channel is allocated for subsequent operations. @deprecated

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 1286
def self.method_missing(meth, *args, &blk)
  self.default.__send__(meth, *args, &blk)
end
new(connection = nil, id = self.class.next_channel_id, options = {}, &block) click to toggle source

@param [AMQP::Session] connection Connection to open this channel on. If not given, default AMQP

connection (accessible via {AMQP.connection}) will be used.

@param [Integer] id Channel id. Must not be greater than max channel id client and broker

negotiated on during connection setup. Almost always the right thing to do
is to let AMQP gem pick channel identifier for you. If you want to get next
channel id, use {AMQP::Channel.next_channel_id} (it is thread-safe).

@param [Hash] options A hash of options

@example Instantiating a channel for default connection (accessible as AMQP.connection)

AMQP.connect do |connection|
  AMQP::Channel.new(connection) do |channel, open_ok|
    # channel is ready: set up your messaging flow by creating exchanges,
    # queues, binding them together and so on.
  end
end

@example Instantiating a channel for explicitly given connection

AMQP.connect do |connection|
  AMQP::Channel.new(connection) do |channel, open_ok|
    # ...
  end
end

@example Instantiating a channel with a :prefetch option

AMQP.connect do |connection|
  AMQP::Channel.new(connection, AMQP::Channel.next_channel_id, :prefetch => 5) do |channel, open_ok|
    # ...
  end
end

@option options [Boolean] :prefetch (nil) Specifies number of messages to prefetch. Channel-specific. See {AMQP::Channel#prefetch}. @option options [Boolean] :auto_recovery (nil) Turns on automatic network failure recovery mode for this channel.

@yield [channel, open_ok] Yields open channel instance and AMQP method (channel.open-ok) instance. The latter is optional. @yieldparam [Channel] channel Channel that is successfully open @yieldparam [AMQP::Protocol::Channel::OpenOk] open_ok AMQP channel.open-ok) instance

@see AMQP::Channel#prefetch @api public

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 203
def initialize(connection = nil, id = self.class.next_channel_id, options = {}, &block)
  raise 'AMQP can only be used from within EM.run {}' unless EM.reactor_running?

  @connection = connection || AMQP.connection || AMQP.start
  # this means 2nd argument is options
  if id.kind_of?(Hash)
    options = options.merge(id)
    id      = self.class.next_channel_id
  end

  super(@connection, id, options)

  @rpcs                       = Hash.new
  # we need this deferrable to mimic what AMQP gem 0.7 does to enable
  # the following (pseudo-synchronous) style of programming some people use in their
  # existing codebases:
  #
  # connection = AMQP.connect
  # channel    = AMQP::Channel.new(connection)
  # queue      = AMQP::Queue.new(channel)
  #
  # ...
  #
  # Read more about EM::Deferrable#callback behavior in EventMachine documentation. MK.
  @channel_is_open_deferrable = AMQ::Client::EventMachineClient::Deferrable.new

  @parameter_checks = {:queue => [:durable, :exclusive, :auto_delete, :arguments], :exchange => [:type, :durable, :arguments]}

  # only send channel.open when connection is actually open. Makes it possible to
  # do c = AMQP.connect; AMQP::Channel.new(c) that is what some people do. MK.
  @connection.on_connection do
    self.open do |ch, open_ok|
      @channel_is_open_deferrable.succeed

      if block
        case block.arity
        when 1 then block.call(ch)
        else block.call(ch, open_ok)
        end # case
      end # if

      self.prefetch(options[:prefetch], false) if options[:prefetch]
    end # self.open
  end # @connection.on_open
end
next_channel_id() click to toggle source

Returns next available channel id. This method is thread safe.

@return [Fixnum] @api public @see Channel.release_channel_id @see Channel.reset_channel_id_allocator

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 1207
def self.next_channel_id
  channel_id_mutex.synchronize do
    self.initialize_channel_id_allocator

    @int_allocator.allocate
  end
end
on_error(&block) click to toggle source

Defines a global callback to be run on channel-level exception across all channels. Consider using Channel#on_error instead. This method is here for sake of backwards compatibility with 0.6.x and 0.7.x releases. @see AMQP::Channel#on_error @deprecated @api public

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 1101
def self.on_error(&block)
  self.error(&block)
end
release_channel_id(i) click to toggle source

Releases previously allocated channel id. This method is thread safe.

@param [Fixnum] Channel id to release @api public @see Channel.next_channel_id @see Channel.reset_channel_id_allocator

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 1221
def self.release_channel_id(i)
  channel_id_mutex.synchronize do
    self.initialize_channel_id_allocator

    @int_allocator.release(i)
  end
end
reset_channel_id_allocator() click to toggle source

Resets channel allocator. This method is thread safe. @api public @see Channel.next_channel_id @see Channel.release_channel_id

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 1233
def self.reset_channel_id_allocator
  channel_id_mutex.synchronize do
    initialize_channel_id_allocator

    @int_allocator.reset
  end
end

Public Instance Methods

acknowledge(delivery_tag, multiple = false) click to toggle source

Acknowledge one or all messages on the channel.

@api public @see reject @see recover @see files.travis-ci.org/docs/amqp/0.9.1/AMQP091Reference.pdf AMQP 0.9.1 protocol documentation (Section 1.8.3.13.)

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 1021
def acknowledge(delivery_tag, multiple = false)
  super(delivery_tag, multiple)
end
auto_recover() click to toggle source

Called by associated connection object when AMQP connection has been re-established (for example, after a network failure).

@api plugin

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 262
def auto_recover
  return unless auto_recovering?

  @channel_is_open_deferrable.fail
  @channel_is_open_deferrable = AMQ::Client::EventMachineClient::Deferrable.new

  self.open do
    @channel_is_open_deferrable.succeed

    # re-establish prefetch
    self.prefetch(@options[:prefetch], false) if @options[:prefetch]

    # exchanges must be recovered first because queue recovery includes recovery of bindings. MK.
    @exchanges.each { |name, e| e.auto_recover }
    @queues.each    { |name, q| q.auto_recover }
  end
end
auto_recovering?() click to toggle source

@return [Boolean] true if this channel uses automatic recovery mode

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 254
def auto_recovering?
  @auto_recovery
end
close(reply_code = 200, reply_text = DEFAULT_REPLY_TEXT, class_id = 0, method_id = 0, &block) click to toggle source

Closes AMQP channel.

@api public

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 957
def close(reply_code = 200, reply_text = DEFAULT_REPLY_TEXT, class_id = 0, method_id = 0, &block)
  self.status = :closing
  r = super(reply_code, reply_text, class_id, method_id, &block)

  r
end
closing?() click to toggle source

@return [Boolean] @api public

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 950
def closing?
  self.status == :closing
end
default_exchange() click to toggle source

Returns exchange object with the same name as default (aka unnamed) exchange. Default exchange is a direct exchange and automatically routes messages to queues when routing key matches queue name exactly. This feature is known as "automatic binding" (of queues to default exchange).

*Use default exchange when you want to route messages directly to specific queues* (queue names are known, you don't mind this kind of coupling between applications).

@example Using default exchange to publish messages to queues with known names

AMQP.start(:host => 'localhost') do |connection|
  ch        = AMQP::Channel.new(connection)

  queue1    = ch.queue("queue1").subscribe do |payload|
    puts "[#{queue1.name}] => #{payload}"
  end
  queue2    = ch.queue("queue2").subscribe do |payload|
    puts "[#{queue2.name}] => #{payload}"
  end
  queue3    = ch.queue("queue3").subscribe do |payload|
    puts "[#{queue3.name}] => #{payload}"
  end
  queues    = [queue1, queue2, queue3]

  # Rely on default direct exchange binding, see section 2.1.2.4 Automatic Mode in AMQP 0.9.1 spec.
  exchange = AMQP::Exchange.default
  EM.add_periodic_timer(1) do
    q = queues.sample

    exchange.publish "Some payload from #{Time.now.to_i}", :routing_key => q.name
  end
end

@see Exchange @see files.travis-ci.org/docs/amqp/0.9.1/AMQP091Specification.pdf AMQP 0.9.1 specification (Section 2.1.2.4)

@return [Exchange] @api public

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 441
def default_exchange
  @default_exchange ||= Exchange.default(self)
end
direct(name = 'amq.direct', opts = {}, &block) click to toggle source

Defines, intializes and returns a direct Exchange instance.

Learn more about direct exchanges in {Exchange Exchange class documentation}.

@param [String] name (amq.direct) Exchange name.

@option opts [Boolean] :passive (false) If set, the server will not create the exchange if it does not

already exist. The client can use this to check whether an exchange
exists without modifying the server state.

@option opts [Boolean] :durable (false) If set when creating a new exchange, the exchange will be marked as

durable. Durable exchanges and their bindings are recreated upon a server
restart (information about them is persisted). Non-durable (transient) exchanges
do not survive if/when a server restarts (information about them is stored exclusively
in RAM).

@option opts [Boolean] :auto_delete (false) If set, the exchange is deleted when all queues have finished

using it. The server waits for a short period of time before
determining the exchange is unused to give time to the client code
to bind a queue to it.

@option opts [Boolean] :internal (default false) If set, the exchange may not be used directly by publishers, but

only when bound to other exchanges. Internal exchanges are used to
construct wiring that is not visible to applications. This is a RabbitMQ-specific
extension.

@option opts [Boolean] :nowait (true) If set, the server will not respond to the method. The client should

not wait for a reply method.  If the server could not complete the
method it will raise a channel or connection exception.

@raise [AMQP::Error] Raised when exchange is redeclared with parameters different from original declaration. @raise [AMQP::Error] Raised when exchange is declared with :passive => true and the exchange does not exist.

@example Using default pre-declared direct exchange and no callbacks (pseudo-synchronous style)

# an exchange application A will be using to publish updates
# to some search index
exchange = channel.direct("index.updates")

# In the same (or different) process declare a queue that broker will
# generate name for, bind it to aforementioned exchange using method chaining
queue    = channel.queue("").
                   # queue will be receiving messages that were published with
                   # :routing_key attribute value of "search.index.updates"
                   bind(exchange, :routing_key => "search.index.updates").
                   # register a callback that will be run when messages arrive
                   subscribe { |header, message| puts("Received #{message}") }

# now publish a new document contents for indexing,
# message will be delivered to the queue we declared and bound on the line above
exchange.publish(document.content, :routing_key => "search.index.updates")

@example Instantiating a direct exchange using {Channel#direct} with a callback

AMQP.connect do |connection|
  AMQP::Channel.new(connection) do |channel|
    channel.direct("email.replies_listener") do |exchange, declare_ok|
      # by now exchange is ready and waiting
    end
  end
end

@see Channel#default_exchange @see Exchange @see Exchange#initialize @see files.travis-ci.org/docs/amqp/0.9.1/AMQP091Specification.pdf AMQP 0.9.1 specification (Section 3.1.3.1)

@return [Exchange] @api public

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 388
def direct(name = 'amq.direct', opts = {}, &block)
  if exchange = find_exchange(name)
    extended_opts = Exchange.add_default_options(:direct, name, opts, block)

    validate_parameters_match!(exchange, extended_opts, :exchange)

    block.call(exchange) if block
    exchange
  else
    register_exchange(Exchange.new(self, :direct, name, opts, &block))
  end
end
fanout(name = 'amq.fanout', opts = {}, &block) click to toggle source

Defines, intializes and returns a fanout Exchange instance.

Learn more about fanout exchanges in {Exchange Exchange class documentation}.

@param [String] name (amq.fanout) Exchange name.

@option opts [Boolean] :passive (false) If set, the server will not create the exchange if it does not

already exist. The client can use this to check whether an exchange
exists without modifying the server state.

@option opts [Boolean] :durable (false) If set when creating a new exchange, the exchange will be marked as

durable. Durable exchanges and their bindings are recreated upon a server
restart (information about them is persisted). Non-durable (transient) exchanges
do not survive if/when a server restarts (information about them is stored exclusively
in RAM).

@option opts [Boolean] :auto_delete (false) If set, the exchange is deleted when all queues have finished

using it. The server waits for a short period of time before
determining the exchange is unused to give time to the client code
to bind a queue to it.

@option opts [Boolean] :internal (default false) If set, the exchange may not be used directly by publishers, but

only when bound to other exchanges. Internal exchanges are used to
construct wiring that is not visible to applications. This is a RabbitMQ-specific
extension.

@option opts [Boolean] :nowait (true) If set, the server will not respond to the method. The client should

not wait for a reply method.  If the server could not complete the
method it will raise a channel or connection exception.

@raise [AMQP::Error] Raised when exchange is redeclared with parameters different from original declaration. @raise [AMQP::Error] Raised when exchange is declared with :passive => true and the exchange does not exist.

@example Using fanout exchange to deliver messages to multiple consumers

# open up a channel
# declare a fanout exchange
# declare 3 queues, binds them
# publish a message

@see Exchange @see Exchange#initialize @see Channel#default_exchange @see files.travis-ci.org/docs/amqp/0.9.1/AMQP091Specification.pdf AMQP 0.9.1 specification (Section 3.1.3.2)

@return [Exchange] @api public

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 496
def fanout(name = 'amq.fanout', opts = {}, &block)
  if exchange = find_exchange(name)
    extended_opts = Exchange.add_default_options(:fanout, name, opts, block)

    validate_parameters_match!(exchange, extended_opts, :exchange)

    block.call(exchange) if block
    exchange
  else
    register_exchange(Exchange.new(self, :fanout, name, opts, &block))
  end
end
find_rpc(name) click to toggle source

@private @api plugin

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 1260
def find_rpc(name)
  @rpcs[name]
end
flow(active = false, &block) click to toggle source

Asks the peer to pause or restart the flow of content data sent to a consumer. This is a simple flow­control mechanism that a peer can use to avoid overflowing its queues or otherwise finding itself receiving more messages than it can process. Note that this method is not intended for window control. It does not affect contents returned to Queue#get callers.

@param [Boolean] Desired flow state.

@see files.travis-ci.org/docs/amqp/0.9.1/AMQP091Reference.pdf AMQP 0.9.1 protocol documentation (Section 1.5.2.3.) @api public

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 981
def flow(active = false, &block)
  super(active, &block)
end
flow_is_active?() click to toggle source

@return [Boolean] True if flow in this channel is active (messages will be delivered to consumers that use this channel).

@api public

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 988
def flow_is_active?
  @flow_is_active
end
handle_close(method) click to toggle source

Overrides AMQ::Client::Channel version to also call global callback (if defined) for backwards compatibility.

@private @api private

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 1138
def handle_close(method)
  super(method)

  self.class.error(method.reply_text)
  self.class.release_channel_id(@id)
end
handle_close_ok(method) click to toggle source

Overrides AMQ::Client::Channel version to also release the channel id

@private @api private

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 1149
def handle_close_ok(method)
  super(method)
  self.class.release_channel_id(@id)
end
handle_connection_interruption(reason = nil) click to toggle source

Overrides superclass method to also re-create @channel_is_open_deferrable

@api plugin @private

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 1187
def handle_connection_interruption(reason = nil)
  super(reason)

  self.class.release_channel_id(@id) unless auto_recovering?
  @channel_is_open_deferrable = AMQ::Client::EventMachineClient::Deferrable.new
end
headers(name = 'amq.match', opts = {}, &block) click to toggle source

Defines, intializes and returns a headers Exchange instance.

Learn more about headers exchanges in {Exchange Exchange class documentation}.

@param [String] name (amq.match) Exchange name.

@option opts [Boolean] :passive (false) If set, the server will not create the exchange if it does not

already exist. The client can use this to check whether an exchange
exists without modifying the server state.

@option opts [Boolean] :durable (false) If set when creating a new exchange, the exchange will be marked as

durable. Durable exchanges and their bindings are recreated upon a server
restart (information about them is persisted). Non-durable (transient) exchanges
do not survive if/when a server restarts (information about them is stored exclusively
in RAM).

@option opts [Boolean] :auto_delete (false) If set, the exchange is deleted when all queues have finished

using it. The server waits for a short period of time before
determining the exchange is unused to give time to the client code
to bind a queue to it.

@option opts [Boolean] :internal (default false) If set, the exchange may not be used directly by publishers, but

only when bound to other exchanges. Internal exchanges are used to
construct wiring that is not visible to applications. This is a RabbitMQ-specific
extension.

@option opts [Boolean] :nowait (true) If set, the server will not respond to the method. The client should

not wait for a reply method.  If the server could not complete the
method it will raise a channel or connection exception.

@raise [AMQP::Error] Raised when exchange is redeclared with parameters different from original declaration. @raise [AMQP::Error] Raised when exchange is declared with :passive => true and the exchange does not exist.

@example Using headers exchange to route messages based on multiple attributes (OS, architecture, # of cores)

puts "=> Headers routing example"
puts
AMQP.start do |connection|
  channel   = AMQP::Channel.new(connection)
  channel.on_error do |ch, channel_close|
    puts "A channel-level exception: #{channel_close.inspect}"
  end

  exchange = channel.headers("amq.match", :durable => true)

  channel.queue("", :auto_delete => true).bind(exchange, :arguments => { 'x-match' => 'all', :arch => "x64", :os => 'linux' }).subscribe do |metadata, payload|
    puts "[linux/x64] Got a message: #{payload}"
  end
  channel.queue("", :auto_delete => true).bind(exchange, :arguments => { 'x-match' => 'all', :arch => "x32", :os => 'linux' }).subscribe do |metadata, payload|
    puts "[linux/x32] Got a message: #{payload}"
  end
  channel.queue("", :auto_delete => true).bind(exchange, :arguments => { 'x-match' => 'any', :os => 'linux', :arch => "__any__" }).subscribe do |metadata, payload|
    puts "[linux] Got a message: #{payload}"
  end
  channel.queue("", :auto_delete => true).bind(exchange, :arguments => { 'x-match' => 'any', :os => 'macosx', :cores => 8 }).subscribe do |metadata, payload|
    puts "[macosx|octocore] Got a message: #{payload}"
  end

  EventMachine.add_timer(0.5) do
    exchange.publish "For linux/x64",   :headers => { :arch => "x64", :os => 'linux' }
    exchange.publish "For linux/x32",   :headers => { :arch => "x32", :os => 'linux' }
    exchange.publish "For linux",       :headers => { :os => 'linux'  }
    exchange.publish "For OS X",        :headers => { :os => 'macosx' }
    exchange.publish "For solaris/x64", :headers => { :os => 'solaris', :arch => 'x64' }
    exchange.publish "For ocotocore",   :headers => { :cores => 8  }
  end

  show_stopper = Proc.new do
    $stdout.puts "Stopping..."
    connection.close {
      EventMachine.stop { exit }
    }
  end

  Signal.trap "INT", show_stopper
  EventMachine.add_timer(2, show_stopper)
end

@see Exchange @see Exchange#initialize @see Channel#default_exchange @see files.travis-ci.org/docs/amqp/0.9.1/AMQP091Specification.pdf AMQP 0.9.1 specification (Section 3.1.3.3)

@return [Exchange] @api public

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 718
def headers(name = 'amq.match', opts = {}, &block)
  if exchange = find_exchange(name)
    extended_opts = Exchange.add_default_options(:headers, name, opts, block)

    validate_parameters_match!(exchange, extended_opts, :exchange)

    block.call(exchange) if block
    exchange
  else
    register_exchange(Exchange.new(self, :headers, name, opts, &block))
  end
end
on_error(&block) click to toggle source

Defines a callback that will be executed when channel is closed after channel-level exception.

@api public

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 1090
def on_error(&block)
  super(&block)
end
once_open(&block) click to toggle source

Takes a block that will be deferred till the moment when channel is considered open (channel.open-ok is received from the broker). If you need to delay an operation till the moment channel is open, this method is what you are looking for.

Multiple callbacks are supported. If when this moment is called, channel is already open, block is executed immediately.

@api public

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 939
def once_open(&block)
  @channel_is_open_deferrable.callback do
    # guards against cases when deferred operations
    # don't complete before the channel is closed
    block.call if open?
  end
end
Also aliased as: once_opened
once_opened(&block) click to toggle source
Alias for: once_open
open(&block) click to toggle source

Opens AMQP channel.

@note Instantiated channels are opened by default. This method should only be used for error recovery after network connection loss. @api public

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 921
def open(&block)
  super(&block)
end
open?() click to toggle source

@return [Boolean] true if channel is not closed. @api public

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 927
def open?
  self.status == :opened || self.status == :opening
end
prefetch(count, global = false, &block) click to toggle source

@param [Fixnum] Message count @param [Boolean] global (false)

@return [Channel] self

@api public

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 1000
def prefetch(count, global = false, &block)
  self.once_open do
    # RabbitMQ as of 2.3.1 does not support prefetch_size.
    self.qos(0, count, global, &block)
  end

  self
end
queue(name = AMQ::Protocol::EMPTY_STRING, opts = {}, &block) click to toggle source

Declares and returns a Queue instance associated with this channel. See {Queue Queue class documentation} for more information about queues.

To make broker generate queue name for you (a classic example is exclusive queues that are only used for a short period of time), pass empty string as name value. Then queue will get it's name as soon as broker's response (queue.declare-ok) arrives. Note that in this case, block is required.

Like for exchanges, queue names starting with 'amq.' cannot be modified and should not be used by applications.

@example Declaring a queue in a mail delivery app using Channel#queue without a block

AMQP.connect do |connection|
  AMQP::Channel.new(connection) do |ch|
    # message producers will be able to send messages to this queue
    # using direct exchange and routing key = "mail.delivery"
    queue = ch.queue("mail.delivery", :durable => true)
    queue.subscribe do |headers, payload|
      # ...
    end
  end
end

@example Declaring a server-named exclusive queue that receives all messages related to events, using a block.

AMQP.connect do |connection|
  AMQP::Channel.new(connection) do |ch|
    # message producers will be able to send messages to this queue
    # using amq.topic exchange with routing keys that begin with "events"
    ch.queue("", :exclusive => true) do |queue|
      queue.bind(ch.exchange("amq.topic"), :routing_key => "events.#").subscribe do |headers, payload|
        # ...
      end
    end
  end
end

@param [String] name Queue name. If you want a server-named queue, you can omit the name (note that in this case, using block is mandatory).

See {Queue Queue class documentation} for discussion of queue lifecycles and when use of server-named queues
is optimal.

@option opts [Boolean] :passive (false) If set, the server will not create the exchange if it does not

already exist. The client can use this to check whether an exchange
exists without modifying the server state.

@option opts [Boolean] :durable (false) If set when creating a new exchange, the exchange will be marked as

durable. Durable exchanges and their bindings are recreated upon a server
restart (information about them is persisted). Non-durable (transient) exchanges
do not survive if/when a server restarts (information about them is stored exclusively
in RAM). Any remaining messages in the queue will be purged when the queue
is deleted regardless of the message's persistence setting.

@option opts [Boolean] :auto_delete (false) If set, the exchange is deleted when all queues have finished

using it. The server waits for a short period of time before
determining the exchange is unused to give time to the client code
to bind a queue to it.

@option opts [Boolean] :exclusive (false) Exclusive queues may only be used by a single connection.

Exclusivity also implies that queue is automatically deleted when connection
is closed. Only one consumer is allowed to remove messages from exclusive queue.

@option opts [Boolean] :nowait (true) If set, the server will not respond to the method. The client should

not wait for a reply method.  If the server could not complete the
method it will raise a channel or connection exception.

@raise [AMQP::Error] Raised when queue is redeclared with parameters different from original declaration. @raise [AMQP::Error] Raised when queue is declared with :passive => true and the queue does not exist. @raise [AMQP::Error] Raised when queue is declared with :exclusive => true and queue with that name already exist.

@yield [queue, declare_ok] Yields successfully declared queue instance and AMQP method (queue.declare-ok) instance. The latter is optional. @yieldparam [Queue] queue Queue that is successfully declared and is ready to be used. @yieldparam [AMQP::Protocol::Queue::DeclareOk] declare_ok AMQP queue.declare-ok) instance.

@see Queue @see Queue#initialize @see files.travis-ci.org/docs/amqp/0.9.1/AMQP091Specification.pdf AMQP 0.9.1 specification (Section 2.1.4)

@return [Queue] @api public

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 819
def queue(name = AMQ::Protocol::EMPTY_STRING, opts = {}, &block)
  raise ArgumentError.new("queue name must not be nil; if you want broker to generate queue name for you, pass an empty string") if name.nil?

  if name && !name.empty? && (queue = find_queue(name))
    extended_opts = Queue.add_default_options(name, opts, block)

    validate_parameters_match!(queue, extended_opts, :queue)

    block.call(queue) if block
    queue
  else
    self.queue!(name, opts, &block)
  end
end
queue!(name, opts = {}, &block) click to toggle source

Same as {Channel#queue} but when queue with the same name already exists in this channel object's cache, this method will replace existing queue with a newly defined one. Consider using {Channel#queue} instead.

@see Channel#queue

@return [Queue] @api public

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 842
def queue!(name, opts = {}, &block)
  queue = if block.nil?
            Queue.new(self, name, opts)
          else
            shim = Proc.new { |q, method|
              if block.arity == 1
                block.call(q)
              else
                queue = find_queue(method.queue)
                block.call(queue, method.consumer_count, method.message_count)
              end
            }
            Queue.new(self, name, opts, &shim)
          end

  register_queue(queue)
end
queues() click to toggle source

@return [Array<AMQP::Queue>] Queues cache for this channel @api plugin @private

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 863
def queues
  @queues
end
recover(requeue = true, &block) click to toggle source

Notifies AMQ broker that consumer has recovered and unacknowledged messages need to be redelivered.

@return [Channel] self

@note RabbitMQ as of 2.3.1 does not support basic.recover with requeue = false. @see files.travis-ci.org/docs/amqp/0.9.1/AMQP091Reference.pdf AMQP 0.9.1 protocol documentation (Section 1.8.3.16.) @see acknowledge @api public

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 1044
def recover(requeue = true, &block)
  super(requeue, &block)
end
register_rpc(rpc) click to toggle source

@private @api plugin

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 1252
def register_rpc(rpc)
  raise ArgumentError, "argument is nil!" unless rpc

  @rpcs[rpc.name] = rpc
end
reject(delivery_tag, requeue = true) click to toggle source

Reject a message with given delivery tag.

@api public @see acknowledge @see recover @see files.travis-ci.org/docs/amqp/0.9.1/AMQP091Reference.pdf AMQP 0.9.1 protocol documentation (Section 1.8.3.14.)

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 1031
def reject(delivery_tag, requeue = true)
  super(delivery_tag, requeue)
end
reset(&block) click to toggle source

Resets channel state (for example, list of registered queue objects and so on).

Most of the time, this method is not called by application code.

@private @api plugin

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 1160
def reset(&block)
  # See AMQ::Client::Channel
  self.reset_state!

  # there is no way to reset a deferrable; we have to use a new instance. MK.
  @channel_is_open_deferrable = AMQ::Client::EventMachineClient::Deferrable.new
  @channel_is_open_deferrable.callback(&block)

  @connection.on_connection do
    @channel_is_open_deferrable.succeed

    self.prefetch(@options[:prefetch], false) if @options[:prefetch]
  end
end
reset_state!() click to toggle source

@private @api plugin

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 1177
def reset_state!
  super
  @rpcs = Hash.new
end
reuse() click to toggle source

Can be used to recover channels from channel-level exceptions. Allocates a new channel id and reopens itself with this new id, releasing the old id after the new one is allocated.

This includes recovery of known exchanges, queues and bindings, exactly the same way as when the client recovers from a network failure.

@api public

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 287
def reuse
  old_id = @id
  # must release after we allocate a new id, otherwise we will end up
  # with the same value. MK.
  @id    = self.class.next_channel_id
  self.class.release_channel_id(old_id)

  @channel_is_open_deferrable.fail
  @channel_is_open_deferrable = AMQ::Client::EventMachineClient::Deferrable.new

  self.open do
    @channel_is_open_deferrable.succeed

    # re-establish prefetch
    self.prefetch(@options[:prefetch], false) if @options[:prefetch]

    # exchanges must be recovered first because queue recovery includes recovery of bindings. MK.
    @exchanges.each { |name, e| e.auto_recover }
    @queues.each    { |name, q| q.auto_recover }
  end
end
rpc(name, obj = nil) click to toggle source

Instantiates and returns an RPC instance associated with this channel.

The optional object may be a class name, module name or object instance. When given a class or module name, the object is instantiated during this setup. The passed queue is automatically subscribed to so it passes all messages (and their arguments) to the object.

Marshalling and unmarshalling the objects is handled internally. This marshalling is subject to the same restrictions as defined in the [ruby-doc.org/core/classes/Marshal.html Marshal module} in the Ruby standard library.

When the optional object is not passed, the returned rpc reference is used to send messages and arguments to the queue. See {AMQP::RPC#method_missing} which does all of the heavy lifting with the proxy. Some client elsewhere must call this method with the optional block so that there is a valid destination. Failure to do so will just enqueue marshalled messages that are never consumed.

@example Use of RPC

# TODO

@param [String, Queue] Queue to be used by RPC server. @return [RPC] @api public

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 898
def rpc(name, obj = nil)
  RPC.new(self, name, obj)
end
rpcs() click to toggle source

Returns a hash of all rpc proxy objects.

Most of the time, this method is not called by application code. @api plugin

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 909
def rpcs
  @rpcs.values
end
topic(name = 'amq.topic', opts = {}, &block) click to toggle source

Defines, intializes and returns a topic Exchange instance.

Learn more about topic exchanges in {Exchange Exchange class documentation}.

@param [String] name (amq.topic) Exchange name.

@option opts [Boolean] :passive (false) If set, the server will not create the exchange if it does not

already exist. The client can use this to check whether an exchange
exists without modifying the server state.

@option opts [Boolean] :durable (false) If set when creating a new exchange, the exchange will be marked as

durable. Durable exchanges and their bindings are recreated upon a server
restart (information about them is persisted). Non-durable (transient) exchanges
do not survive if/when a server restarts (information about them is stored exclusively
in RAM).

@option opts [Boolean] :auto_delete (false) If set, the exchange is deleted when all queues have finished

using it. The server waits for a short period of time before
determining the exchange is unused to give time to the client code
to bind a queue to it.

@option opts [Boolean] :internal (default false) If set, the exchange may not be used directly by publishers, but

only when bound to other exchanges. Internal exchanges are used to
construct wiring that is not visible to applications. This is a RabbitMQ-specific
extension.

@option opts [Boolean] :nowait (true) If set, the server will not respond to the method. The client should

not wait for a reply method.  If the server could not complete the
method it will raise a channel or connection exception.

@raise [AMQP::Error] Raised when exchange is redeclared with parameters different from original declaration. @raise [AMQP::Error] Raised when exchange is declared with :passive => true and the exchange does not exist.

@example Using topic exchange to deliver relevant news updates

AMQP.connect do |connection|
  channel  = AMQP::Channel.new(connection)
  exchange = channel.topic("pub/sub")

  # Subscribers.
  channel.queue("development").bind(exchange, :key => "technology.dev.#").subscribe do |payload|
    puts "A new dev post: '#{payload}'"
  end
  channel.queue("ruby").bind(exchange, :key => "technology.#.ruby").subscribe do |payload|
    puts "A new post about Ruby: '#{payload}'"
  end

  # Let's publish some data.
  exchange.publish "Ruby post",     :routing_key => "technology.dev.ruby"
  exchange.publish "Erlang post",   :routing_key => "technology.dev.erlang"
  exchange.publish "Sinatra post",  :routing_key => "technology.web.ruby"
  exchange.publish "Jewelery post", :routing_key => "jewelery.ruby"
end

@example Using topic exchange to deliver geographically-relevant data

AMQP.connect do |connection|
  channel  = AMQP::Channel.new(connection)
  exchange = channel.topic("pub/sub")

  # Subscribers.
  channel.queue("americas.north").bind(exchange, :routing_key => "americas.north.#").subscribe do |headers, payload|
    puts "An update for North America: #{payload}, routing key is #{headers.routing_key}"
  end
  channel.queue("americas.south").bind(exchange, :routing_key => "americas.south.#").subscribe do |headers, payload|
    puts "An update for South America: #{payload}, routing key is #{headers.routing_key}"
  end
  channel.queue("us.california").bind(exchange, :routing_key => "americas.north.us.ca.*").subscribe do |headers, payload|
    puts "An update for US/California: #{payload}, routing key is #{headers.routing_key}"
  end
  channel.queue("us.tx.austin").bind(exchange, :routing_key => "#.tx.austin").subscribe do |headers, payload|
    puts "An update for Austin, TX: #{payload}, routing key is #{headers.routing_key}"
  end
  channel.queue("it.rome").bind(exchange, :routing_key => "europe.italy.rome").subscribe do |headers, payload|
    puts "An update for Rome, Italy: #{payload}, routing key is #{headers.routing_key}"
  end
  channel.queue("asia.hk").bind(exchange, :routing_key => "asia.southeast.hk.#").subscribe do |headers, payload|
    puts "An update for Hong Kong: #{payload}, routing key is #{headers.routing_key}"
  end

  exchange.publish("San Diego update", :routing_key => "americas.north.us.ca.sandiego").
    publish("Berkeley update",         :routing_key => "americas.north.us.ca.berkeley").
    publish("San Francisco update",    :routing_key => "americas.north.us.ca.sanfrancisco").
    publish("New York update",         :routing_key => "americas.north.us.ny.newyork").
    publish("São Paolo update",        :routing_key => "americas.south.brazil.saopaolo").
    publish("Hong Kong update",        :routing_key => "asia.southeast.hk.hongkong").
    publish("Kyoto update",            :routing_key => "asia.southeast.japan.kyoto").
    publish("Shanghai update",         :routing_key => "asia.southeast.prc.shanghai").
    publish("Rome update",             :routing_key => "europe.italy.roma").
    publish("Paris update",            :routing_key => "europe.france.paris")
end

@see Exchange @see Exchange#initialize @see www.rabbitmq.com/faq.html#Binding-and-Routing RabbitMQ FAQ on routing & wildcards @see files.travis-ci.org/docs/amqp/0.9.1/AMQP091Specification.pdf AMQP 0.9.1 specification (Section 3.1.3.3)

@return [Exchange] @api public

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 612
def topic(name = 'amq.topic', opts = {}, &block)
  if exchange = find_exchange(name)
    extended_opts = Exchange.add_default_options(:topic, name, opts, block)

    validate_parameters_match!(exchange, extended_opts, :exchange)

    block.call(exchange) if block
    exchange
  else
    register_exchange(Exchange.new(self, :topic, name, opts, &block))
  end
end
tx_commit(&block) click to toggle source

Commits AMQP transaction.

@api public

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 1066
def tx_commit(&block)
  super(&block)
end
tx_rollback(&block) click to toggle source

Rolls AMQP transaction back.

@api public

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 1073
def tx_rollback(&block)
  super(&block)
end
tx_select(&block) click to toggle source

Sets the channel to use standard transactions. One must use this method at least once on a channel before using tx_tommit or tx_rollback methods.

@api public

# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 1059
def tx_select(&block)
  super(&block)
end

Protected Instance Methods

validate_parameters_match!(entity, parameters, type) click to toggle source
# File lib/amqp/channel.rb, line 1294
def validate_parameters_match!(entity, parameters, type)
  unless entity.opts.values_at(*@parameter_checks[type]) == parameters.values_at(*@parameter_checks[type]) || parameters[:passive]
    raise AMQP::IncompatibleOptionsError.new(entity.name, entity.opts, parameters)
  end
end

[Validate]

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