Commit Graph

164 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jean-Sébastien Pédron 63f7da23c7
Delete symlinks to `erlang.mk` and `rabbitmq-components.mk`
[Why]
They make it more difficult to compile RabbitMQ on Windows. They were
probably useful at the time of the switch to a monorepository but I
don't see their need anymore.
2025-06-16 15:19:18 +02:00
David Ansari 1850ff1363 Avoid using the size/1 BIF
Trigger a 4.2.x alpha release build / trigger_alpha_build (push) Waiting to run Details
Test (make) / Build and Xref (1.17, 26) (push) Waiting to run Details
Test (make) / Build and Xref (1.17, 27) (push) Waiting to run Details
Test (make) / Test (1.17, 27, khepri) (push) Waiting to run Details
Test (make) / Test (1.17, 27, mnesia) (push) Waiting to run Details
Test (make) / Test mixed clusters (1.17, 27, khepri) (push) Waiting to run Details
Test (make) / Test mixed clusters (1.17, 27, mnesia) (push) Waiting to run Details
Test (make) / Type check (1.17, 27) (push) Waiting to run Details
Avoid using the size/1 BIF for performance critical code because
according to
https://whatsapp.github.io/erlang-language-platform/docs/erlang-error-index/w/W0050/
"The BIF is not optimized by the JIT".
2025-06-11 14:14:01 +02:00
Aitor Perez 07adc3e571
Remove Bazel files 2025-03-13 13:42:34 +00:00
Michael Klishin 968eefa1bb
Bump (c) line year
There are no functional changes to this massive diff.
2025-01-01 17:54:10 -05:00
Péter Gömöri 4eb5b82f9f
amqp10_common: Don't wrap export for test in test macro
The application is not always recompiled which causes tests to fail
because they cannot call `serial_number:usort/1`.

(cherry picked from commit 05a3733722)
2024-11-19 19:14:19 -05:00
David Ansari 358ff79611 Provide clear error message for reserved annotation keys
As described in https://docs.oasis-open.org/amqp/core/v1.0/os/amqp-core-messaging-v1.0-os.html#type-annotations
> The annotations type is a map where the keys are restricted to be of type symbol or of type ulong.
> All ulong keys, and all symbolic keys except those beginning with "x-" are reserved.

Prior to this commit, if an AMQP client used a reserved annotation key,
the entire AMQP connection terminated with a function_clause error
message that might be difficult to understand for client libs:
```
<<"Session error: function_clause\n[{amqp10_framing,'-decode_annotations/1-fun-0-',\n                 [{{symbol,<<\"aa\">>},{utf8,<<\"bbb\">>}}],\n                 [{file,\"amqp10_framing.erl\"},{line,158}]},\n {lists,map,2,[{file,\"lists.erl\"},{line,1559}]},\n {amqp10_framing,decode,1,[{file,\"amqp10_framing.erl\"},{line,127}]},\n {lists,map_1,2,[{file,\"lists.erl\"},{line,1564}]},\n {lists,map,2,[{file,\"lists.erl\"},{line,1559}]},\n {mc_amqp,init,1,[{file,\"mc_amqp.erl\"},{line,102}]},\n {mc,init,4,[{file,\"mc.erl\"},{line,150}]},\n {rabbit_amqp_session,incoming_link_transfer,4,\n                      [{file,\"rabbit_amqp_session.erl\"},{line,2341}]}]">>
```

This commit ends only the session and provides a clearer error message.
2024-10-16 14:14:04 +02:00
David Ansari df59a52b70
Support AMQP filter expressions (#12415)
* Support AMQP filter expressions

 ## What?

This PR implements the following property filter expressions for AMQP clients
consuming from streams as defined in
[AMQP Filter Expressions Version 1.0 Working Draft 09](https://groups.oasis-open.org/higherlogic/ws/public/document?document_id=66227):
* properties filters [section 4.2.4]
* application-properties filters [section 4.2.5]

String prefix and suffix matching is also supported.

This PR also fixes a bug where RabbitMQ would accept wrong filters.
Specifically, prior to this PR the values of the filter-set's map were
allowed to be symbols. However, "every value MUST be either null or of a
described type which provides the archetype filter."

 ## Why?

This feature adds the ability to RabbitMQ to have multiple concurrent clients
each consuming only a subset of messages while maintaining message order.

This feature also reduces network traffic between RabbitMQ and clients by
only dispatching those messages that the clients are actually interested in.

Note that AMQP filter expressions are more fine grained than the [bloom filter based
stream filtering](https://www.rabbitmq.com/blog/2023/10/16/stream-filtering) because
* they do not suffer false positives
* the unit of filtering is per-message instead of per-chunk
* matching can be performed on **multiple** values in the properties and
  application-properties sections
* prefix and suffix matching on the actual values is supported.

Both, AMQP filter expressions and bloom filters can be used together.

 ## How?

If a filter isn't valid, RabbitMQ ignores the filter. RabbitMQ only
replies with filters it actually supports and validated successfully to
comply with:
"The receiving endpoint sets its desired filter, the sending endpoint
[RabbitMQ] sets the filter actually in place (including any filters defaulted at
the node)."

* Delete streams test case

The test suite constructed a wrong filter-set.
Specifically the value of the filter-set didn't use a described type as
mandated by the spec.
Using https://azure.github.io/amqpnetlite/api/Amqp.Types.DescribedValue.html
throws errors that the descriptor can't be encoded. Given that this code
path is already tests via the amqp_filtex_SUITE, this F# test gets
therefore deleted.

* Re-introduce the AMQP filter-set bug

Since clients might rely on the wrong filter-set value type, we support
the bug behind a deprecated feature flag and gradually remove support
this bug.

* Revert "Delete streams test case"

This reverts commit c95cfeaef7.
2024-10-07 17:12:26 +02:00
Loïc Hoguin 5e3942478f
amqp10_common: Don't dialyze tests or from source by default 2024-09-30 12:35:42 +02:00
David Ansari 9d7ebf32a9 Enforce correct transfer settled flag
For messages published to RabbitMQ, RabbitMQ honors the transfer `settled`
field, no matter what value the sender settle mode was set to in the attach
frame.

Therefore, prior to this commit, a client could send a transfer with
`settled=true` even though sender settle mode was set to `unsettled` in the
attach frame.

This commit enforces that the publisher sets only transfer `settled` fields
that are valid with the spec.

If sender settle mode is:
* `unsettled`, the transfer `settled` flag must be `false`.
* `settled`, the transfer `settled` flag must be `true`.
* `mixed`, the transfer `settled` flag can be `true` or `false`.
2024-09-25 18:06:22 +02:00
David Ansari b1eb354385 Strictly validate annotations 2024-09-18 12:42:27 +02:00
Loïc Hoguin 7ad8e2856b
make: Restrict Erlang.mk plugin inclusion
This has no real impact on performance[1] but should
make it clear which application can run the broker
and/or publish to Hex.pm. In particular, applications
that we can't run the broker from will now give up
early if we try to.

Note that while the broker can't normally run from the
amqp_client application's directory, it can run from
tests and some of the tests start the broker.

[1] on my machine
2024-08-29 15:19:50 +02:00
Loïc Hoguin 445f3c9270
make: Move rabbitmq-early-test.mk to rabbitmq-early-plugin.mk
No real need to have two files, especially since it contains
only a few variable definitions. Plan is to only keep
separate files for larger features such as dist or run.
2024-08-29 15:19:50 +02:00
Loïc Hoguin d4222f8216
make: Remove emptied rabbitmq-tools.mk 2024-08-29 15:19:14 +02:00
Loïc Hoguin 7e7e6feb9d
make: Remove rabbitmq-tests.mk
Everything in this file seems to be dead code except
ct-slow/ct-fast, which have been replaced by their
equivalent in the rabbit Makefile.
2024-08-29 15:19:13 +02:00
Loïc Hoguin bbfa066d79
Cleanup .gitignore files for the monorepo
We don't need to duplicate so many patterns in so many
files since we have a monorepo (and want to keep it).

If I managed to miss something or remove something that
should stay, please put it back. Note that monorepo-wide
patterns should go in the top-level .gitignore file.
Other .gitignore files are for application or folder-
specific patterns.
2024-06-28 12:00:52 +02:00
Loïc Hoguin 18f8ee1457
Merge pull request #11549 from rabbitmq/loic-make-cleanups
Various make cleanup/consolidation
2024-06-27 11:42:24 +02:00
David Ansari dcb2fe0fd9 Fix message IDs settlement order
## What?

This commit fixes issues that were present only on `main`
branch and were introduced by #9022.

1. Classic queues (specifically `rabbit_queue_consumers:subtract_acks/3`)
   expect message IDs to be (n)acked in the order as they were delivered
   to the channel / session proc.
   Hence, the `lists:usort(MsgIds0)` in `rabbit_classic_queue:settle/5`
   was wrong causing not all messages to be acked adding a regression
   to also AMQP 0.9.1.
2. The order in which the session proc requeues or rejects multiple
   message IDs at once is important. For example, if the client sends a
   DISPOSITION with first=3 and last=5, the message IDs corresponding to
   delivery IDs 3,4,5 must be requeued or rejected in exactly that
   order.
   For example, quorum queues use this order of message IDs in
   34d3f94374/deps/rabbit/src/rabbit_fifo.erl (L226-L234)
   to dead letter in that order.

 ## How?

The session proc will settle (internal) message IDs to queues in ascending
(AMQP) delivery ID order, i.e. in the order messages were sent to the
client and in the order messages were settled by the client.

This commit chooses to keep the session's outgoing_unsettled_map map
data structure.

An alternative would have been to use a queue or lqueue for the
outgoing_unsettled_map as done in
* 34d3f94374/deps/rabbit/src/rabbit_channel.erl (L135)
* 34d3f94374/deps/rabbit/src/rabbit_queue_consumers.erl (L43)

Whether a queue (as done by `rabbit_channel`) or a map (as done by
`rabbit_amqp_session`) performs better depends on the pattern how
clients ack messages.

A queue will likely perform good enough because usually the oldest
delivered messages will be acked first.
However, given that there can be many different consumers on an AQMP
0.9.1 channel or AMQP 1.0 session, this commit favours a map because
it will likely generate less garbage and is very efficient when for
example a single new message (or few new messages) gets acked while
many (older) messages are still checked out by the session (but by
possibly different AMQP 1.0 receivers).
2024-06-26 13:35:41 +02:00
Loïc Hoguin 9f15e978b1
make: Remove xrefr
It is no longer used by Erlang.mk.
2024-06-25 13:08:08 +02:00
Michal Kuratczyk cfa3de4b2b
Remove unused imports (thanks elp!) 2024-05-23 16:36:08 +02:00
David Ansari c3289689bd Remove unused code 2024-05-02 12:13:02 +02:00
David Ansari b721b1a01b Support maps and lists in AMQP array elements 2024-05-02 07:56:00 +00:00
David Ansari 6018155e9b Add property test for AMQP serializer and parser 2024-05-02 07:56:00 +00:00
David Ansari 6225dc9928 Do not parse entire AMQP body
Prior to this commit the entire amqp-value or amqp-sequence sections
were parsed when converting a message from mc_amqp.
Parsing the entire amqp-value or amqp-sequence section can generate a
huge amount of garbage depending on how large these sections are.

Given that other protocol cannot make use of amqp-value and
amqp-sequence sections anyway, leave them AMQP encoded when converting
from mc_amqp.

In fact prior to this commit, the entire body section was parsed
generating huge amounts of garbage just to subsequently encode it again
in mc_amqpl or mc_mqtt.

The new conversion interface from mc_amqp to other mc_* modules will
either output amqp-data sections or the encoded amqp-value /
amqp-sequence sections.
2024-05-02 07:56:00 +00:00
David Ansari fc7f458f7c Fix tests 2024-05-02 07:56:00 +00:00
David Ansari 2380b850e9 Do not create binaries in parse/1 2024-05-02 07:56:00 +00:00
David Ansari 9fbbb4770c Move frequent clauses to the top 2024-05-02 07:55:59 +00:00
David Ansari bfe285445e Remove slow guard tests 2024-05-02 07:55:59 +00:00
David Ansari 4980669502 New mc_amqp state 2024-05-02 07:55:59 +00:00
David Ansari 0a31d7721b Parse until body and return position for bare sections
parse_many is completely optimized
2024-05-02 07:55:59 +00:00
David Ansari cf7a2a0f45 Speed up AMQP parser 2024-05-02 07:55:59 +00:00
Rin Kuryloski 4ec33c8678
Fix some dialyzer build system errors in make (#11014)
* make amqp10_common dialyze green in make

* make rabbitmq_ct_client_helpers dialyze green with make

* fixup rabbitmq_prelaunch path ref

* Cleanup unused dep_* vars

* Fixup xref for rabbitmq_ct_helpers

I could not figure out how to make xref aware of the cli code without
also checking the cli code as well, and reporting additional errors

* remove unused file

* fix make diaylze for rabbitmq_stream_common

* update deps/oauth2_client/Makefile to match Bazel
2024-04-16 13:26:51 +02:00
David Ansari b0260cf4b3 Avoid creation of binaries in AMQP 1.0 generator
When generating iodata() in the AMQP 1.0 generator, prefer integers over
binaries.

Rename functions and variable names to better reflect the AMQP 1.0 spec
instead of using AMQP 0.9.1 wording.
2024-04-10 17:11:34 +02:00
David Ansari 8a3f3c6f34 Enable AMQP 1.0 clients to manage topologies
## What?

* Allow AMQP 1.0 clients to dynamically create and delete RabbitMQ
  topologies (exchanges, queues, bindings).
* Provide an Erlang AMQP 1.0 client that manages topologies.

 ## Why?

Today, RabbitMQ topologies can be created via:
* [Management HTTP API](https://www.rabbitmq.com/docs/management#http-api)
  (including Management UI and
  [messaging-topology-operator](https://github.com/rabbitmq/messaging-topology-operator))
* [Definition Import](https://www.rabbitmq.com/docs/definitions#import)
* AMQP 0.9.1 clients

Up to RabbitMQ 3.13 the RabbitMQ AMQP 1.0 plugin auto creates queues
and bindings depending on the terminus [address
format](https://github.com/rabbitmq/rabbitmq-server/tree/v3.13.x/deps/rabbitmq_amqp1_0#routing-and-addressing).

Such implicit creation of topologies is limiting and obscure.
For some address formats, queues will be created, but not deleted.

Some of RabbitMQ's success is due to its flexible routing topologies
that AMQP 0.9.1 clients can create and delete dynamically.

This commit allows dynamic management of topologies for AMQP 1.0 clients.
This commit builds on top of Native AMQP 1.0 (PR #9022) and will be
available in RabbitMQ 4.0.

 ## How?

This commits adds the following management operations for AMQP 1.0 clients:
* declare queue
* delete queue
* purge queue
* bind queue to exchange
* unbind queue from exchange
* declare exchange
* delete exchange
* bind exchange to exchange
* unbind exchange from exchange

Hence, at least the AMQP 0.9.1 management operations are supported for
AMQP 1.0 clients.

In addition the operation
* get queue

is provided which - similar to `declare queue` - returns queue
information including the current leader and replicas.
This allows clients to publish or consume locally on the node that hosts
the queue.

Compared to AMQP 0.9.1 whose commands and command fields are fixed, the
new AMQP Management API is extensible: New operations and new fields can
easily be added in the future.

There are different design options how management operations could be
supported for AMQP 1.0 clients:
1. Use a special exchange type as done in https://github.com/rabbitmq/rabbitmq-management-exchange
  This has the advantage that any protocol client (e.g. also STOMP clients) could
  dynamically manage topologies. However, a special exchange type is the wrong abstraction.
2. Clients could send "special" messages with special headers that the broker interprets.

This commit decided for a variation of the 2nd option using a more
standardized way by re-using a subest of the following latest AMQP 1.0 extension
specifications:
* [AMQP Request-Response Messaging with Link Pairing Version 1.0 - Committee Specification 01](https://docs.oasis-open.org/amqp/linkpair/v1.0/cs01/linkpair-v1.0-cs01.html) (February 2021)
* [HTTP Semantics and Content over AMQP Version 1.0 - Working Draft 06](https://groups.oasis-open.org/higherlogic/ws/public/document?document_id=65571) (July 2019)
* [AMQP Management Version 1.0 - Working Draft 16](https://groups.oasis-open.org/higherlogic/ws/public/document?document_id=65575) (July 2019)

An important goal is to keep the interaction between AMQP 1.0 client and RabbitMQ
simple to increase usage, development and adoptability of future RabbitMQ AMQP 1.0
client library wrappers.

The AMQP 1.0 client has to create a link pair to the special `/management` node.
This allows the client to send and receive from the management node.
Similar to AMQP 0.9.1, there is no need for a reply queue since the reply
will be sent directly to the client.

Requests and responses are modelled via HTTP, but sent via AMQP using
the `HTTP Semantics and Content over AMQP` extension (henceforth `HTTP
over AMQP` extension).

This commit tries to follow the `HTTP over AMQP` extension as much as
possible but deviates where this draft spec doesn't make sense.

The projected mode §4.1 is used as opposed to tunneled mode §4.2.
A named relay `/management` is used (§6.3) where the message field `to` is the URL.

Deviations are
* §3.1 mandates that URIs are not encoded in an AMQP message.
  However, we percent encode URIs in the AMQP message. Otherwise there
  is for example no way to distinguish a `/` in a queue name from the
  URI path separator `/`.
* §4.1.4 mandates a data section. This commit uses an amqp-value section
  as it's a better fit given that the content is AMQP encoded data.

Using an HTTP API allows for a common well understood interface and future extensibility.
Instead of re-using the current RabbitMQ HTTP API, this commit uses a
new HTTP API (let's call it v2) which could be used as a future API for
plain HTTP clients.

 ### HTTP API v1

The current HTTP API (let's call it v1) is **not** used since v1
comes with a couple of weaknesses:

1. Deep level of nesting becomes confusing and difficult to manage.

Examples of deep nesting in v1:
```
/api/bindings/vhost/e/source/e/destination/props
/api/bindings/vhost/e/exchange/q/queue/props
```

2. Redundant endpoints returning the same resources

v1 has 9 endpoints to list binding(s):
```
/api/exchanges/vhost/name/bindings/source
/api/exchanges/vhost/name/bindings/destination
/api/queues/vhost/name/bindings
/api/bindings
/api/bindings/vhost
/api/bindings/vhost/e/exchange/q/queue
/api/bindings/vhost/e/exchange/q/queue/props
/api/bindings/vhost/e/source/e/destination
/api/bindings/vhost/e/source/e/destination/props
```

3. Verbs in path names
Path names should be nouns instead.
v1 contains verbs:
```
/api/queues/vhost/name/get
/api/exchanges/vhost/name/publish
```

 ### AMQP Management extension

Only few aspects of the AMQP Management extension are used.

The central idea of the AMQP management spec is **dynamic discovery** such that broker independent AMQP 1.0
clients can discover objects, types, operations, and HTTP endpoints of specific brokers.
In fact, clients are only conformant if:
> All request addresses are dynamically discovered starting from the discovery document.
> A requesting container MUST NOT use fixed assumptions about the addressing structure of the management API.

While this is a nice and powerful idea, no AMQP 1.0 client and no AMQP 1.0 server implement the
latest AMQP 1.0 management spec from 2019, partly presumably due to its complexity.
Therefore, the idea of such dynamic discovery has failed to be implemented in practice.

The AMQP management spec mandates that the management endpoint returns a discovery document containing
broker specific collections, types, configuration, and operations including their endpoints.

The API endpoints of the AMQP management spec are therefore all designed around dynamic discovery.

For example, to create either a queue or an exchange, the client has to
```
POST /$management/entities
```
which shows that the entities collection acts as a generic factory, see section 2.2.
The server will then create the resource and reply with a location header containing a URI pointing to the resource.
For RabbitMQ, we don’t need such a generic factory to create queues or exchanges.

To list bindings for a queue Q1, the spec suggests
```
GET /$management/Queues/Q1/$management/entities
```
which again shows the generic entities endpoint as well as a `$management` endpoint under Q1 to
allow a queue to return a discovery document.
For RabbitMQ, we don’t need such generic endpoints and discovery documents.

Given we aim for our own thin RabbitMQ AMQP 1.0 client wrapper libraries which expose
the RabbitMQ model to the developer, we can directly use fixed HTTP endpoint assumptions
in our RabbitMQ specific libraries.

This is by far simpler than using the dynamic endpoints of the management spec.
Simplicity leads to higher adoption and enables more developers to write RabbitMQ AMQP 1.0 client
library wrappers.

The AMQP Management extension also suffers from deep level of nesting in paths
Examples:
```
/$management/Queues/Q1/$management/entities
/$management/Queues/Q1/Bindings/Binding1
```
as well as verbs in path names: Section 7.1.4 suggests using verbs in path names,
for example “purge”, due to the dynamic operations discovery document.

 ### HTTP API v2

This commit introduces a new HTTP API v2 following best practices.
It could serve as a future API for plain HTTP clients.

This commit and RabbitMQ 4.0 will only implement a minimal set of
HTTP API v2 endpoints and only for HTTP over AMQP.
In other words, the existing HTTP API v1 Cowboy handlers will continue to be
used for all plain HTTP requests in RabbitMQ 4.0 and will remain untouched for RabbitMQ 4.0.
Over time, after 4.0 shipped, we could ship a pure HTTP API implementation for HTTP API v2.
Hence, the new HTTP API v2 endpoints for HTTP over AMQP should be designed such that they
can be re-used in the future for a pure HTTP implementation.

The minimal set of endpoints for RabbitMQ 4.0 are:

``
GET / PUT / DELETE
/vhosts/:vhost/queues/:queue
```
read, create, delete a queue

```
DELETE
/vhosts/:vhost/queues/:queue/messages
```
purges a queue

```
GET / DELETE
/vhosts/:vhost/bindings/:binding
```
read, delete bindings
where `:binding` is a binding ID of the following path segment:
```
src=e1;dstq=q2;key=my-key;args=
```
Binding arguments `args` has an empty value by default, i.e. there are no binding arguments.
If the binding includes binding arguments, `args` will be an Erlang portable term hash
provided by the server similar to what’s provided in HTTP API v1 today.
Alternatively, we could use an arguments scheme of:
```
args=k1,utf8,v1&k2,uint,3
```
However, such a scheme leads to long URIs when there are many binding arguments.
Note that it’s perfectly fine for URI producing applications to include URI
reserved characters `=` / `;` / `,` / `$` in a path segment.

To create a binding, the client therefore needs to POST to a bindings factory URI:
```
POST
/vhosts/:vhost/bindings
```

To list all bindings between a source exchange e1 and destination exchange e2 with binding key k1:
```
GET
/vhosts/:vhost/bindings?src=e1&dste=e2&key=k1
```

This endpoint will be called by the RabbitMQ AMQP 1.0 client library to unbind a
binding with non-empty binding arguments to get the binding ID before invoking a
```
DELETE
/vhosts/:vhost/bindings/:binding
```

In future, after RabbitMQ 4.0 shipped, new API endpoints could be added.
The following is up for discussion and is only meant to show the clean and simple design of HTTP API v2.

Bindings endpoint can be queried as follows:

to list all bindings for a given source exchange e1:
```
GET
/vhosts/:vhost/bindings?src=e1
```

to list all bindings for a given destination queue q1:
```
GET
/vhosts/:vhost/bindings?dstq=q1
```

to list all bindings between a source exchange e1 and destination queue q1:
```
GET
/vhosts/:vhost/bindings?src=e1&dstq=q1
```

multiple bindings between source exchange e1 and destination queue q1 could be deleted at once as follows:
```
DELETE /vhosts/:vhost/bindings?src=e1&dstq=q1
```

GET could be supported globally across all vhosts:
```
/exchanges
/queues
/bindings
```

Publish a message:
```
POST
/vhosts/:vhost/queues/:queue/messages
```

Consume or peek a message (depending on query parameters):
```
GET
/vhosts/:vhost/queues/:queue/messages
```

Note that the AMQP 1.0 client omits the `/vhost/:vhost` path prefix.
Since an AMQP connection belongs to a single vhost, there is no need to
additionally include the vhost in every HTTP request.

Pros of HTTP API v2:

1. Low level of nesting

Queues, exchanges, bindings are top level entities directly under vhosts.
Although the HTTP API doesn’t have to reflect how resources are stored in the database,
v2 does nicely reflect the Khepri tree structure.

2. Nouns instead of verbs
HTTP API v2 is very simple to read and understand as shown by
```
POST    /vhosts/:vhost/queues/:queue/messages	to post messages, i.e. publish to a queue.
GET     /vhosts/:vhost/queues/:queue/messages	to get messages, i.e. consume or peek from a queue.
DELETE  /vhosts/:vhost/queues/:queue/messages	to delete messages, i.e. purge a queue.
```

A separate new HTTP API v2 allows us to ship only handlers for HTTP over AMQP for RabbitMQ 4.0
and therefore move faster while still keeping the option on the table to re-use the new v2 API
for pure HTTP in the future.
In contrast, re-using the HTTP API v1 for HTTP over AMQP is possible, but dirty because separate handlers
(HTTP over AMQP and pure HTTP) replying differently will be needed for the same v1 endpoints.
2024-03-28 11:36:56 +01:00
David Ansari afd28ba76d Apply PR feedback 2024-02-28 14:15:20 +01:00
David Ansari 8cb313d5a1 Support AMQP 1.0 natively
## What

Similar to Native MQTT in #5895, this commits implements Native AMQP 1.0.
By "native", we mean do not proxy via AMQP 0.9.1 anymore.

  ## Why

Native AMQP 1.0 comes with the following major benefits:
1. Similar to Native MQTT, this commit provides better throughput, latency,
   scalability, and resource usage for AMQP 1.0.
   See https://blog.rabbitmq.com/posts/2023/03/native-mqtt for native MQTT improvements.
   See further below for some benchmarks.
2. Since AMQP 1.0 is not limited anymore by the AMQP 0.9.1 protocol,
   this commit allows implementing more AMQP 1.0 features in the future.
   Some features are already implemented in this commit (see next section).
3. Simpler, better understandable, and more maintainable code.

Native AMQP 1.0 as implemented in this commit has the
following major benefits compared to AMQP 0.9.1:
4. Memory and disk alarms will only stop accepting incoming TRANSFER frames.
   New connections can still be created to consume from RabbitMQ to empty queues.
5. Due to 4. no need anymore for separate connections for publishers and
   consumers as we currently recommended for AMQP 0.9.1. which potentially
   halves the number of physical TCP connections.
6. When a single connection sends to multiple target queues, a single
   slow target queue won't block the entire connection.
   Publisher can still send data quickly to all other target queues.
7. A publisher can request whether it wants publisher confirmation on a per-message basis.
   In AMQP 0.9.1 publisher confirms are configured per channel only.
8. Consumers can change their "prefetch count" dynamically which isn't
   possible in our AMQP 0.9.1 implementation. See #10174
9. AMQP 1.0 is an extensible protocol

This commit also fixes dozens of bugs present in the AMQP 1.0 plugin in
RabbitMQ 3.x - most of which cannot be backported due to the complexity
and limitations of the old 3.x implementation.

This commit contains breaking changes and is therefore targeted for RabbitMQ 4.0.

 ## Implementation details

1. Breaking change: With Native AMQP, the behaviour of
```
Convert AMQP 0.9.1 message headers to application properties for an AMQP 1.0 consumer
amqp1_0.convert_amqp091_headers_to_app_props = false | true (default false)
Convert AMQP 1.0 Application Properties to AMQP 0.9.1 headers
amqp1_0.convert_app_props_to_amqp091_headers = false | true (default false)
```
will break because we always convert according to the message container conversions.
For example, AMQP 0.9.1 x-headers will go into message-annotations instead of application properties.
Also, `false` won’t be respected since we always convert the headers with message containers.

2. Remove rabbit_queue_collector

rabbit_queue_collector is responsible for synchronously deleting
exclusive queues. Since the AMQP 1.0 plugin never creates exclusive
queues, rabbit_queue_collector doesn't need to be started in the first
place. This will save 1 Erlang process per AMQP 1.0 connection.

3. 7 processes per connection + 1 process per session in this commit instead of
   7 processes per connection + 15 processes per session in 3.x
Supervision hierarchy got re-designed.

4. Use 1 writer process per AMQP 1.0 connection
AMQP 0.9.1 uses a separate rabbit_writer Erlang process per AMQP 0.9.1 channel.
Prior to this commit, AMQP 1.0 used a separate rabbit_amqp1_0_writer process per AMQP 1.0 session.
Advantage of single writer proc per session (prior to this commit):
* High parallelism for serialising packets if multiple sessions within
  a connection write heavily at the same time.

This commit uses a single writer process per AMQP 1.0 connection that is
shared across all AMQP 1.0 sessions.
Advantages of single writer proc per connection (this commit):
* Lower memory usage with hundreds of thousands of AMQP 1.0 sessions
* Less TCP and IP header overhead given that the single writer process
  can accumulate across all sessions bytes before flushing the socket.

In other words, this commit decides that a reader / writer process pair
per AMQP 1.0 connection is good enough for bi-directional TRANSFER flows.
Having a writer per session is too heavy.
We still ensure high throughput by having separate reader, writer, and
session processes.

5. Transform rabbit_amqp1_0_writer into gen_server
Why:
Prior to this commit, when clicking on the AMQP 1.0 writer process in
observer, the process crashed.
Instead of handling all these debug messages of the sys module, it's better
to implement a gen_server.
There is no advantage of using a special OTP process over gen_server
for the AMQP 1.0 writer.
gen_server also provides cleaner format status output.

How:
Message callbacks return a timeout of 0.
After all messages in the inbox are processed, the timeout message is
handled by flushing any pending bytes.

6. Remove stats timer from writer
AMQP 1.0 connections haven't emitted any stats previously.

7. When there are contiguous queue confirmations in the session process
mailbox, batch them. When the confirmations are sent to the publisher, a
single DISPOSITION frame is sent for contiguously confirmed delivery
IDs.
This approach should be good enough. However it's sub optimal in
scenarios where contiguous delivery IDs that need confirmations are rare,
for example:
* There are multiple links in the session with different sender
  settlement modes and sender publishes across these links interleaved.
* sender settlement mode is mixed and sender publishes interleaved settled
  and unsettled TRANSFERs.

8. Introduce credit API v2
Why:
The AMQP 0.9.1 credit extension which is to be removed in 4.0 was poorly
designed since basic.credit is a synchronous call into the queue process
blocking the entire AMQP 1.0 session process.

How:
Change the interactions between queue clients and queue server
implementations:
* Clients only request a credit reply if the FLOW's `echo` field is set
* Include all link flow control state held by the queue process into a
  new credit_reply queue event:
  * `available` after the queue sends any deliveries
  * `link-credit` after the queue sends any deliveries
  * `drain` which allows us to combine the old queue events
    send_credit_reply and send_drained into a single new queue event
    credit_reply.
* Include the consumer tag into the credit_reply queue event such that
  the AMQP 1.0 session process can process any credit replies
  asynchronously.

Link flow control state `delivery-count` also moves to the queue processes.

The new interactions are hidden behind feature flag credit_api_v2 to
allow for rolling upgrades from 3.13 to 4.0.

9. Use serial number arithmetic in quorum queues and session process.

10. Completely bypass the rabbit_limiter module for AMQP 1.0
flow control. The goal is to eventually remove the rabbit_limiter module
in 4.0 since AMQP 0.9.1 global QoS will be unsupported in 4.0. This
commit lifts the AMQP 1.0 link flow control logic out of rabbit_limiter
into rabbit_queue_consumers.

11. Fix credit bug for streams:
AMQP 1.0 settlements shouldn't top up link credit,
only FLOW frames should top up link credit.

12. Allow sender settle mode unsettled for streams
since AMQP 1.0 acknowledgements to streams are no-ops (currently).

13. Fix AMQP 1.0 client bugs
Auto renewing credits should not be related to settling TRANSFERs.
Remove field link_credit_unsettled as it was wrong and confusing.
Prior to this commit auto renewal did not work when the sender uses
sender settlement mode settled.

14. Fix AMQP 1.0 client bugs
The wrong outdated Link was passed to function auto_flow/2

15. Use osiris chunk iterator
Only hold messages of uncompressed sub batches in memory if consumer
doesn't have sufficient credits.
Compressed sub batches are skipped for non Stream protocol consumers.

16. Fix incoming link flow control
Always use confirms between AMQP 1.0 queue clients and queue servers.
As already done internally by rabbit_fifo_client and
rabbit_stream_queue, use confirms for classic queues as well.

17. Include link handle into correlation when publishing messages to target queues
such that session process can correlate confirms from target queues to
incoming links.

18. Only grant more credits to publishers if publisher hasn't sufficient credits
anymore and there are not too many unconfirmed messages on the link.

19. Completely ignore `block` and `unblock` queue actions and RabbitMQ credit flow
between classic queue process and session process.

20. Link flow control is independent between links.
A client can refer to a queue or to an exchange with multiple
dynamically added target queues. Multiple incoming links can also fan
in to the same queue. However the link topology looks like, this
commit ensures that each link is only granted more credits if that link
isn't overloaded.

21. A connection or a session can send to many different queues.
In AMQP 0.9.1, a single slow queue will lead to the entire channel, and
then entire connection being blocked.
This commit makes sure that a single slow queue from one link won't slow
down sending on other links.
For example, having link A sending to a local classic queue and
link B sending to 5 replica quorum queue, link B will naturally
grant credits slower than link A. So, despite the quorum queue being
slower in confirming messages, the same AMQP 1.0 connection and session
can still pump data very fast into the classic queue.

22. If cluster wide memory or disk alarm occurs.
Each session sends a FLOW with incoming-window to 0 to sending client.
If sending clients don’t obey, force disconnect the client.

If cluster wide memory alarm clears:
Each session resumes with a FLOW defaulting to initial incoming-window.

23. All operations apart of publishing TRANSFERS to RabbitMQ can continue during cluster wide alarms,
specifically, attaching consumers and consuming, i.e. emptying queues.
There is no need for separate AMQP 1.0 connections for publishers and consumers as recommended in our AMQP 0.9.1 implementation.

24. Flow control summary:
* If queue becomes bottleneck, that’s solved by slowing down individual sending links (AMQP 1.0 link flow control).
* If session becomes bottleneck (more unlikely), that’s solved by AMQP 1.0 session flow control.
* If connection becomes bottleneck, it naturally won’t read fast enough from the socket causing TCP backpressure being applied.
Nowhere will RabbitMQ internal credit based flow control (i.e. module credit_flow) be used on the incoming AMQP 1.0 message path.

25. Register AMQP sessions
Prefer local-only pg over our custom pg_local implementation as
pg is a better process group implementation than pg_local.
pg_local was identified as bottleneck in tests where many MQTT clients were disconnected at once.

26. Start a local-only pg when Rabbit boots:
> A scope can be kept local-only by using a scope name that is unique cluster-wide, e.g. the node name:
> pg:start_link(node()).
Register AMQP 1.0 connections and sessions with pg.

In future we should remove pg_local and instead use the new local-only
pg for all registered processes such as AMQP 0.9.1 connections and channels.

27. Requeue messages if link detached
Although the spec allows to settle delivery IDs on detached links, RabbitMQ does not respect the 'closed'
field of the DETACH frame and therefore handles every DETACH frame as closed. Since the link is closed,
we expect every outstanding delivery to be requeued.
In addition to consumer cancellation, detaching a link therefore causes in flight deliveries to be requeued.
Note that this behaviour is different from merely consumer cancellation in AMQP 0.9.1:
"After a consumer is cancelled there will be no future deliveries dispatched to it. Note that there can
still be "in flight" deliveries dispatched previously. Cancelling a consumer will neither discard nor requeue them."
[https://www.rabbitmq.com/consumers.html#unsubscribing]
An AMQP receiver can first drain, and then detach to prevent "in flight" deliveries

28. Init AMQP session with BEGIN frame
Similar to how there can't be an MQTT processor without a CONNECT
frame, there can't be an AMQP session without a BEGIN frame.
This allows having strict dialyzer types for session flow control
fields (i.e. not allowing 'undefined').

29. Move serial_number to AMQP 1.0 common lib
such that it can be used by both AMQP 1.0 server and client

30. Fix AMQP client to do serial number arithmetic.

31. AMQP client: Differentiate between delivery-id and transfer-id for better
understandability.

32. Fix link flow control in classic queues
This commit fixes
```
java -jar target/perf-test.jar -ad false -f persistent -u cq -c 3000 -C 1000000 -y 0
```
followed by
```
./omq -x 0 amqp -T /queue/cq -D 1000000 --amqp-consumer-credits 2
```
Prior to this commit, (and on RabbitMQ 3.x) the consuming would halt after around
8 - 10,000 messages.

The bug was that in flight messages from classic queue process to
session process were not taken into account when topping up credit to
the classic queue process.
Fixes #2597

The solution to this bug (and a much cleaner design anyway independent of
this bug) is that queues should hold all link flow control state including
the delivery-count.

Hence, when credit API v2 is used the delivery-count will be held by the
classic queue process, quorum queue process, and stream queue client
instead of managing the delivery-count in the session.

33. The double level crediting between (a) session process and
rabbit_fifo_client, and (b) rabbit_fifo_client and rabbit_fifo was
removed. Therefore, instead of managing 3 separate delivery-counts (i. session,
ii. rabbit_fifo_client, iii. rabbit_fifo), only 1 delivery-count is used
in rabbit_fifo. This is a big simplification.

34. This commit fixes quorum queues without bumping the machine version
nor introducing new rabbit_fifo commands.

Whether credit API v2 is used is solely determined at link attachment time
depending on whether feature flag credit_api_v2 is enabled.

Even when that feature flag will be enabled later on, this link will
keep using credit API v1 until detached (or the node is shut down).

Eventually, after feature flag credit_api_v2 has been enabled and a
subsequent rolling upgrade, all links will use credit API v2.

This approach is safe and simple.

The 2 alternatives to move delivery-count from the session process to the
queue processes would have been:

i. Explicit feature flag credit_api_v2 migration function
* Can use a gen_server:call and only finish migration once all delivery-counts were migrated.
Cons:
* Extra new message format just for migration is required.
* Risky as migration will fail if a target queue doesn’t reply.

ii. Session always includes DeliveryCountSnd when crediting to the queue:
Cons:
* 2 delivery counts will be hold simultaneously in session proc and queue proc;
could be solved by deleting the session proc’s delivery-count for credit-reply
* What happens if the receiver doesn’t provide credit for a very long time? Is that a problem?

35. Support stream filtering in AMQP 1.0 (by @acogoluegnes)
Use the x-stream-filter-value message annotation
to carry the filter value in a published message.
Use the rabbitmq:stream-filter and rabbitmq:stream-match-unfiltered
filters when creating a receiver that wants to filter
out messages from a stream.

36. Remove credit extension from AMQP 0.9.1 client

37. Support maintenance mode closing AMQP 1.0 connections.

38. Remove AMQP 0.9.1 client dependency from AMQP 1.0 implementation.

39. Move AMQP 1.0 plugin to the core. AMQP 1.0 is enabled by default.
    The old rabbitmq_amqp1_0 plugin will be kept as a no-op plugin to prevent deployment
    tools from failing that execute:
```
rabbitmq-plugins enable rabbitmq_amqp1_0
rabbitmq-plugins disable rabbitmq_amqp1_0
```

40. Breaking change: Remove CLI command `rabbitmqctl list_amqp10_connections`.
Instead, list both AMQP 0.9.1 and AMQP 1.0 connections in `list_connections`:
```
rabbitmqctl list_connections protocol
Listing connections ...
protocol
{1, 0}
{0,9,1}
```

 ## Benchmarks

 ### Throughput & Latency

Setup:
* Single node Ubuntu 22.04
* Erlang 26.1.1

Start RabbitMQ:
```
make run-broker PLUGINS="rabbitmq_management rabbitmq_amqp1_0" FULL=1 RABBITMQ_SERVER_ADDITIONAL_ERL_ARGS="+S 3"
```

Predeclare durable classic queue cq1, durable quorum queue qq1, durable stream queue sq1.

Start client:
https://github.com/ssorj/quiver
https://hub.docker.com/r/ssorj/quiver/tags (digest 453a2aceda64)
```
docker run -it --rm --add-host host.docker.internal:host-gateway ssorj/quiver:latest
bash-5.1# quiver --version
quiver 0.4.0-SNAPSHOT
```

1. Classic queue
```
quiver //host.docker.internal//amq/queue/cq1 --durable --count 1m --duration 10m --body-size 12 --credit 1000
```

This commit:
```
Count ............................................. 1,000,000 messages
Duration ............................................... 73.8 seconds
Sender rate .......................................... 13,548 messages/s
Receiver rate ........................................ 13,547 messages/s
End-to-end rate ...................................... 13,547 messages/s

Latencies by percentile:

          0% ........ 0 ms       90.00% ........ 9 ms
         25% ........ 2 ms       99.00% ....... 14 ms
         50% ........ 4 ms       99.90% ....... 17 ms
        100% ....... 26 ms       99.99% ....... 24 ms
```

RabbitMQ 3.x (main branch as of 30 January 2024):
```
---------------------- Sender -----------------------  --------------------- Receiver ----------------------  --------
Time [s]      Count [m]  Rate [m/s]  CPU [%]  RSS [M]  Time [s]      Count [m]  Rate [m/s]  CPU [%]  RSS [M]  Lat [ms]
-----------------------------------------------------  -----------------------------------------------------  --------
     2.1        130,814      65,342        6     73.6       2.1          3,217       1,607        0      8.0       511
     4.1        163,580      16,367        2     74.1       4.1          3,217           0        0      8.0         0
     6.1        229,114      32,767        3     74.1       6.1          3,217           0        0      8.0         0
     8.1        261,880      16,367        2     74.1       8.1         67,874      32,296        8      8.2     7,662
    10.1        294,646      16,367        2     74.1      10.1         67,874           0        0      8.2         0
    12.1        360,180      32,734        3     74.1      12.1         67,874           0        0      8.2         0
    14.1        392,946      16,367        3     74.1      14.1         68,604         365        0      8.2    12,147
    16.1        458,480      32,734        3     74.1      16.1         68,604           0        0      8.2         0
    18.1        491,246      16,367        2     74.1      18.1         68,604           0        0      8.2         0
    20.1        556,780      32,767        4     74.1      20.1         68,604           0        0      8.2         0
    22.1        589,546      16,375        2     74.1      22.1         68,604           0        0      8.2         0
receiver timed out
    24.1        622,312      16,367        2     74.1      24.1         68,604           0        0      8.2         0
quiver:  error: PlanoProcessError: Command 'quiver-arrow receive //host.docker.internal//amq/queue/cq1 --impl qpid-proton-c --duration 10m --count 1m --rate 0 --body-size 12 --credit 1000 --transaction-size 0 --timeout 10 --durable --output /tmp/quiver-otujr23y' returned non-zero exit status 1.
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "/usr/local/lib/quiver/python/quiver/pair.py", line 144, in run
    _plano.wait(receiver, check=True)
  File "/usr/local/lib/quiver/python/plano/main.py", line 1243, in wait
    raise PlanoProcessError(proc)
plano.main.PlanoProcessError: Command 'quiver-arrow receive //host.docker.internal//amq/queue/cq1 --impl qpid-proton-c --duration 10m --count 1m --rate 0 --body-size 12 --credit 1000 --transaction-size 0 --timeout 10 --durable --output /tmp/quiver-otujr23y' returned non-zero exit status 1.
```

2. Quorum queue:
```
quiver //host.docker.internal//amq/queue/qq1 --durable --count 1m --duration 10m --body-size 12 --credit 1000
```
This commit:
```
Count ............................................. 1,000,000 messages
Duration .............................................. 101.4 seconds
Sender rate ........................................... 9,867 messages/s
Receiver rate ......................................... 9,868 messages/s
End-to-end rate ....................................... 9,865 messages/s

Latencies by percentile:

          0% ....... 11 ms       90.00% ....... 23 ms
         25% ....... 15 ms       99.00% ....... 28 ms
         50% ....... 18 ms       99.90% ....... 33 ms
        100% ....... 49 ms       99.99% ....... 47 ms
```

RabbitMQ 3.x:
```
---------------------- Sender -----------------------  --------------------- Receiver ----------------------  --------
Time [s]      Count [m]  Rate [m/s]  CPU [%]  RSS [M]  Time [s]      Count [m]  Rate [m/s]  CPU [%]  RSS [M]  Lat [ms]
-----------------------------------------------------  -----------------------------------------------------  --------
     2.1        130,814      65,342        9     69.9       2.1         18,430       9,206        5      7.6     1,221
     4.1        163,580      16,375        5     70.2       4.1         18,867         218        0      7.6     2,168
     6.1        229,114      32,767        6     70.2       6.1         18,867           0        0      7.6         0
     8.1        294,648      32,734        7     70.2       8.1         18,867           0        0      7.6         0
    10.1        360,182      32,734        6     70.2      10.1         18,867           0        0      7.6         0
    12.1        425,716      32,767        6     70.2      12.1         18,867           0        0      7.6         0
receiver timed out
    14.1        458,482      16,367        5     70.2      14.1         18,867           0        0      7.6         0
quiver:  error: PlanoProcessError: Command 'quiver-arrow receive //host.docker.internal//amq/queue/qq1 --impl qpid-proton-c --duration 10m --count 1m --rate 0 --body-size 12 --credit 1000 --transaction-size 0 --timeout 10 --durable --output /tmp/quiver-b1gcup43' returned non-zero exit status 1.
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "/usr/local/lib/quiver/python/quiver/pair.py", line 144, in run
    _plano.wait(receiver, check=True)
  File "/usr/local/lib/quiver/python/plano/main.py", line 1243, in wait
    raise PlanoProcessError(proc)
plano.main.PlanoProcessError: Command 'quiver-arrow receive //host.docker.internal//amq/queue/qq1 --impl qpid-proton-c --duration 10m --count 1m --rate 0 --body-size 12 --credit 1000 --transaction-size 0 --timeout 10 --durable --output /tmp/quiver-b1gcup43' returned non-zero exit status 1.
```

3. Stream:
```
quiver-arrow send //host.docker.internal//amq/queue/sq1 --durable --count 1m -d 10m --summary --verbose
```

This commit:
```
Count ............................................. 1,000,000 messages
Duration ................................................ 8.7 seconds
Message rate ........................................ 115,154 messages/s
```

RabbitMQ 3.x:
```
Count ............................................. 1,000,000 messages
Duration ............................................... 21.2 seconds
Message rate ......................................... 47,232 messages/s
```

 ### Memory usage

Start RabbitMQ:
```
ERL_MAX_PORTS=3000000 RABBITMQ_SERVER_ADDITIONAL_ERL_ARGS="+P 3000000 +S 6" make run-broker PLUGINS="rabbitmq_amqp1_0" FULL=1 RABBITMQ_CONFIG_FILE="rabbitmq.conf"
```

```
/bin/cat rabbitmq.conf

tcp_listen_options.sndbuf  = 2048
tcp_listen_options.recbuf  = 2048
vm_memory_high_watermark.relative = 0.95
vm_memory_high_watermark_paging_ratio = 0.95
loopback_users = none
```

Create 50k connections with 2 sessions per connection, i.e. 100k session in total:

```go
package main

import (
	"context"
	"log"
	"time"

	"github.com/Azure/go-amqp"
)

func main() {
	for i := 0; i < 50000; i++ {
		conn, err := amqp.Dial(context.TODO(), "amqp://nuc", &amqp.ConnOptions{SASLType: amqp.SASLTypeAnonymous()})
		if err != nil {
			log.Fatal("dialing AMQP server:", err)
		}
		_, err = conn.NewSession(context.TODO(), nil)
		if err != nil {
			log.Fatal("creating AMQP session:", err)
		}
		_, err = conn.NewSession(context.TODO(), nil)
		if err != nil {
			log.Fatal("creating AMQP session:", err)
		}
	}
	log.Println("opened all connections")
	time.Sleep(5 * time.Hour)
}
```

This commit:
```
erlang:memory().
[{total,4586376480},
 {processes,4025898504},
 {processes_used,4025871040},
 {system,560477976},
 {atom,1048841},
 {atom_used,1042841},
 {binary,233228608},
 {code,21449982},
 {ets,108560464}]

erlang:system_info(process_count).
450289
```
7 procs per connection + 1 proc per session.
(7 + 2*1) * 50,000 = 450,000 procs

RabbitMQ 3.x:
```
erlang:memory().
[{total,15168232704},
 {processes,14044779256},
 {processes_used,14044755120},
 {system,1123453448},
 {atom,1057033},
 {atom_used,1052587},
 {binary,236381264},
 {code,21790238},
 {ets,391423744}]

erlang:system_info(process_count).
1850309
```
7 procs per connection + 15 per session
(7 + 2*15) * 50,000 = 1,850,000 procs

50k connections + 100k session require
with this commit: 4.5 GB
in RabbitMQ 3.x: 15 GB

 ## Future work

1. More efficient parser and serializer
2. TODO in mc_amqp: Do not store the parsed message on disk.
3. Implement both AMQP HTTP extension and AMQP management extension to allow AMQP
clients to create RabbitMQ objects (queues, exchanges, ...).
2024-02-28 14:15:20 +01:00
David Ansari 8b151f43f7 Parse 2 bytes encoded AMQP boolean to Erlang boolean
An AMQP boolean can by encoded using 1 byte or 2 bytes:
https://docs.oasis-open.org/amqp/core/v1.0/os/amqp-core-types-v1.0-os.html#type-boolean

Prior to this commit, our Erlang parser returned:
* Erlang terms `true` or `false` for the 1 byte AMQP encoding
* Erlang terms `{boolean, true}` or `{boolean, false}` for the 2 byte AMQP enconding

Having a serializer and parser that perform the opposite actions such
that
```
Term = parse(serialize(Term))
```
is desirable as it provides a symmetric property useful not only for
property based testing, but also for avoiding altering message hashes
when serializing and parsing the same term.

However, dealing wth `{boolean, boolean()}` tuples instead of `boolean()` is very unhandy since
all Erlang code must take care of both forms leading to subtle bugs as
occurred in:
* 4cbeab8974/deps/rabbitmq_amqp1_0/src/rabbit_amqp1_0_message.erl (L155-L158)
* b8173c9d3b/deps/rabbitmq_mqtt/src/mc_mqtt.erl (L83-L88)
* b8173c9d3b/deps/rabbit/src/mc_amqpl.erl (L123-L127)

Therefore, this commits decides to take the safe approach and always
parse to an Erlang `boolean()` independent of whether the AMQP boolean
was encoded with 1 or 2 bytes.
2024-02-16 17:57:28 +01:00
Michael Klishin 01092ff31f
(c) year bumps 2024-01-01 22:02:20 -05:00
Ariel Otilibili e1d09fbba6 Replaced true | false by boolean() 2023-12-22 17:28:31 +01:00
Michael Klishin 1b642353ca
Update (c) according to [1]
1. https://investors.broadcom.com/news-releases/news-release-details/broadcom-and-vmware-intend-close-transaction-november-22-2023
2023-11-21 23:18:22 -05:00
Karl Nilsson 119f034406
Message Containers (#5077)
This PR implements an approach for a "protocol (data format) agnostic core" where the format of the message isn't converted at point of reception.

Currently all non AMQP 0.9.1 originating messages are converted into a AMQP 0.9.1 flavoured basic_message record before sent to a queue. If the messages are then consumed by the originating protocol they are converted back from AMQP 0.9.1. For some protocols such as MQTT 3.1 this isn't too expensive as MQTT is mostly a fairly easily mapped subset of AMQP 0.9.1 but for others such as AMQP 1.0 the conversions are awkward and in some cases lossy even if consuming from the originating protocol.

This PR instead wraps all incoming messages in their originating form into a generic, extensible message container type (mc). The container module exposes an API to get common message details such as size and various properties (ttl, priority etc) directly from the source data type. Each protocol needs to implement the mc behaviour such that when a message originating form one protocol is consumed by another protocol we convert it to the target protocol at that point.

The message container also contains annotations, dead letter records and other meta data we need to record during the lifetime of a message. The original protocol message is never modified unless it is consumed.

This includes conversion modules to and from amqp, amqpl (AMQP 0.9.1) and mqtt.


COMMIT HISTORY:

* Refactor away from using the delivery{} record

In many places including exchange types. This should make it
easier to move towards using a message container type instead of
basic_message.

Add mc module and move direct replies outside of exchange

Lots of changes incl classic queues

Implement stream support incl amqp conversions

simplify mc state record

move mc.erl

mc dlx stuff

recent history exchange

Make tracking work

But doesn't take a protocol agnostic approach as we just convert
everything into AMQP legacy and back. Might be good enough for now.

Tracing as a whole may want a bit of a re-vamp at some point.

tidy

make quorum queue peek work by legacy conversion

dead lettering fixes

dead lettering fixes

CMQ fixes

rabbit_trace type fixes

fixes

fix

Fix classic queue props

test assertion fix

feature flag and backwards compat

Enable message_container feature flag in some SUITEs

Dialyzer fixes

fixes

fix

test fixes

Various

Manually update a gazelle generated file

until a gazelle enhancement can be made
https://github.com/rabbitmq/rules_erlang/issues/185

Add message_containers_SUITE to bazel

and regen bazel files with gazelle from rules_erlang@main

Simplify essential proprty access

Such as durable, ttl and priority by extracting them into annotations
at message container init time.

Move type

to remove dependenc on amqp10 stuff in mc.erl

mostly because I don't know how to make bazel do the right thing

add more stuff

Refine routing header stuff

wip

Cosmetics

Do not use "maybe" as type name as "maybe" is a keyword since OTP 25
which makes Erlang LS complain.

* Dedup death queue names

* Fix function clause crashes

Fix failing tests in the MQTT shared_SUITE:
A classic queue message ID can be undefined as set in
fbe79ff47b/deps/rabbit/src/rabbit_classic_queue_index_v2.erl (L1048)

Fix failing tests in the MQTT shared_SUITE-mixed:
When feature flag message_containers is disabled, the
message is not an #mc{} record, but a #basic_message{} record.

* Fix is_utf8_no_null crash

Prior to this commit, the function crashed if invalid UTF-8 was
provided, e.g.:
```
1> rabbit_misc:is_valid_shortstr(<<"😇"/utf16>>).
** exception error: no function clause matching rabbit_misc:is_utf8_no_null(<<216,61,222,7>>) (rabbit_misc.erl, line 1481)
```

* Implement mqtt mc behaviour

For now via amqp translation.

This is still work in progress, but the following SUITEs pass:
```
make -C deps/rabbitmq_mqtt ct-shared t=[mqtt,v5,cluster_size_1] FULL=1
make -C deps/rabbitmq_mqtt ct-v5 t=[mqtt,cluster_size_1] FULL=1
```

* Shorten mc file names

Module name length matters because for each persistent message the #mc{}
record is persisted to disk.

```
1> iolist_size(term_to_iovec({mc, rabbit_mc_amqp_legacy})).
30
2> iolist_size(term_to_iovec({mc, mc_amqpl})).
17
```

This commit renames the mc modules:
```
ag -l rabbit_mc_amqp_legacy | xargs sed -i 's/rabbit_mc_amqp_legacy/mc_amqpl/g'
ag -l rabbit_mc_amqp | xargs sed -i 's/rabbit_mc_amqp/mc_amqp/g'
ag -l rabbit_mqtt_mc | xargs sed -i 's/rabbit_mqtt_mc/mc_mqtt/g'
```

* mc: make deaths an annotation + fixes

* Fix mc_mqtt protocol_state callback

* Fix test will_delay_node_restart

```
make -C deps/rabbitmq_mqtt ct-v5 t=[mqtt,cluster_size_3]:will_delay_node_restart FULL=1
```

* Bazel run gazelle

* mix format rabbitmqctl.ex

* Ensure ttl annotation is refelected in amqp legacy protocol state

* Fix id access in message store

* Fix rabbit_message_interceptor_SUITE

* dializer fixes

* Fix rabbit:rabbit_message_interceptor_SUITE-mixed

set_annotation/3 should not result in duplicate keys

* Fix MQTT shared_SUITE-mixed

Up to 3.12 non-MQTT publishes were always QoS 1 regardless of delivery_mode.
75a953ce28/deps/rabbitmq_mqtt/src/rabbit_mqtt_processor.erl (L2075-L2076)
From now on, non-MQTT publishes are QoS 1 if durable.
This makes more sense.

The MQTT plugin must send a #basic_message{} to an old node that does
not understand message containers.

* Field content of 'v1_0.data' can be binary

Fix
```
bazel test //deps/rabbitmq_mqtt:shared_SUITE-mixed \
    --test_env FOCUS="-group [mqtt,v4,cluster_size_1] -case trace" \
    -t- --test_sharding_strategy=disabled
```

* Remove route/2 and implement route/3 for all exchange types.

This removes the route/2 callback from rabbit_exchange_type and
makes route/3 mandatory instead. This is a breaking change and
will require all implementations of exchange types to update their
code, however this is necessary anyway for them to correctly handle
the mc type.

stream filtering fixes

* Translate directly from MQTT to AMQP 0.9.1

* handle undecoded properties in mc_compat

amqpl: put clause in right order

recover death deatails from amqp data

* Replace callback init_amqp with convert_from

* Fix return value of lists:keyfind/3

* Translate directly from AMQP 0.9.1 to MQTT

* Fix MQTT payload size

MQTT payload can be a list when converted from AMQP 0.9.1 for example

First conversions tests

Plus some other conversion related fixes.

bazel

bazel

translate amqp 1.0 null to undefined

mc: property/2 and correlation_id/message_id return type tagged values.

To ensure we can support a variety of types better.

The type type tags are AMQP 1.0 flavoured.

fix death recovery

mc_mqtt: impl new api

Add callbacks to allow protocols to compact data before storage

And make readable if needing to query things repeatedly.

bazel fix

* more decoding

* tracking mixed versions compat

* mc: flip default of `durable` annotation to save some data.

Assuming most messages are durable and that in memory messages suffer less
from persistence overhead it makes sense for a non existent `durable`
annotation to mean durable=true.

* mc conversion tests and tidy up

* mc make x_header unstrict again

* amqpl: death record fixes

* bazel

* amqp -> amqpl conversion test

* Fix crash in mc_amqp:size/1

Body can be a single amqp-value section (instead of
being a list) as shown by test
```
make -C deps/rabbitmq_amqp1_0/ ct-system t=java
```
on branch native-amqp.

* Fix crash in lists:flatten/1

Data can be a single amqp-value section (instead of
being a list) as shown by test
```
make -C deps/rabbitmq_amqp1_0 ct-system t=dotnet:roundtrip_to_amqp_091
```
on branch native-amqp.

* Fix crash in rabbit_writer

Running test
```
make -C deps/rabbitmq_amqp1_0 ct-system t=dotnet:roundtrip_to_amqp_091
```
on branch native-amqp resulted in the following crash:
```
crasher:
  initial call: rabbit_writer:enter_mainloop/2
  pid: <0.711.0>
  registered_name: []
  exception error: bad argument
    in function  size/1
       called as size([<<0>>,<<"Sw">>,[<<160,2>>,<<"hi">>]])
       *** argument 1: not tuple or binary
    in call from rabbit_binary_generator:build_content_frames/7 (rabbit_binary_generator.erl, line 89)
    in call from rabbit_binary_generator:build_simple_content_frames/4 (rabbit_binary_generator.erl, line 61)
    in call from rabbit_writer:assemble_frames/5 (rabbit_writer.erl, line 334)
    in call from rabbit_writer:internal_send_command_async/3 (rabbit_writer.erl, line 365)
    in call from rabbit_writer:handle_message/2 (rabbit_writer.erl, line 265)
    in call from rabbit_writer:handle_message/3 (rabbit_writer.erl, line 232)
    in call from rabbit_writer:mainloop1/2 (rabbit_writer.erl, line 223)
```
because #content.payload_fragments_rev is currently supposed to
be a flat list of binaries instead of being an iolist.

This commit fixes this crash inefficiently by calling
iolist_to_binary/1. A better solution would be to allow AMQP legacy's #content.payload_fragments_rev
to be an iolist.

* Add accidentally deleted line back

* mc: optimise mc_amqp internal format

By removint the outer records for message and delivery annotations
as well as application properties and footers.

* mc: optimis mc_amqp map_add by using upsert

* mc: refactoring and bug fixes

* mc_SUITE routingheader assertions

* mc remove serialize/1 callback as only used by amqp

* mc_amqp: avoid returning a nested list from protocol_state

* test and bug fix

* move infer_type to mc_util

* mc fixes and additiona assertions

* Support headers exchange routing for MQTT messages

When a headers exchange is bound to the MQTT topic exchange, routing
will be performend based on both MQTT topic (by the topic exchange) and
MQTT User Property (by the headers exchange).

This combines the best worlds of both MQTT 5.0 and AMQP 0.9.1 and
enables powerful routing topologies.

When the User Property contains the same name multiple times, only the
last name (and value) will be considered by the headers exchange.

* Fix crash when sending from stream to amqpl

When publishing a message via the stream protocol and consuming it via
AMQP 0.9.1, the following crash occurred prior to this commit:
```
crasher:
  initial call: rabbit_channel:init/1
  pid: <0.818.0>
  registered_name: []
  exception exit: {{badmatch,undefined},
                   [{rabbit_channel,handle_deliver0,4,
                                    [{file,"rabbit_channel.erl"},
                                     {line,2728}]},
                    {lists,foldl,3,[{file,"lists.erl"},{line,1594}]},
                    {rabbit_channel,handle_cast,2,
                                    [{file,"rabbit_channel.erl"},
                                     {line,728}]},
                    {gen_server2,handle_msg,2,
                                 [{file,"gen_server2.erl"},{line,1056}]},
                    {proc_lib,wake_up,3,
                              [{file,"proc_lib.erl"},{line,251}]}]}
```

This commit first gives `mc:init/3` the chance to set exchange and
routing_keys annotations.
If not set, `rabbit_stream_queue` will set these annotations assuming
the message was originally published via the stream protocol.

* Support consistent hash exchange routing for MQTT 5.0

When a consistent hash exchange is bound to the MQTT topic exchange,
MQTT 5.0 messages can be routed to queues consistently based on the
Correlation-Data in the PUBLISH packet.

* Convert MQTT 5.0 User Property

* to AMQP 0.9.1 headers
* from AMQP 0.9.1 headers
* to AMQP 1.0 application properties and message annotations
* from AMQP 1.0 application properties and message annotations

* Make use of Annotations in mc_mqtt:protocol_state/2

mc_mqtt:protocol_state/2 includes Annotations as parameter.
It's cleaner to make use of these Annotations when computing the
protocol state instead of relying on the caller (rabbitmq_mqtt_processor)
to compute the protocol state.

* Enforce AMQP 0.9.1 field name length limit

The AMQP 0.9.1 spec prohibits field names longer than 128 characters.
Therefore, when converting AMQP 1.0 message annotations, application
properties or MQTT 5.0 User Property to AMQP 0.9.1 headers, drop any
names longer than 128 characters.

* Fix type specs

Apply feedback from Michael Davis

Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <mcarsondavis@gmail.com>

* Add mc_mqtt unit test suite

Implement mc_mqtt:x_header/2

* Translate indicator that payload is UTF-8 encoded

when converting between MQTT 5.0 and AMQP 1.0

* Translate single amqp-value section from AMQP 1.0 to MQTT

Convert to a text representation, if possible, and indicate to MQTT
client that the payload is UTF-8 encoded. This way, the MQTT client will
be able to parse the payload.

If conversion to text representation is not possible, encode the payload
using the AMQP 1.0 type system and indiate the encoding via Content-Type
message/vnd.rabbitmq.amqp.

This Content-Type is not registered.
Type "message" makes sense since it's a message.
Vendor tree "vnd.rabbitmq.amqp" makes sense since merely subtype "amqp" is not
registered.

* Fix payload conversion

* Translate Response Topic between MQTT and AMQP

Translate MQTT 5.0 Response Topic to AMQP 1.0 reply-to address and vice
versa.

The Response Topic must be a UTF-8 encoded string.

This commit re-uses the already defined RabbitMQ target addresses:
```
"/topic/"     RK        Publish to amq.topic with routing key RK
"/exchange/"  X "/" RK  Publish to exchange X with routing key RK
```

By default, the MQTT topic exchange is configure dto be amq.topic using
the 1st target address.

When an operator modifies the mqtt.exchange, the 2nd target address is
used.

* Apply PR feedback

and fix formatting

Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <mcarsondavis@gmail.com>

* tidy up

* Add MQTT message_containers test

* consistent hash exchange: avoid amqp legacy conversion

When hashing on a header value.

* Avoid converting to amqp legacy when using exchange federation

* Fix test flake

* test and dialyzer fixes

* dialyzer fix

* Add MQTT protocol interoperability tests

Test receiving from and sending to MQTT 5.0 and
* AMQP 0.9.1
* AMQP 1.0
* STOMP
* Streams

* Regenerate portions of deps/rabbit/app.bzl with gazelle

I'm not exactly sure how this happened, but gazell seems to have been
run with an older version of the rules_erlang gazelle extension at
some point. This caused generation of a structure that is no longer
used. This commit updates the structure to the current pattern.

* mc: refactoring

* mc_amqpl: handle delivery annotations

Just in case they are included.

Also use iolist_to_iovec to create flat list of binaries when
converting from amqp with amqp encoded payload.

---------

Co-authored-by: David Ansari <david.ansari@gmx.de>
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <mcarsondavis@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Rin Kuryloski <kuryloskip@vmware.com>
2023-08-31 11:27:13 +01:00
Michael Klishin 55442aa914 Replace @rabbitmq.com addresses with rabbitmq-core@groups.vmware.com
Don't ask why we have to do it. Because reasons!
2023-06-20 15:40:13 +04:00
Rin Kuryloski eb94a58bc9 Add a workflow to compare the bazel/erlang.mk output
To catch any drift between the builds
2023-05-15 13:54:14 +02:00
Rin Kuryloski a944439fba Replace globs in bazel with explicit lists of files
As this is preferred in rules_erlang 3.9.14
2023-04-25 17:29:12 +02:00
Rin Kuryloski 854d01d9a5 Restore the original -include_lib statements from before #6466
since this broke erlang_ls

requires rules_erlang 3.9.13
2023-04-20 12:40:45 +02:00
Rin Kuryloski 8de8f59d47 Use gazelle generated bazel files
Bazel build files are now maintained primarily with `bazel run
gazelle`. This will analyze and merge changes into the build files as
necessitated by certain code changes (e.g. the introduction of new
modules).

In some cases there hints to gazelle in the build files, such as `#
gazelle:erlang...` or `# keep` comments. xref checks on plugins that
depend on the cli are a good example.
2023-04-17 18:13:18 +02:00
Alexey Lebedeff c7da0da8b8 Cleanup dialyzer calls
- Use the same base .plt everywhere, so there is no need to list
standard apps everywhere
- Fix typespecs: some typos and the use of not-exported types
2023-02-06 17:05:30 +01:00
Rin Kuryloski a317b30807 Use improved assert_suites2 macro from rules_erlang 3.9.0 2023-01-18 15:07:06 +01:00
Michael Klishin ec4f1dba7d
(c) year bump: 2022 => 2023 2023-01-01 23:17:36 -05:00
Luke Bakken 553aab51c9
Update branch names and links
Fix publish of libs to hex.pm

@lhoguin noticed that the hex packages for the amqp_client, amqp10_client and related project do not currently work with erlang.mk. This PR fixes this issue.

Tested using this project: https://github.com/lukebakken/amqp-clients-test.git
2022-09-29 13:58:56 -07:00
Rin Kuryloski 34782e591c Update amqp*_client Makefiles for branch rename
For hex publishing correctness
2022-08-16 09:43:40 +02:00