Objectives
This sample demonstrates how durable or non-durable topics can be created and used in WSO2 Message Broker using the RabbitMQ .NET/C# client. It first introduces a sample .NET named TopicPublisher, which is used to publish messages to a known, created topic in Message Broker, and then introduces a sample .NET client named TopicConsumer to listen for messages and print message contents to the console.
Prerequisites
To run this code sample, you must download and add the RabbitMQ.Client.dll
file as a reference in your .NET project. You can download this file from http://www.rabbitmq.com/dotnet.html or the WSO2 repository.
Running the sample
Before running the TopicPublisher class, you must register at least one TopicConsumer binding before sending messages to the topic by doing one of the following:
- Log into WSO2 Message Broker management console and create a topic named 'test-topic' (from the Main menu, choose Topics -> Add).
OR - Run the TopicConsumer class depicted below, which will register a binding to that topic. When you have run the TopicConsumer class, you will see the topic subscription it created is visible in the management console when you choose Topics -> Browse.
You can now use the following TopicPublisher .NET client to send messages to the 'test-topic' topic created earlier.
/* * Copyright (c) 2005-2010, WSO2 Inc. (http://www.wso2.org) All Rights Reserved. * * WSO2 Inc. licenses this file to you under the Apache License, * Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except * in compliance with the License. * You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, * software distributed under the License is distributed on an * "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY * KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the * specific language governing permissions and limitations * under the License. */ using System; using System.Collections.Generic; using System.Linq; using System.Text; using RabbitMQ.Client; namespace MB_Topic_Publisher { class TopicPublisher { static void Main(string[] args) { TopicPublisher topicPublisher = new TopicPublisher(); topicPublisher.PublishMessage("Test Message"); Console.WriteLine("Message Sent.."); Console.ReadLine(); } public void PublishMessage(string message) { //Setup the connection with the message broker ConnectionFactory factory = new ConnectionFactory(); IProtocol protocol = Protocols.AMQP_0_8_QPID; factory.VirtualHost = "/carbon"; factory.UserName = "admin"; factory.Password = "admin"; factory.HostName = "localhost"; factory.Port = 5672; factory.Protocol = protocol; using (IConnection conn = factory.CreateConnection()) { using (IModel ch = conn.CreateModel()) { // Declare a topic exchange to publish messages, here we have used the default topic exchange of WSO2 MB ch.ExchangeDeclare("amq.topic", "topic"); // Publish the message to the exchange, it will send it to the routing key which is our name 'myTopic'. // The syntax is ch.BasicPublish(<exchange_name>, <topic_name>, <message_properties>,<message_body>) ch.BasicPublish("amq.topic", "test-topic", null, Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes(message)); } } } } }
Next, execute the following TopicConsumer .NET client, which receives messages from 'test-topic'.
using System; using System.Collections.Generic; using System.Linq; using System.Text; using RabbitMQ.Client; namespace MB_TopicClient { class TopicConsumer { static void Main(string[] args) { TopicConsumer topicConsumer = new TopicConsumer(); topicConsumer.getMessages(); } public void getMessages() { //Setup the connection with the message broker ConnectionFactory factory = new ConnectionFactory(); IProtocol protocol = Protocols.AMQP_0_8_QPID; factory.VirtualHost = "/carbon"; factory.UserName = "admin"; factory.Password = "admin"; factory.HostName = "localhost"; factory.Port = 5672; factory.Protocol = protocol; using (IConnection conn = factory.CreateConnection()) { using (IModel ch = conn.CreateModel()) { // Declare a topic exchange to be bound to retrieve messages, here we have used the default topic exchange of WSO2 MB ch.ExchangeDeclare("amq.topic", "topic"); // Declare a topic name, here we use a non-durable topic. To make it durable use the 2nd parameter as 'true' ch.QueueDeclare("test-topic", false, false, false, null); // Bind the Topic in to the exchange ch.QueueBind("test-topic", "amq.topic", "test-topic"); // Declare a consumer which listens on the messages published to 'test-topic' topic, we need to declare an exclusive subscriber, in order to get this work. // The syntax is BasicConsume(<queuename>, <noAck>,<consumerTag>, <noLocal>, <exclusive>, <arguments>, <Consumer>) QueueingBasicConsumer consumer = new QueueingBasicConsumer(ch); ch.BasicConsume("test-topic", false, "1", false, true, null, consumer); while (true) { try { RabbitMQ.Client.Events.BasicDeliverEventArgs e =(RabbitMQ.Client.Events.BasicDeliverEventArgs)consumer.Queue.Dequeue(); byte[] body = e.Body; string message = Encoding.UTF8.GetString(body); Console.WriteLine(message); ch.BasicAck(e.DeliveryTag, false); } catch (OperationCanceledException e) { Console.WriteLine(e); break; } } } } } } }