RabbitMQ in Action
Author: Jason Williams
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Published: 2012-04-19
Total Pages: 447
ISBN-13: 1638353840
DOWNLOAD EBOOKSummary RabbitMQ in Action is a fast-paced run through building and managing scalable applications using the RabbitMQ messaging server. It starts by explaining how message queuing works, its history, and how RabbitMQ fits in. Then it shows you real-world examples you can apply to your own scalability and interoperability challenges. About the Technology There's a virtual switchboard at the core of most large applications where messages race between servers, programs, and services. RabbitMQ is an efficient and easy-to-deploy queue that handles this message traffic effortlessly in all situations, from web startups to massive enterprise systems. About the Book RabbitMQ in Action teaches you to build and manage scalable applications in multiple languages using the RabbitMQ messaging server. It's a snap to get started. You'll learn how message queuing works and how RabbitMQ fits in. Then, you'll explore practical scalability and interoperability issues through many examples. By the end, you'll know how to make Rabbit run like a well-oiled machine in a 24 x 7 x 365 environment. Written for developers familiar with Python, PHP, Java, .NET, or any other modern programming language. No RabbitMQ experience required. Purchase of the print book comes with an offer of a free PDF, ePub, and Kindle eBook from Manning. Also available is all code from the book. What's Inside Learn fundamental messaging design patterns Use patterns for on-demand scalability Glue a PHP frontend to a backend written in anything Implement a PubSub-alerting service in 30 minutes flat Configure RabbitMQ's built-in clustering Monitor, manage, extend, and tune RabbitMQ ============================================ Table of Contents Pulling RabbitMQ out of the hat Understanding messaging Running and administering Rabbit Solving problems with Rabbit: coding and patterns Clustering and dealing with failure Writing code that survives failure Warrens and Shovels: failover and replication Administering RabbitMQ from the Web Controlling Rabbit with the REST API Monitoring: Houston, we have a problem Supercharging and securing your Rabbit Smart Rabbits: extending RabbitMQ