##Overview This bundle allows you to easily consume messages from Push Queues by simply tagging your services and relying on Symfony's event dispatcher - without needing to run a daemon or background process to continuously poll your queue.
Full Documentation: qpush-bundle.readthedocs.org
##Installation
The bundle should be installed through composer.
####Add the bundle to your composer.json file
{
"require": {
"uecode/qpush-bundle": "~2.2.0",
}
}
####Update AppKernel.php of your Symfony Application
Add the UecodeQPushBundle
to your kernel bootstrap sequence, in the $bundles
array.
public function registerBundles()
{
$bundles = array(
// ...
new Uecode\Bundle\QPushBundle\UecodeQPushBundle(),
);
return $bundles;
}
##Basic Configuration:
Here is a basic configuration that would create a push queue called
my_queue_name
using AWS or IronMQ. You can read about the supported providers
and provider options in the full documentation.
######Example
#app/config.yml
uecode_qpush:
providers:
ironmq:
token: YOUR_IRON_MQ_TOKEN_HERE
project_id: YOUR_IRON_MQ_PROJECT_ID_HERE
aws:
key: YOUR_AWS_KEY_HERE
secret: YOUR_AWS_SECRET_HERE
region: YOUR_AWS_REGION_HERE
queues:
my_queue_key:
provider: ironmq #or aws
options:
queue_name: my_queue_name #optional. the queue name used on the provider
push_notifications: true
subscribers:
- { endpoint: http://example.com/qpush, protocol: http }
You may exclude aws key and secret to default to IAM role on the EC2 machine.
##Publishing messages to your Queue
Publishing messages is simple - fetch the registered Provider service from the
container and call the publish
method on the respective queue.
This bundle stores your messages as a json object and the publish method expects an array, typically associative.
######Example
// src/My/Bundle/ExampleBundle/Controller/MyController.php
public function publishAction()
{
$message = ['foo' => 'bar'];
// fetch your provider service from the container
$this->get('uecode_qpush')->get('my_queue_key')->publish($message);
// you can also fetch it directly
$this->get('uecode_qpush.my_queue_key')->publish($message);
}
##Working with messages from your Queue
When a message hits your application, this bundle will dispatch a MessageEvent
which can be handled by your services. You need to tag your services to handle
these events.
######Example
services:
my_example_service:
class: My\Bundle\ExampleBundle\Service\ExampleService
tags:
- { name: uecode_qpush.event_listener, event: my_queue_key.message_received, method: onMessageReceived }
######Example
// src/My/Bundle/ExampleBundle/Service/ExampleService.php
use Uecode\Bundle\QPushBundle\Event\MessageEvent;
public function onMessageReceived(MessageEvent $event)
{
$queue_name = $event->getQueueName();
$message = $event->getMessage();
// do some processing
}
The Message
objects contain the provider specific message id, a message body,
and a collection of provider specific metadata.
These properties are accessible through simple getters from the message object.
######Example
// src/My/Bundle/ExampleBundle/Service/ExampleService.php
use Uecode\Bundle\QPushBundle\Event\MessageEvent;
use Uecode\Bundle\QPushBundle\Message\Message;
public function onMessageReceived(MessageEvent $event)
{
$id = $event->getMessage()->getId();
$body = $event->getMessage()->getBody();
$metadata = $event->getMessage()->getMetadata();
// do some processing
}
###Cleaning up the Queue
Once all other Event Listeners have been invoked on a MessageEvent
, the Bundle
will automatically attempt to remove the Message from your Queue for you.