This topic tells you how to set default policies for the on-demand VMware Tanzu RabbitMQ for Tanzu Application Service service. For setting pre-provisioned policies, see Setting Default RabbitMQ Policies for the Pre-Provisioned Service.

Setting up Policies in On-Demand RabbitMQ

In on-demand RabbitMQ, the operator cannot set a default policy globally for all service plans or for a concrete service plan. Instead, it is up to the service instance owner (the Cloud Foundry space developer who created the service instance) to define policies and otherwise manage the RabbitMQ cluster.

The developer sets up policies in RabbitMQ through the management API or through the UI if they want to use a browser. To access the management API, the developer needs a username and password in addition to the URL.

To set policies:

  1. Create a Service Instance
  2. Obtain the RabbitMQ Management API Credentials
  3. Declare a RabbitMQ Policy Through the Management API
  4. List Policies

Create a Service Instance

To create a service instance:

  1. Run:

    cf create-service p.rabbitmq PLAN SERVICE-INSTANCE-NAME
    

    Where:

    • SERVICE-INSTANCE-NAME is a name of your choice.
    • PLAN is the plan. For example, single-node.

Obtain the RabbitMQ Management API Credentials

You can get a RabbitMQ user’s credentials through the RabbitMQ Management UI or through the cf CLI.

When using the cf CLI, you can get the credentials through a service key or through a service binding. Both methods create a RabbitMQ user with the user tags management and policymaker. policymaker is the key user tag that permits a developer to create and delete policies.

Choose one of the following methods to obtain the RabbitMQ management API credentials http_api_uri, vhost, password, and username:

  • Service key method:

    1. Create a service key by running:

      cf create-service-key SERVICE-INSTANCE-NAME SERVICE-KEY
      

      Where:

      • SERVICE-INSTANCE-NAME is the name of your service instance.
      • SERVICE-KEY is a name you choose to identify the service key.
    2. Obtain the credentials by running:

      cf service-key SERVICE-INSTANCE-NAME SERVICE-KEY
      
  • Service binding method:

    1. Bind your app to your service instance by running:

      cf bind-service APP-NAME SERVICE-INSTANCE-NAME
      

      Where:

      • APP-NAME is the name of your app.
      • SERVICE-INSTANCE-NAME is the name of your service instance.
    2. Obtain the credentials for the user assigned to the app by running:

      cf env APP-NAME
      

      This prints out information similar to the below:

      ...
      
      System-Provided:
      VCAP_SERVICES: {
       "p.rabbitmq": [
        {
          "credentials": {
            ...
            "http_api_uri": "https://a9b37966-d67a-448f-b93d-744e3dc95890:hWD38Vvc9wdQAXG8Lh_AAjRI@rmq-a1d3c836-c670-4d22-9191-3e497b68a885.sys.philippinepink.cf-app.com/api/",
            "password": "xxxxxx",
            "username": "a9b37966-d67a-448f-b93d-xxxxx",
            "vhost": "a1d3c836-c670-4d22-9191-3e497b68a885"
            ...
          }
        }
      }
      ...
      

Declare a RabbitMQ Policy Through the Management API

There are at least two methods to declare policies through the management API:

  • Using the command line tool rabbitmqadmin, which you can download from http_api_uri after replacing api/ in http_api_uri with cli/rabbitmqadmin. This tool requires Python to be installed.
  • Using curl or another HTTP client tool to send HTTP requests directly to the http_api_uri you obtained from the app or service-key. This method is used in the procedures below.

Prerequisites

The prerequisites for the below procedures are:

  1. Install the curl command line tool. For more information, see the curl documentation.
  2. Install the jq command line tool. For more information, see the jq documentation in GitHub.
  3. Download copies of the scripts set-policy and list-policies from GitHub to your local machine.

Set up an HA Policy

All queues with names that start with ha. are mirrored with one replica and with automatic synchronization.

The set-policy script assumes the app is bound to a single RabbitMQ service instance. It accepts these parameters:

  1. The app’s name
  2. The name of the policy
  3. The policy pattern
  4. The definition
  5. The priority

To set up an HA policy:

  1. Set the policy by running:

    ./set-policy APP-NAME ha "^ha\." '{"ha-mode":"exactly", "ha-params":2, "ha-sync-mode":"automatic"}' NUMBER
    

    Where:

    • APP-NAME is your app.
    • NUMBER is the priority value, such as 10.

    When there are two or more policies that match the same queue or exchange, RabbitMQ compares the priority values of the policies to choose which policy to apply.
    RabbitMQ assigns 0 to priority when no value is provided.
    You do not need to assign a value to the priority if you have no overlapping policies.

    For example:

    $ ./set-policy demo-app ha "^ha\." '{"ha-mode":"exactly", "ha-params":2, "ha-sync-mode":"automatic"}' 10
    

Set up an HA Plus DLX Policy

All queues named ha-dlx.* are mirrored with one replica, with automatic synchronization, and with a dead-letter exchange. To combine multiple features you must create a policy that combines both. For more information, see the RabbitMQ documentation.

To create a policy that combines ha and dlx:

  1. Set the policy by running:

    ./set-policy APP-NAME ha-dlx "^ha-dlx\." '{"ha-mode":"exactly", "ha-params":2, "ha-sync-mode":"automatic",  "dead-letter-exchange": "ha-dlx" }'
    

    Where APP-NAME is the name of the app.

    For example:

    $ ./set-policy demo-app ha-dlx "^ha-dlx\." '{"ha-mode":"exactly", "ha-params":2, "ha-sync-mode":"automatic",  "dead-letter-exchange": "ha-dlx" }'
    

Set up a Policy for Temporary Queues

All queues named temp.* must have a maximum length and message time to live (TTL).

To create a policy for temporary queues:

  1. Set the policy by running:

    ./set-policy APP-NAME ha "^temp\." '{"max-length": NUMBER, "overflow": "reject-publish", "message-ttl": MILLISECONDS}'
    

    Where:

    • APP-NAME is the name of the app.
    • NUMBER is the maximum number of messages, such as 2.
    • MILLISECONDS is a number of milliseconds, such as 60000.

    For example:

    $ ./set-policy demo-app ha "^temp\." '{"max-length": 2, "overflow": "reject-publish", "message-ttl": 60000}'
    

When the queue is full, the broker rejects further publishing attempts. If the publisher uses the protocol extension Publisher Confirm, it gets a nack. For more information about Publisher Confirm, see the RabbitMQ documentation.

Set up a Policy for a Concrete Queue

To set up a policy for a concrete queue:

  1. Set the policy by running:

    ./set-policy APP-NAME ha "^CONCRETE-QUEUE$" '{"queue-mode":"lazy"}'
    

    Where:

    • APP-NAME is the name of the app.
    • CONCRETE-QUEUE is the name of the concrete queue, such as event-log.

    The queue mode must be lazy.

    For example:

    $ ./set-policy demo-app ha "^event-log$" '{"queue-mode":"lazy"}'
    

List Policies

After setting policies, you can list them using the list-policies script you downloaded in Prerequisites above.

To see the policies you created:

  1. Run:

    ./list-policies APP-NAME
    

    Where APP-NAME is your app. For example:

    $ ./list-policies demo-app
    [
      {
        "vhost": "a1d3c836-c670-4d22-9191-3e497b68a885",
        "name": "test",
        "pattern": "^ha\.",
        "apply-to": "all",
        "definition": {
          "ha-mode": "exactly",
          "ha-params": 2,
          "ha-sync-mode": "automatic"
        },
        "priority": 10
      }
    ]
    
check-circle-line exclamation-circle-line close-line
Scroll to top icon