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rabbitmq - Service Oriented Architecture - AMQP or HTTP

A little background.

Very big monolithic Django application. All components use the same database. We need to separate services so we can independently upgrade some parts of the system without affecting the rest.

We use RabbitMQ as a broker to Celery.

Right now we have two options:

  1. HTTP Services using a REST interface.
  2. JSONRPC over AMQP to a event loop service

My team is leaning towards HTTP because that's what they are familiar with but I think the advantages of using RPC over AMQP far outweigh it.

AMQP provides us with the capabilities to easily add in load balancing, and high availability, with guaranteed message deliveries.

Whereas with HTTP we have to create client HTTP wrappers to work with the REST interfaces, we have to put in a load balancer and set up that infrastructure in order to have HA etc.

With AMQP I can just spawn another instance of the service, it will connect to the same queue as the other instances and bam, HA and load balancing.

Am I missing something with my thoughts on AMQP?

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At first,

  • REST, RPC - architecture patterns, AMQP - wire-level and HTTP - application protocol which run on top of TCP/IP
  • AMQP is a specific protocol when HTTP - general-purpose protocol, thus, HTTP has damn high overhead comparing to AMQP
  • AMQP nature is asynchronous where HTTP nature is synchronous
  • both REST and RPC use data serialization, which format is up to you and it depends of infrastructure. If you are using python everywhere I think you can use python native serialization - pickle which should be faster than JSON or any other formats.
  • both HTTP+REST and AMQP+RPC can run in heterogeneous and/or distributed environment

So if you are choosing what to use: HTTP+REST or AMQP+RPC, the answer is really subject of infrastructure complexity and resource usage. Without any specific requirements both solution will work fine, but i would rather make some abstraction to be able switch between them transparently.

You told that your team familiar with HTTP but not with AMQP. If development time is an important time you got an answer.

If you want to build HA infrastructure with minimal complexity I guess AMQP protocol is what you want.

I had an experience with both of them and advantages of RESTful services are:

  • they well-mapped on web interface
  • people are familiar with them
  • easy to debug (due to general purpose of HTTP)
  • easy provide API to third-party services.

Advantages of AMQP-based solution:

  • damn fast
  • flexible
  • cost-effective (in resources usage meaning)

Note, that you can provide RESTful API to third-party services on top of your AMQP-based API while REST is not a protocol but rather paradigm, but you should think about it building your AQMP RPC api. I have done it in this way to provide API to external third-party services and provide access to API on those part of infrastructure which run on old codebase or where it is not possible to add AMQP support.

If I am right your question is about how to better organize communication between different parts of your software, not how to provide an API to end-users.

If you have a high-load project RabbitMQ is damn good piece of software and you can easily add any number of workers which run on different machines. Also it has mirroring and clustering out of the box. And one more thing, RabbitMQ is build on top of Erlang OTP, which is high-reliable,stable platform ... (bla-bla-bla), it is good not only for marketing but for engineers too. I had an issue with RabbitMQ only once when nginx logs took all disc space on the same partition where RabbitMQ run.

UPD (May 2018): Saurabh Bhoomkar posted a link to the MQ vs. HTTP article written by Arnold Shoon on June 7th, 2012, here's a copy of it:

I was going through my old files and came across my notes on MQ and thought I’d share some reasons to use MQ vs. HTTP:

  • If your consumer processes at a fixed rate (i.e. can’t handle floods to the HTTP server [bursts]) then using MQ provides the flexibility for the service to buffer the other requests vs. bogging it down.
  • Time independent processing and messaging exchange patterns — if the thread is performing a fire-and-forget, then MQ is better suited for that pattern vs. HTTP.
  • Long-lived processes are better suited for MQ as you can send a request and have a seperate thread listening for responses (note WS-Addressing allows HTTP to process in this manner but requires both endpoints to support that capability).
  • Loose coupling where one process can continue to do work even if the other process is not available vs. HTTP having to retry.
  • Request prioritization where more important messages can jump to the front of the queue.
  • XA transactions – MQ is fully XA compliant – HTTP is not.
  • Fault tolerance – MQ messages survive server or network failures – HTTP does not.
  • MQ provides for ‘assured’ delivery of messages once and only once, http does not.
  • MQ provides the ability to do message segmentation and message grouping for large messages – HTTP does not have that ability as it treats each transaction seperately.
  • MQ provides a pub/sub interface where-as HTTP is point-to-point.

UPD (Dec 2018): As noticed by @Kevin in comments below, it's questionable that RabbitMQ scales better then RESTful servies. My original answer was based on simply adding more workers, which is just a part of scaling and as long as single AMQP broker capacity not exceeded, it is true, though after that it requires more advanced techniques like Highly Available (Mirrored) Queues which makes both HTTP and AMQP-based services have some non-trivial complexity to scale at infrastructure level.

After careful thinking I also removed that maintaining AMQP broker (RabbitMQ) is simpler than any HTTP server: original answer was written in Jun 2013 and a lot of changed since that time, but the main change was that I get more insight in both of approaches, so the best I can say now that "your mileage may vary".

Also note, that comparing both HTTP and AMQP is apple to oranges to some extent, so please, do not interpret this answer as the ultimate guidance to base your decision on but rather take it as one of sources or as a reference for your further researches to find out what exact solution will match your particular case.


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