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crates.io Documentation

Dependencies

spring-stream = { version = "<version>", features=["file"] }

spring-stream supports four message storages: file, stdio, redis, and kafka.

optional features: json.

Configuration items

[stream]
uri = "file://./stream"   # StreamerUri data stream address

StreamUri supports file, stdio, redis, and kafka. For the format of uri, please refer to StreamerUri.

  • stdio is suitable for command line projects.
  • file is suitable for stand-alone deployment projects.
  • redis is suitable for distributed deployment projects. Redis5.0 provides stream data structure, so the redis version is required to be greater than 5.0. For details, please refer to redis stream official documentation.
  • Kafka is suitable for distributed deployment projects with larger message volumes. Kafka can be replaced with redpanda, which is a high-performance message middleware written in C++ and compatible with the kafka protocol. It can completely get rid of the JVM that Kafka relies on.

Detailed stream configuration

# File stream configuration
[stream.file]
connect = { create_file = "CreateIfNotExists" }

# Standard stream configuration
[stream.stdio]
connect = { loopback = false }

# Redis stream configuration
[stream.redis]
connect = { db=0,username="user",password="passwd" }

# Kafka stream configuration
[stream.kafka]
connect = { sasl_options={mechanism="Plain",username="user",password="passwd"}}

Send message

StreamPlugin registers a Producer for sending messages. If you need to send messages in json format, you need to add the json feature in the dependencies:

spring-stream = { version = "0.1.1", features=["file","json"] }
{{ include_code(path="../../examples/stream-file-example/src/bin/producer.rs") }}

Consume messages

spring-stream provides a process macro called stream_listener to subscribe to messages from a specified topic. The code is as follows:

{{ include_code(path="../../examples/stream-file-example/src/bin/consumer.rs") }}

View the complete example code stream-file-example, stream-redis-example, stream-kafka-example

Read configuration

You can use Config to extract the configuration in toml. The usage is exactly the same as spring-web.

#[derive(Debug, Configurable, Deserialize)]
#[config_prefix = "custom"]
struct CustomConfig {
    a: u32,
    b: bool,
}

#[stream_listener("topic")]
async fn use_toml_config(Config(conf): Config<CustomConfig>) -> impl IntoResponse {
    format!("a={}, b={}", conf.a, conf.b)
}

Add the corresponding configuration to your configuration file:

[custom]
a = 1
b = true