A command line utility to interact with and manage NATS.
This utility replaces various past tools that were named in the form nats-sub
and nats-pub
, adds several new capabilities
and support full JetStream management.
- JetStream management
- Key-Value management
- Object Store management
- Service API management
- JetStream data and configuration backup
- Message publish and subscribe
- Service requests and creation
- Benchmarking and Latency testing
- Deep system account inspection and reporting
- Configuration context maintenance
- NATS eco-system schema registry
Releases are published to GitHub where Zip, RPMs and DEBs for various operating systems can be found.
The nats cli can be installed directly via go install
.
To install the latest version:
go install github.com/nats-io/natscli/nats@latest
To install a specific release:
go install github.com/nats-io/natscli/[email protected]
For macOS brew
can be used to install the latest released version:
brew tap nats-io/nats-tools
brew install nats-io/nats-tools/nats
On Windows, scoop has the latest released version:
scoop bucket add extras
scoop install extras/natscli
For Arch users there is an AUR package that you can install with:
yay natscli
The following script will install the latest released version of the nats cli on Linux and macOS:
curl -sf https://binaries.nats.dev/nats-io/natscli/nats@latest | sh
Nightly builds are included in the synadia/nats-server:nightly
Docker images.
The nats
CLI supports multiple named configurations, for the rest of the document we'll interact via demo.nats.io
.
To enable this we'll create a demo
configuration and set it as default.
First we add a configuration to capture the default localhost
configuration.
nats context add localhost --description "Localhost"
Output
NATS Configuration Context "localhost"
Description: Localhost
Server URLs: nats://127.0.0.1:4222
Next we add a context for demo.nats.io:4222
and we select it as default.
nats context add nats --server demo.nats.io:4222 --description "NATS Demo" --select
Output
NATS Configuration Context "nats"
Description: NATS Demo
Server URLs: demo.nats.io:4222
These are the contexts, the *
indicates the default
nats context ls
Output
Known contexts:
localhost Localhost
nats* NATS Demo
The context is selected as default, use nats context --help
to see how to add, remove and edit contexts.
To switch to another context we can use:
nats ctx select localhost
To switch context back to previous one, we can use context previous
subcommand:
nats ctx -- -
nats-cli stores contextes in ~/.config/nats/context
. Those contextes are stored as JSON documents. You can find the description and expected value for this configuration file by running nats --help
and look for the global flags.
For full information on managing JetStream please refer to the JetStream Documentation
As of nats-server v2.2.0 JetStream is GA.
The nats
CLI can publish messages and subscribe to subjects.
We will subscribe to the cli.demo
subject:
nats sub cli.demo
Output
12:30:25 Subscribing on cli.demo
We can now publish messages to the cli.demo
subject.
First we publish a single message:
nats pub cli.demo "hello world"
Output
12:31:20 Published 11 bytes to "cli.demo"
Next we publish 5 messages with a counter and timestamp in the format message 5 @ 2020-12-03T12:33:18+01:00
:
nats pub cli.demo "message {{.Count}} @ {{.TimeStamp}}" --count=5
Output
12:33:17 Published 33 bytes to "cli.demo"
12:33:17 Published 33 bytes to "cli.demo"
12:33:17 Published 33 bytes to "cli.demo"
12:33:18 Published 33 bytes to "cli.demo"
12:33:18 Published 33 bytes to "cli.demo"
We can also publish messages read from STDIN:
echo hello|nats pub cli.demo
Output
12:34:15 Reading payload from STDIN
12:34:15 Published 6 bytes to "cli.demo"
Finally, NATS supports HTTP style headers and the CLI behaves like curl
:
nats pub cli.demo 'hello headers' -H Header1:One -H Header2:Two
Output
12:38:44 Published 13 bytes to "cli.demo"
The receiver will show:
nats sub cli.demo
Output
[#47] Received on "cli.demo"
Header1: One
Header2: Two
hello headers
We can print matching replay-requests together
nats sub --match-replies cli.demo
Output
[#48] Received on "cli.demo" with reply "_INBOX.12345"
[#48] Matched reply on "_INBOX.12345"
sub --match-replies --dump subject.name
Output
X.json
X_reply.json
When receiving messages from a JetStream Push Consumer messages can be acknowledged when received by passing --ack
, the
message metadata is also produced:
nats sub js.out.testing --ack
Output
12:55:23 Subscribing on js.out.testing with acknowledgement of JetStream messages
[#1] Received JetStream message: consumer: TESTING > TAIL / subject: js.in.testing / delivered: 1 / consumer seq: 568 / stream seq: 2638 / ack: true
test JS message
When subscribers join a Queue Group the messages are randomly load shared within the group. Perform the following subscribe in 2 or more shells and then publish messages using some of the methods shown above, these messages will only be received by one of the subscribers at a time.
nats sub cli.demo --queue=Q1
NATS supports a RPC mechanism where a service received Requests and replies with data in response.
nats reply 'cli.weather.>' "Weather Service"
Output
12:43:28 Listening on "cli.weather.>" in group "NATS-RPLY-22"
In another shell we can send a request to this service:
nats request "cli.weather.london" ''
Output
12:46:34 Sending request on "cli.weather.london"
12:46:35 Received on "_INBOX.BJoZpwsshQM5cKUj8KAkT6.HF9jslpP" rtt 404.76854ms
Weather Service
This shows that the service round trip was 404ms, and we can see the response Weather Service
.
To make this a bit more interesting we can interact with the wttr.in
web service:
nats reply 'cli.weather.>' --command "curl -s wttr.in/{{2}}?format=3"
Output
12:47:03 Listening on "cli.weather.>" in group "NATS-RPLY-22"
We can perform the same request again:
nats request "cli.weather.{london,newyork}" '' --raw
Output
london: 🌦 +7°C
newyork: ☀️ +2°C
Now the nats
CLI parses the subject, extracts the {london,newyork}
from the subjects and calls curl
, replacing
{{2}}
with the body of the 2nd subject token - {london,newyork}
.
Additional to the raw output of messages using nats sub
and nats stream view
you can also translate the message data by running it through a command.
The command receives the message data as raw bytes through stdin and the output of the command will be the shown output for the message. There is the additional possibility to add the filter subject by using {{Subject}}
as part of the arguments for the tranlation command.
Here we use the jq tool to format our json message payload into a more readable format:
We subscribe to a subject that will receive json data.
nats sub --translate 'jq .' cli.json
Now we publish some example data.
nats pub cli.json '{"task":"demo","duration":60}'
The Output will show the message formatted.
23:54:35 Subscribing on cli.json
[#1] Received on "cli.json"
{
"task": "demo",
"duration": 60
}
Another example is creating hex dumps from any message to avoid terminal corruption.
By changing the subscription into:
nats sub --translate 'xxd' cli.json
We will get the following output for the same published msg:
00:02:56 Subscribing on cli.json
[#1] Received on "cli.json"
00000000: 7b22 7461 736b 223a 2264 656d 6f22 2c22 {"task":"demo","
00000010: 6475 7261 7469 6f6e 223a 3630 7d duration":60}
A somewhat artificial example using the subject as argument would be:
nats sub --translate "sed 's/\(.*\)/{{Subject}}: \1/'" cli.json
Output
00:22:19 Subscribing on cli.json
[#1] Received on "cli.json"
cli.json: {"task":"demo","duration":60}
The translation feature makes it possible to write specialized or universal translators to aid in debugging messages in streams or core nats.
Benchmarking and latency testing is key requirement for evaluating the production preparedness of your NATS network.
Here we'll run these benchmarks against a local server instead of demo.nats.io
.
nats context select localhost
Output
NATS Configuration Context "localhost"
Description: Localhost
Server URLs: nats://127.0.0.1:4222
We can benchmark core NATS publishing performance, here we publish 10 million messages from 5 concurrent publishers. By default messages are published as quick as possible without any acknowledgement or confirmations:
nats bench test --msgs=10000000 --pub 5
Output
01:30:14 Starting benchmark [msgs=10,000,000, msgsize=128 B, pubs=5, subs=0, js=false, stream=benchstream storage=memory, syncpub=false, pubbatch=100, jstimeout=30s, pull=false, pullbatch=100, request=false, reply=false, noqueue=false, maxackpending=-1, replicas=1, purge=false]
Finished 0s [================================================] 100%
Finished 0s [================================================] 100%
Finished 0s [================================================] 100%
Finished 0s [================================================] 100%
Finished 0s [================================================] 100%
Pub stats: 14,047,987 msgs/sec ~ 1.67 GB/sec
[1] 3,300,540 msgs/sec ~ 402.90 MB/sec (2000000 msgs)
[2] 3,306,601 msgs/sec ~ 403.64 MB/sec (2000000 msgs)
[3] 3,296,538 msgs/sec ~ 402.41 MB/sec (2000000 msgs)
[4] 2,813,752 msgs/sec ~ 343.48 MB/sec (2000000 msgs)
[5] 2,811,227 msgs/sec ~ 343.17 MB/sec (2000000 msgs)
min 2,811,227 | avg 3,105,731 | max 3,306,601 | stddev 239,453 msgs
Adding --sub 2
will start two subscribers on the same subject and measure the rate of messages:
nats bench test --msgs=10000000 --pub 5 --sub 2
Output
...
01:30:52 Starting benchmark [msgs=10,000,000, msgsize=128 B, pubs=5, subs=2, js=false, stream=benchstream storage=memory, syncpub=false, pubbatch=100, jstimeout=30s, pull=false, pullbatch=100, request=false, reply=false, noqueue=false, maxackpending=-1, replicas=1, purge=false]
01:30:52 Starting subscriber, expecting 10,000,000 messages
01:30:52 Starting subscriber, expecting 10,000,000 messages
Finished 6s [================================================] 100%
Finished 6s [================================================] 100%
Finished 6s [================================================] 100%
Finished 6s [================================================] 100%
Finished 6s [================================================] 100%
Finished 6s [================================================] 100%
Finished 6s [================================================] 100%
NATS Pub/Sub stats: 4,906,104 msgs/sec ~ 598.89 MB/sec
Pub stats: 1,635,428 msgs/sec ~ 199.64 MB/sec
[1] 328,573 msgs/sec ~ 40.11 MB/sec (2000000 msgs)
[2] 328,147 msgs/sec ~ 40.06 MB/sec (2000000 msgs)
[3] 327,411 msgs/sec ~ 39.97 MB/sec (2000000 msgs)
[4] 327,318 msgs/sec ~ 39.96 MB/sec (2000000 msgs)
[5] 327,283 msgs/sec ~ 39.95 MB/sec (2000000 msgs)
min 327,283 | avg 327,746 | max 328,573 | stddev 520 msgs
Sub stats: 3,271,233 msgs/sec ~ 399.32 MB/sec
[1] 1,635,682 msgs/sec ~ 199.67 MB/sec (10000000 msgs)
[2] 1,635,616 msgs/sec ~ 199.66 MB/sec (10000000 msgs)
min 1,635,616 | avg 1,635,649 | max 1,635,682 | stddev 33 msgs
JetStream testing can be done by adding the --js
flag. You can for example measure first the speed of publishing into a stream
nats bench js.bench --js --pub 2 --msgs 1000000 --purge
Output
01:37:36 Starting benchmark [msgs=1,000,000, msgsize=128 B, pubs=2, subs=0, js=true, stream=benchstream storage=memory, syncpub=false, pubbatch=100, jstimeout=30s, pull=false, pullbatch=100, request=false, reply=false, noqueue=false, maxackpending=-1, replicas=1, purge=true]
01:37:36 Purging the stream
Finished 2s [================================================] 100%
Finished 2s [================================================] 100%
Pub stats: 415,097 msgs/sec ~ 50.67 MB/sec
[1] 207,907 msgs/sec ~ 25.38 MB/sec (500000 msgs)
[2] 207,572 msgs/sec ~ 25.34 MB/sec (500000 msgs)
min 207,572 | avg 207,739 | max 207,907 | stddev 167 msgs
And then you can for example measure the speed of receiving (i.e. replay) the messages from the stream using ordered push consumers
nats bench js.bench --js --sub 4 --msgs 1000000
Output
01:40:05 Starting benchmark [msgs=1,000,000, msgsize=128 B, pubs=0, subs=4, js=true, stream=benchstream storage=memory, syncpub=false, pubbatch=100, jstimeout=30s, pull=false, pullbatch=100, request=false, reply=false, noqueue=false, maxackpending=-1, replicas=1, purge=false]
01:40:05 Starting subscriber, expecting 1,000,000 messages
01:40:05 Starting subscriber, expecting 1,000,000 messages
01:40:05 Starting subscriber, expecting 1,000,000 messages
01:40:05 Starting subscriber, expecting 1,000,000 messages
Finished 2s [================================================] 100%
Finished 2s [================================================] 100%
Finished 2s [================================================] 100%
Finished 2s [================================================] 100%
Sub stats: 1,522,920 msgs/sec ~ 185.90 MB/sec
[1] 382,739 msgs/sec ~ 46.72 MB/sec (1000000 msgs)
[2] 382,772 msgs/sec ~ 46.73 MB/sec (1000000 msgs)
[3] 382,407 msgs/sec ~ 46.68 MB/sec (1000000 msgs)
[4] 381,060 msgs/sec ~ 46.52 MB/sec (1000000 msgs)
min 381,060 | avg 382,244 | max 382,772 | stddev 698 msgs
Similarily you can benchmark synchronous request-reply type of interactions using the --request
and --reply
flags. For example you can first start one (or more) replier(s)
nats bench test --sub 2 --reply
And then run a benchmark with one (or more) synchronous requester(s)
nats bench test --pub 10 --request
Output
03:04:56 Starting benchmark [msgs=100,000, msgsize=128 B, pubs=10, subs=0, js=false, stream=benchstream storage=memory, syncpub=false, pubbatch=100, jstimeout=30s, pull=false, pullbatch=100, request=true, reply=false, noqueue=false, maxackpending=-1, replicas=1, purge=false]
03:04:56 Benchmark in request-reply mode
Finished 2s [================================================] 100%
Finished 2s [================================================] 100%
Finished 2s [================================================] 100%
Finished 2s [================================================] 100%
Finished 2s [================================================] 100%
Finished 2s [================================================] 100%
Finished 2s [================================================] 100%
Finished 2s [================================================] 100%
Finished 2s [================================================] 100%
Finished 2s [================================================] 100%
Pub stats: 40,064 msgs/sec ~ 4.89 MB/sec
[1] 4,045 msgs/sec ~ 505.63 KB/sec (10000 msgs)
[2] 4,031 msgs/sec ~ 503.93 KB/sec (10000 msgs)
[3] 4,034 msgs/sec ~ 504.37 KB/sec (10000 msgs)
[4] 4,031 msgs/sec ~ 503.92 KB/sec (10000 msgs)
[5] 4,022 msgs/sec ~ 502.85 KB/sec (10000 msgs)
[6] 4,028 msgs/sec ~ 503.59 KB/sec (10000 msgs)
[7] 4,025 msgs/sec ~ 503.22 KB/sec (10000 msgs)
[8] 4,028 msgs/sec ~ 503.59 KB/sec (10000 msgs)
[9] 4,025 msgs/sec ~ 503.15 KB/sec (10000 msgs)
[10] 4,018 msgs/sec ~ 502.28 KB/sec (10000 msgs)
min 4,018 | avg 4,028 | max 4,045 | stddev 7 msgs
There are numerous other flags that can be set to configure size of messages, using push or pull JetStream consumers and much more, see nats bench --help
.
Latency is the rate at which messages can cross your network, with the nats
CLI you can connect a publisher and subscriber
to your NATS network and measure the latency between the publisher and subscriber.
nats latency --server-b localhost:4222 --rate 500000
Output
==============================
Pub Server RTT : 64µs
Sub Server RTT : 70µs
Message Payload: 8B
Target Duration: 5s
Target Msgs/Sec: 500000
Target Band/Sec: 7.6M
==============================
HDR Percentiles:
10: 57µs
50: 94µs
75: 122µs
90: 162µs
99: 314µs
99.9: 490µs
99.99: 764µs
99.999: 863µs
99.9999: 886µs
99.99999: 1.483ms
100: 1.483ms
==============================
Actual Msgs/Sec: 499990
Actual Band/Sec: 7.6M
Minimum Latency: 25µs
Median Latency : 94µs
Maximum Latency: 1.483ms
1st Sent Wall Time : 3.091ms
Last Sent Wall Time: 5.000098s
Last Recv Wall Time: 5.000168s
Various flags exist to adjust message size and target rates, see nats latency --help
NATS publish a number of events and have a Request-Reply API that expose a wealth of internal information about the state of the network.
For most of these features you will need a System Account enabled, most of these commands are run against that account.
I create a system
context before running these commands and pass that to the commands.
nats event --context system
Output
Listening for Client Connection events on $SYS.ACCOUNT.*.CONNECT
Listening for Client Disconnection events on $SYS.ACCOUNT.*.DISCONNECT
Listening for Authentication Errors events on $SYS.SERVER.*.CLIENT.AUTH.ERR
[12:18:35] [puGCIK5UcWUxBXJ52q4Hti] Client Connection
Server: nc1-c1
Cluster: c1
Client:
ID: 17
User: one
Name: NATS CLI Version development
Account: one
Library Version: 1.11.0 Language: go
Host: 172.21.0.1
[12:18:35] [puGCIK5UcWUxBXJ52q4Hw8] Client Disconnection
Reason: Client Closed
Server: nc1-c1
Cluster: c1
Client:
ID: 17
User: one
Name: NATS CLI Version development
Account: one
Library Version: 1.11.0 Language: go
Host: 172.21.0.1
Stats:
Received: 0 messages (0 B)
Published: 1 messages (0 B)
RTT: 1.551714ms
Here one can see a client connected and disconnected shortly after, several other system events are supported.
If an account is running JetStream the nats event
tool can also be used to look at JetStream advisories by passing
--js-metric --js-advisory
These events are JSON messages and can be viewed raw using --json
or in Cloud Events format with --cloudevent
,
finally a short version of the messages can be shown:
nats event --short
Output
Listening for Client Connection events on $SYS.ACCOUNT.*.CONNECT
Listening for Client Disconnection events on $SYS.ACCOUNT.*.DISCONNECT
Listening for Authentication Errors events on $SYS.SERVER.*.CLIENT.AUTH.ERR
12:20:58 [Connection] user: one cid: 19 in account one
12:20:58 [Disconnection] user: one cid: 19 in account one: Client Closed
12:21:00 [Connection] user: one cid: 20 in account one
12:21:00 [Disconnection] user: one cid: 20 in account one: Client Closed
12:21:00 [Connection] user: one cid: 21 in account one
When a cluster or super cluster of NATS servers is configured with a system account a wealth of information is available
via internal APIs, the nats
tool can interact with these and observe your servers.
A quick view of the available servers and your network RTT to each can be seen with nats server ping
:
nats server ping
Output
nc1-c1 rtt=2.30864ms
nc3-c1 rtt=2.396573ms
nc2-c1 rtt=2.484994ms
nc3-c2 rtt=2.549958ms
...
---- ping statistics ----
9 replies max: 3.00 min: 1.00 avg: 2.78
A general server overview can be seen with nats server list
:
nats server list
Output
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| Server Overview |
+--------+------------+-----------+---------------+-------+------+--------+-----+---------+-----+------+--------+------------+
| Name | Cluster | IP | Version | Conns | Subs | Routes | GWs | Mem | CPU | Slow | Uptime | RTT |
+--------+------------+-----------+---------------+-------+------+--------+-----+---------+-----+------+--------+------------+
| nc1-c1 | c1 | localhost | 2.2.0-beta.34 | 1 | 97 | 2 | 2 | 13 MiB | 0.0 | 0 | 5m29s | 3.371675ms |
| nc2-c1 | c1 | localhost | 2.2.0-beta.34 | 0 | 97 | 2 | 2 | 13 MiB | 0.0 | 0 | 5m29s | 3.48287ms |
| nc3-c1 | c1 | localhost | 2.2.0-beta.34 | 0 | 97 | 2 | 2 | 14 MiB | 0.0 | 0 | 5m30s | 3.57123ms |
| nc1-c3 | c3 | localhost | 2.2.0-beta.34 | 0 | 96 | 2 | 2 | 15 MiB | 0.0 | 0 | 5m29s | 3.655548ms |
...
+--------+------------+-----------+---------------+-------+------+--------+-----+---------+-----+------+--------+------------+
| | 3 Clusters | 9 Servers | | 1 | 867 | | | 125 MiB | | 0 | | |
+--------+------------+-----------+---------------+-------+------+--------+-----+---------+-----+------+--------+------------+
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| Cluster Overview |
+---------+------------+-------------------+-------------------+-------------+
| Cluster | Node Count | Outgoing Gateways | Incoming Gateways | Connections |
+---------+------------+-------------------+-------------------+-------------+
| c1 | 3 | 6 | 6 | 1 |
| c3 | 3 | 6 | 6 | 0 |
| c2 | 3 | 6 | 6 | 0 |
+---------+------------+-------------------+-------------------+-------------+
| | 9 | 18 | 18 | 1 |
+---------+------------+-------------------+-------------------+-------------+
Data from a specific server can be accessed using it's server name or ID:
nats server info nc1-c1
Output
Server information for nc1-c1 (NBNIKFCQZ3J6I7JDTUDHAH3Z3HOQYEYGZZ5HOS63BX47PS66NHPT2P72)
Process Details:
Version: 2.2.0-beta.34
Git Commit: 2e26d919
Go Version: go1.14.12
Start Time: 2020-12-03 12:18:00.423780567 +0000 UTC
Uptime: 10m1s
Connection Details:
Auth Required: true
TLS Required: false
Host: localhost:10000
Client URLs: localhost:10000
localhost:10002
localhost:10001
Limits:
Max Conn: 65536
Max Subs: 0
Max Payload: 1.0 MiB
TLS Timeout: 2s
Write Deadline: 10s
Statistics:
CPU Cores: 2 1.00%
Memory: 13 MiB
Connections: 1
Subscriptions: 0
Msgs: 240 in 687 out
Bytes: 151 KiB in 416 KiB out
Slow Consumers: 0
Cluster:
Name: c1
Host: 0.0.0.0:6222
URLs: nc1:6222
nc2:6222
nc3:6222
Super Cluster:
Name: c1
Host: 0.0.0.0:7222
Clusters: c1
c2
c3
Additional to this various reports can be generated using nats server report
, this allows one to list all connections and
subscriptions across the entire cluster with filtering to limit the results by account etc.
Additional raw information in JSON format can be retrieved using the nats server request
commands.
The nats server check
command provides numerous monitoring utilities that supports the popular Nagios exist code based
protocol, a format compatible with Prometheus textfile
format and a human friendly textual output.
Using these tools one can create monitors for various aspects of NATS Server, JetStream and KV.
The nats server check stream
and nats server check consumer
commands can be used to monitor the health of Streams and
Consumers.
We'll cover the flags below but since version 0.2.0
these commands support auto configuration from Metadata on the
Stream and Consumer. For example if the command accepts --msgs-warn
then the metadata io.nats.monitor.msgs-warn
can be used to set the same value. Calling the check command without passing the value on the command will use the
metadata value instead.
The stream check command allows the health of a stream to be monitored including Sources, Mirrors, Cluster Health and more.
To perform end to end health checks on a stream it is suggested that canary messages are published regularly into the stream with clients detecting those and discarding them after ACK.
The nats server check message
command can be used to check such canary messages exist in the stream, how old they
are and if the content is correct. We suggest using this in complex Sourcing and Mirroring setups to perform an
additional out-of-band health check on the flow of messages. This includes checking timestamps on the messages.
--lag-critical=MSGS
Critical threshold to allow for lag on any source or mirror. Lag is how many tasks the source or
mirror is behind, this means the mirror or source do not have complete data and would require fixing.
--seen-critical=DURATION
Critical threshold for how long ago the source or mirror should have been seen. During
network outages or problems with the foreign Stream this time would increase. The duration can be a string like 5m
.
--min-sources=SOURCES
, --max-sources=SOURCES
Minimum and Maximum number of sources to expect, this allow you to
monitor that in a dynamically configured environment that the set number of sources are configured.
--peer-expect=SERVERS
Number of cluster replicas to expect, again allowing an assertion that the configuration does
not change unexpectedly
--peer-lag-critical=OPS
Critical threshold to allow for cluster peer lag, any RAFT peer that is further behind than
this number of operations will result in a critical error
--peer-seen-critical=DURATION
Critical threshold for how long ago a cluster peer should have been seen, this is
sumular to the lag on Sources and Mirrors but checks the lag in the Raft cluster.
--msgs-warn=MSGS
and --msgs-critical=MSGS
Checks the number of messages in the stream, if warn is smaller than
critical the check will alert for fewer messages than the thresholds.
--subjects-warn=SUBJECTS
and --subjects-critical=SUBJECTS
Checks the number of subjects in the stream. If warn is
bigger than critical the logic will be inverted ensuring that no more than the thresholds exist in the stream.
The consumer check is concerned with message flow through a consumer and have various adjustable thresholds in duration and count to detect stalled consumers, consumers with no active clients, consumers with slow clients or ones where processing the messages are failing.
A suggested pattern is publishing canary messages into the stream regularly, perhaps with the header Canary: 1
set,
and having applications just ACK and discard those messages. This way even in idle times the end to end flow of messages
can be monitored.
--outstanding-ack-critical=-1
Maximum number of outstanding acks to allow, this allow you to alert on the scenario
where clients consuming messages are slow to process messages and the number of outstanding acks are growing. Once this
hits the configured max the consumer will stall.
--waiting-critical=-1
Maximum number of waiting pulls to allow
--unprocessed-critical=-1
Maximum number of unprocessed messages to allow, this indicates how far behind the end
of the stream the consumer is, in work queue scenarios this will indicate a alert if the amount of outstanding work
grows.
--last-delivery-critical=0s
This is the time duration since the last delivery to a client, if this number grows it
could mean there are no messages to deliver or no clients to deliver messages to.
--last-ack-critical=0s
This is the duration of time since the last message was acknowledged, this duration might
indicate that no messages are being successfully processed.
--redelivery-critical=-1
Alerts on the number of redeliveries currently in flight, a high number means many clients
are doing NAKs or not completing message processing within the allowed Ack window.
We are adopting JSON Schema to describe the core data formats of events and advisories - as shown by nats event
. Additionally
all the API interactions with the JetStream API is documented using the same format.
These schemas can be used using tools like QuickType to generate stubs for various programming languages.
The nats
CLI allows you to view these schemas and validate documents using these schemas.
nats schema ls
Output
Matched Schemas:
io.nats.jetstream.advisory.v1.api_audit
io.nats.jetstream.advisory.v1.consumer_action
io.nats.jetstream.advisory.v1.max_deliver
...
The schemas can be limited using a regular expression, try nats schema ls request
to see all API requests.
Schemas can be viewed in their raw JSON or YAML formats using nats schema info io.nats.jetstream.advisory.v1.consumer_action
,
these schemas include descriptions about each field and more.
Finally, if you are interacting with the API using JSON request messages constructed using languages that is not supported by our own management libraries you can use this tool to validate your messages:
nats schema validate io.nats.jetstream.api.v1.stream_create_request request.json
Output
Validation errors in request.json:
retention: retention must be one of the following: "limits", "interest", "workqueue"
(root): Must validate all the schemas (allOf)
Here I validate request.json
against the Schema that describes the API to create Streams, the validation indicates
that I have an incorrect value in the retention
field.