#!/usr/bin/env python """ direct_consumer.py This AMQP client reads messages from a message queue named "message_queue". """ import qpid import sys import os from random import randint from qpid.util import connect from qpid.connection import Connection from qpid.datatypes import Message, RangedSet, uuid4 from qpid.queue import Empty #----- Initialization -------------------------------------- # Set parameters for login host="127.0.0.1" port=5672 user="guest" password="guest" # If an alternate host or port has been specified, use that instead # (this is used in our unit tests) if len(sys.argv) > 1 : host=sys.argv[1] if len(sys.argv) > 2 : port=int(sys.argv[2]) # Create a connection. socket = connect(host, port) connection = Connection (sock=socket) connection.start() session = connection.session(str(uuid4())) #----- Read from queue -------------------------------------------- # Now let's create a local client queue and tell it to read # incoming messages. # The consumer tag identifies the client-side queue. local_queue_name = "local_queue" queue = session.incoming(local_queue_name) # Call message_subscribe() to tell the broker to deliver messages # from the AMQP queue to this local client queue. The broker will # start delivering messages as soon as credit is allocated using # queue.start(). session.message_subscribe(queue="message_queue", destination=local_queue_name) queue.start() # Initialize 'final' and 'content', variables used to identify the last message. final = "That's all, folks!" # In a message body, signals the last message content = "" # Content of the last message read message = None while content != final: message = queue.get(timeout=10) content = message.body session.message_accept(RangedSet(message.id)) print content #----- Cleanup ------------------------------------------------ # Clean up before exiting so there are no open threads. # session.close(timeout=10)