- NATS Pub/Sub Walkthrough
- Walkthrough prerequisites
- 1. Create Subscriber 1
- 2. Create a Publisher and publish a message
- 3. Verify message publication and receipt
- 4. Try publishing another message
- 5. Create Subscriber 2
- 6. Publish another message using the publisher client
- 7. Create Subscriber 3
- 8. Publish another message
- 9. Alter Subscriber 3 to use a wildcard
- 10. Publish another message
- Walkthrough prerequisites
- See Also
NATS is a publish subscribe messaging system based on subjects. Subscribers listening on a subject receive messages published on that subject. If the subscriber is not actively listening on the subject, the message is not received. Subscribers can use the wildcard tokens such as *
and >
to match a single token or to match the tail of a subject.
NATS Pub/Sub Walkthrough
This simple walkthrough demonstrates some ways in which subscribers listen on subjects, and publishers send messages on specific subjects.
Walkthrough prerequisites
If you have not already done so, you need to install the nats
CLI Tool and optionally the nats-server on your machine.
1. Create Subscriber 1
In a shell or command prompt session, start a client subscriber program.
nats sub <subject>
Here, <subject>
is a subject to listen on. It helps to use unique and well thought-through subject strings because you need to ensure that messages reach the correct subscribers even when wildcards are used.
For example:
nats sub msg.test
You should see the message: Listening on [msg.test]
2. Create a Publisher and publish a message
In another shell or command prompt, create a NATS publisher and send a message.
nats pub <subject> <message>
Where <subject>
is the subject name and <message>
is the text to publish.
For example:
nats pub msg.test "NATS MESSAGE"
3. Verify message publication and receipt
You’ll notice that the publisher sends the message and prints: Published [msg.test] : ‘NATS MESSAGE’.
The subscriber receives the message and prints: [#1] Received on [msg.test]: ‘NATS MESSAGE’.
If the receiver does not get the message, you’ll need to check if you are using the same subject name for the publisher and the subscriber.
4. Try publishing another message
nats pub msg.test "NATS MESSAGE 2"
You’ll notice that the subscriber receives the message.
Note that a message count is incremented each time your subscribing client receives a message on that subject.
5. Create Subscriber 2
In a new shell or command prompt, start a new NATS subscriber.
nats sub msg.test
6. Publish another message using the publisher client
nats pub msg.test "NATS MESSAGE 3"
Verify that both subscribing clients receive the message.
7. Create Subscriber 3
In a new shell or command prompt session, create a new subscriber that listens on a different subject.
nats sub msg.test.new
8. Publish another message
nats pub msg.test "NATS MESSAGE 4"
Subscriber 1 and Subscriber 2 receive the message, but Subscriber 3 does not. Why? Because Subscriber 3 is not listening on the message subject used by the publisher.
9. Alter Subscriber 3 to use a wildcard
Change the last subscriber to listen on msg.* and run it:
nats sub msg.*
Note: NATS supports the use of wildcard characters for message subscribers only. You cannot publish a message using a wildcard subject.
10. Publish another message
nats pub msg.test "NATS MESSAGE 5"
This time, all three subscribing clients should receive the message.
Do try out a few more variations of substrings and wildcards to test your understanding.
See Also
Publish-subscribe pattern with the NATS CLI
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