NATS - Go Client
A Go client for the NATS messaging system.
Installation
# Go client
go get github.com/nats-io/nats.go/
# Server
go get github.com/nats-io/nats-server
When using or transitioning to Go modules support:
# Go client latest or explicit version
go get github.com/nats-io/nats.go/@latest
go get github.com/nats-io/nats.go/@v1.9.1
# For latest NATS Server, add /v2 at the end
go get github.com/nats-io/nats-server/v2
# NATS Server v1 is installed otherwise
# go get github.com/nats-io/nats-server
Basic Usage
import nats "github.com/nats-io/nats.go"
// Connect to a server
nc, _ := nats.Connect(nats.DefaultURL)
// Simple Publisher
nc.Publish("foo", []byte("Hello World"))
// Simple Async Subscriber
nc.Subscribe("foo", func(m *nats.Msg) {
fmt.Printf("Received a message: %s\n", string(m.Data))
})
// Responding to a request message
nc.Subscribe("request", func(m *nats.Msg) {
m.Respond([]byte("answer is 42"))
})
// Simple Sync Subscriber
sub, err := nc.SubscribeSync("foo")
m, err := sub.NextMsg(timeout)
// Channel Subscriber
ch := make(chan *nats.Msg, 64)
sub, err := nc.ChanSubscribe("foo", ch)
msg := <- ch
// Unsubscribe
sub.Unsubscribe()
// Drain
sub.Drain()
// Requests
msg, err := nc.Request("help", []byte("help me"), 10*time.Millisecond)
// Replies
nc.Subscribe("help", func(m *nats.Msg) {
nc.Publish(m.Reply, []byte("I can help!"))
})
// Drain connection (Preferred for responders)
// Close() not needed if this is called.
nc.Drain()
// Close connection
nc.Close()
Encoded Connections
nc, _ := nats.Connect(nats.DefaultURL)
c, _ := nats.NewEncodedConn(nc, nats.JSON_ENCODER)
defer c.Close()
// Simple Publisher
c.Publish("foo", "Hello World")
// Simple Async Subscriber
c.Subscribe("foo", func(s string) {
fmt.Printf("Received a message: %s\n", s)
})
// EncodedConn can Publish any raw Go type using the registered Encoder
type person struct {
Name string
Address string
Age int
}
// Go type Subscriber
c.Subscribe("hello", func(p *person) {
fmt.Printf("Received a person: %+v\n", p)
})
me := &person{Name: "derek", Age: 22, Address: "140 New Montgomery Street, San Francisco, CA"}
// Go type Publisher
c.Publish("hello", me)
// Unsubscribe
sub, err := c.Subscribe("foo", nil)
// ...
sub.Unsubscribe()
// Requests
var response string
err = c.Request("help", "help me", &response, 10*time.Millisecond)
if err != nil {
fmt.Printf("Request failed: %v\n", err)
}
// Replying
c.Subscribe("help", func(subj, reply string, msg string) {
c.Publish(reply, "I can help!")
})
// Close connection
c.Close();
New Authentication (Nkeys and User Credentials)
This requires server with version >= 2.0.0
NATS servers have a new security and authentication mechanism to authenticate with user credentials and Nkeys. The simplest form is to use the helper method UserCredentials(credsFilepath).
nc, err := nats.Connect(url, nats.UserCredentials("user.creds"))
The helper methods creates two callback handlers to present the user JWT and sign the nonce challenge from the server. The core client library never has direct access to your private key and simply performs the callback for signing the server challenge. The helper will load and wipe and erase memory it uses for each connect or reconnect.
The helper also can take two entries, one for the JWT and one for the NKey seed file.
nc, err := nats.Connect(url, nats.UserCredentials("user.jwt", "user.nk"))
You can also set the callback handlers directly and manage challenge signing directly.
nc, err := nats.Connect(url, nats.UserJWT(jwtCB, sigCB))
Bare Nkeys are also supported. The nkey seed should be in a read only file, e.g. seed.txt
> cat seed.txt
# This is my seed nkey!
SUAGMJH5XLGZKQQWAWKRZJIGMOU4HPFUYLXJMXOO5NLFEO2OOQJ5LPRDPM
This is a helper function which will load and decode and do the proper signing for the server nonce. It will clear memory in between invocations. You can choose to use the low level option and provide the public key and a signature callback on your own.
opt, err := nats.NkeyOptionFromSeed("seed.txt")
nc, err := nats.Connect(serverUrl, opt)
// Direct
nc, err := nats.Connect(serverUrl, nats.Nkey(pubNkey, sigCB))
TLS
// tls as a scheme will enable secure connections by default. This will also verify the server name.
nc, err := nats.Connect("tls://nats.demo.io:4443")
// If you are using a self-signed certificate, you need to have a tls.Config with RootCAs setup.
// We provide a helper method to make this case easier.
nc, err = nats.Connect("tls://localhost:4443", nats.RootCAs("./configs/certs/ca.pem"))
// If the server requires client certificate, there is an helper function for that too:
cert := nats.ClientCert("./configs/certs/client-cert.pem", "./configs/certs/client-key.pem")
nc, err = nats.Connect("tls://localhost:4443", cert)
// You can also supply a complete tls.Config
certFile := "./configs/certs/client-cert.pem"
keyFile := "./configs/certs/client-key.pem"
cert, err := tls.LoadX509KeyPair(certFile, keyFile)
if err != nil {
t.Fatalf("error parsing X509 certificate/key pair: %v", err)
}
config := &tls.Config{
ServerName: opts.Host,
Certificates: []tls.Certificate{cert},
RootCAs: pool,
MinVersion: tls.VersionTLS12,
}
nc, err = nats.Connect("nats://localhost:4443", nats.Secure(config))
if err != nil {
t.Fatalf("Got an error on Connect with Secure Options: %+v\n", err)
}
Using Go Channels (netchan)
nc, _ := nats.Connect(nats.DefaultURL)
ec, _ := nats.NewEncodedConn(nc, nats.JSON_ENCODER)
defer ec.Close()
type person struct {
Name string
Address string
Age int
}
recvCh := make(chan *person)
ec.BindRecvChan("hello", recvCh)
sendCh := make(chan *person)
ec.BindSendChan("hello", sendCh)
me := &person{Name: "derek", Age: 22, Address: "140 New Montgomery Street"}
// Send via Go channels
sendCh <- me
// Receive via Go channels
who := <- recvCh
Wildcard Subscriptions
// "*" matches any token, at any level of the subject.
nc.Subscribe("foo.*.baz", func(m *Msg) {
fmt.Printf("Msg received on [%s] : %s\n", m.Subject, string(m.Data));
})
nc.Subscribe("foo.bar.*", func(m *Msg) {
fmt.Printf("Msg received on [%s] : %s\n", m.Subject, string(m.Data));
})
// ">" matches any length of the tail of a subject, and can only be the last token
// E.g. 'foo.>' will match 'foo.bar', 'foo.bar.baz', 'foo.foo.bar.bax.22'
nc.Subscribe("foo.>", func(m *Msg) {
fmt.Printf("Msg received on [%s] : %s\n", m.Subject, string(m.Data));
})
// Matches all of the above
nc.Publish("foo.bar.baz", []byte("Hello World"))
Queue Groups
// All subscriptions with the same queue name will form a queue group.
// Each message will be delivered to only one subscriber per queue group,
// using queuing semantics. You can have as many queue groups as you wish.
// Normal subscribers will continue to work as expected.
nc.QueueSubscribe("foo", "job_workers", func(_ *Msg) {
received += 1;
})
Advanced Usage
// Flush connection to server, returns when all messages have been processed.
nc.Flush()
fmt.Println("All clear!")
// FlushTimeout specifies a timeout value as well.
err := nc.FlushTimeout(1*time.Second)
if err != nil {
fmt.Println("All clear!")
} else {
fmt.Println("Flushed timed out!")
}
// Auto-unsubscribe after MAX_WANTED messages received
const MAX_WANTED = 10
sub, err := nc.Subscribe("foo")
sub.AutoUnsubscribe(MAX_WANTED)
// Multiple connections
nc1 := nats.Connect("nats://host1:4222")
nc2 := nats.Connect("nats://host2:4222")
nc1.Subscribe("foo", func(m *Msg) {
fmt.Printf("Received a message: %s\n", string(m.Data))
})
nc2.Publish("foo", []byte("Hello World!"));
Clustered Usage
var servers = "nats://localhost:1222, nats://localhost:1223, nats://localhost:1224"
nc, err := nats.Connect(servers)
// Optionally set ReconnectWait and MaxReconnect attempts.
// This example means 10 seconds total per backend.
nc, err = nats.Connect(servers, nats.MaxReconnects(5), nats.ReconnectWait(2 * time.Second))
// Optionally disable randomization of the server pool
nc, err = nats.Connect(servers, nats.DontRandomize())
// Setup callbacks to be notified on disconnects, reconnects and connection closed.
nc, err = nats.Connect(servers,
nats.DisconnectErrHandler(func(nc *nats.Conn, err error) {
fmt.Printf("Got disconnected! Reason: %q\n", err)
}),
nats.ReconnectHandler(func(nc *nats.Conn) {
fmt.Printf("Got reconnected to %v!\n", nc.ConnectedUrl())
}),
nats.ClosedHandler(func(nc *nats.Conn) {
fmt.Printf("Connection closed. Reason: %q\n", nc.LastError())
})
)
// When connecting to a mesh of servers with auto-discovery capabilities,
// you may need to provide a username/password or token in order to connect
// to any server in that mesh when authentication is required.
// Instead of providing the credentials in the initial URL, you will use
// new option setters:
nc, err = nats.Connect("nats://localhost:4222", nats.UserInfo("foo", "bar"))
// For token based authentication:
nc, err = nats.Connect("nats://localhost:4222", nats.Token("S3cretT0ken"))
// You can even pass the two at the same time in case one of the server
// in the mesh requires token instead of user name and password.
nc, err = nats.Connect("nats://localhost:4222",
nats.UserInfo("foo", "bar"),
nats.Token("S3cretT0ken"))
// Note that if credentials are specified in the initial URLs, they take
// precedence on the credentials specified through the options.
// For instance, in the connect call below, the client library will use
// the user "my" and password "pwd" to connect to localhost:4222, however,
// it will use username "foo" and password "bar" when (re)connecting to
// a different server URL that it got as part of the auto-discovery.
nc, err = nats.Connect("nats://my:pwd@localhost:4222", nats.UserInfo("foo", "bar"))
Context support (+Go 1.7)
ctx, cancel := context.WithTimeout(context.Background(), 2*time.Second)
defer cancel()
nc, err := nats.Connect(nats.DefaultURL)
// Request with context
msg, err := nc.RequestWithContext(ctx, "foo", []byte("bar"))
// Synchronous subscriber with context
sub, err := nc.SubscribeSync("foo")
msg, err := sub.NextMsgWithContext(ctx)
// Encoded Request with context
c, err := nats.NewEncodedConn(nc, nats.JSON_ENCODER)
type request struct {
Message string `json:"message"`
}
type response struct {
Code int `json:"code"`
}
req := &request{Message: "Hello"}
resp := &response{}
err := c.RequestWithContext(ctx, "foo", req, resp)
License
Unless otherwise noted, the NATS source files are distributed under the Apache Version 2.0 license found in the LICENSE file.