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Dramatiq

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Advice on Dramatiq and NSQ
Pramod Nikam
Co Founder at Usability Designs · | 2 upvotes · 548.9K views
Needs advice
on
Apache ThriftApache ThriftKafkaKafka
and
NSQNSQ

I am looking into IoT World Solution where we have MQTT Broker. This MQTT Broker Sits in one of the Data Center. We are doing a lot of Alert and Alarm related processing on that Data, Currently, we are looking into Solution which can do distributed persistence of log/alert primarily on remote Disk.

Our primary need is to use lightweight where operational complexity and maintenance costs can be significantly reduced. We want to do it on-premise so we are not considering cloud solutions.

We looked into the following alternatives:

Apache Kafka - Great choice but operation and maintenance wise very complex. Rabbit MQ - High availability is the issue, Apache Pulsar - Operational Complexity. NATS - Absence of persistence. Akka Streams - Big learning curve and operational streams.

So we are looking into a lightweight library that can do distributed persistence preferably with publisher and subscriber model. Preferable on JVM stack.

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Replies (1)
Naresh Kancharla
Staff Engineer at Nutanix · | 4 upvotes · 546.4K views
Recommends
on
KafkaKafka

Kafka is best fit here. Below are the advantages with Kafka ACLs (Security), Schema (protobuf), Scale, Consumer driven and No single point of failure.

Operational complexity is manageable with open source monitoring tools.

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Pros of Dramatiq
Pros of NSQ
    Be the first to leave a pro
    • 29
      It's in golang
    • 20
      Distributed
    • 20
      Lightweight
    • 18
      Easy setup
    • 17
      High throughput
    • 11
      Publish-Subscribe
    • 8
      Scalable
    • 8
      Save data if no subscribers are found
    • 6
      Open source
    • 5
      Temporarily kept on disk
    • 2
      Simple-to use
    • 1
      Free
    • 1
      Topics and channels concept
    • 1
      Load balanced
    • 1
      Primarily in-memory

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    Cons of Dramatiq
    Cons of NSQ
      Be the first to leave a con
      • 1
        Long term persistence
      • 1
        Get NSQ behavior out of Kafka but not inverse
      • 1
        HA

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      No Stats

      What is Dramatiq?

      A distributed task queueing library that is simple and has sane defaults for most SaaS workloads. It draws inspiration from GAE Push Queues and Sidekiq.

      What is NSQ?

      NSQ is a realtime distributed messaging platform designed to operate at scale, handling billions of messages per day. It promotes distributed and decentralized topologies without single points of failure, enabling fault tolerance and high availability coupled with a reliable message delivery guarantee. See features & guarantees.

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      What companies use Dramatiq?
      What companies use NSQ?
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      What tools integrate with Dramatiq?
      What tools integrate with NSQ?
        No integrations found
        What are some alternatives to Dramatiq and NSQ?
        Celery
        Celery is an asynchronous task queue/job queue based on distributed message passing. It is focused on real-time operation, but supports scheduling as well.
        MySQL
        The MySQL software delivers a very fast, multi-threaded, multi-user, and robust SQL (Structured Query Language) database server. MySQL Server is intended for mission-critical, heavy-load production systems as well as for embedding into mass-deployed software.
        PostgreSQL
        PostgreSQL is an advanced object-relational database management system that supports an extended subset of the SQL standard, including transactions, foreign keys, subqueries, triggers, user-defined types and functions.
        MongoDB
        MongoDB stores data in JSON-like documents that can vary in structure, offering a dynamic, flexible schema. MongoDB was also designed for high availability and scalability, with built-in replication and auto-sharding.
        Redis
        Redis is an open source (BSD licensed), in-memory data structure store, used as a database, cache, and message broker. Redis provides data structures such as strings, hashes, lists, sets, sorted sets with range queries, bitmaps, hyperloglogs, geospatial indexes, and streams.
        See all alternatives