The purpose of Railway is to standardize a common set of API's and procedures for dealing with inter-process communication between applications via RabbitMQ. This projects implements the API's and procedures for Elixir based projects.
If available in Hex, the package can be installed by adding railway_ipc
to your list of dependencies in mix.exs
:
def deps do
[
{:railway_ipc, "~> 0.3.0"}
]
end
Configure Railway to work with your Repo. Add the following to your config/config.exs
:
config :railway_ipc,
repo: ApplicationName.Repo
Run the mix task to generate the migrations to add the published messages and consumed messages tables to your app's DB:
mix railway_ipc.generate_migrations ./path/to/migration/directory
mix ecto.migrate
Note: Path to migration directory defaults to
./priv/repo/migrations
if none is passed in.
If there are issues running the migration or deploying the migration, try manually writing the name of the migration module (not the file) to avoid using interpolation.
Documentation can be generated with ExDoc and published on HexDocs. Once published, the docs can be found at https://hexdocs.pm/railway_ipc.
Out of the box, Railway can handle storing the same messages multiple times if it's consumed on multiple queues. If you are upgrading Railway from 2.1 or earlier, you will need to run the following migration to make uuid
and queue
a combined primary key for the consumed messages table.
defmodule YOUR_APP_NAME_HERE.Repo.Migrations.UpdateRailwayMessagePKey do
use Ecto.Migration
import Ecto.Query, only: [from: 2]
alias Registrar.Repo
def up do
alter table(:railway_ipc_consumed_messages) do
add :new_uuid, :uuid
end
flush()
from(m in "railway_ipc_consumed_messages", update: [set: [new_uuid: m.uuid]])
|> Repo.update_all([])
alter table(:railway_ipc_consumed_messages) do
remove :uuid
modify :queue, :string, primary_key: true, null: false
modify :new_uuid, :uuid, primary_key: true, null: false
end
rename(table(:railway_ipc_consumed_messages), :new_uuid, to: :uuid)
create unique_index(
"railway_ipc_consumed_messages",
[:uuid, :queue],
name: :railway_ipc_consumed_messages_uniqueness_index
)
end
def down do
alter table(:railway_ipc_consumed_messages) do
add :old_uuid, :uuid
add :old_queue, :string
end
flush()
from(m in "railway_ipc_consumed_messages", update: [set: [old_uuid: m.uuid, old_queue: m.queue]])
|> Repo.update_all([])
alter table(:railway_ipc_consumed_messages) do
remove :uuid
remove :queue
modify :old_uuid, :uuid, primary_key: true, null: false
modify :old_queue, :string, null: false
end
rename(table(:railway_ipc_consumed_messages), :old_uuid, to: :uuid)
rename(table(:railway_ipc_consumed_messages), :old_queue, to: :queue)
end
end
For more information on this process, check out this blogpost: https://niallburkley.com/blog/changing-primary-keys-in-ecto/
Requires Erlang, Elixir, a local RabbitMQ instance, a local PostgreSQL database. Clone the repo and run the bin/setup
script.
This project uses ExUnit
for tests and Credo for linting code.
This project uses CircleCI. All pushes to any branch will trigger a build that runs specs and lints the code.
Steps for releasing a new version:
- update the version in
mix.exs
andREADME.md
- update the CHANGELOG
- create a new release heading with the new version number and date
- create an empty [Unreleased] section with empty headings
- update links at the bottom to reflect new version
- commit the changes with a message like: "Prepping for release 0.3.0"
- tag the commit with
git tag x.x.x
wherex.x.x
is the new version number - push the tag to GitHub
git push --tags
- publish to hex using the command
mix hex.publish
(Note: Since we're using a forked version of theelixir/protobuf
library, we cannot publish to Hex. Once we're able to get back on the officialelixir/protobuf
version we'll start publishing to Hex again. We are still creating Git tags for each release, however.)