Chapter 5. Managing Slow Consumers


Overview

Slow consumers are consumers whose dispatch buffer is regularly too full; the broker cannot dispatch messages to them because they have reached the prefect limit. This can bog down message processing in a number of ways and it can mask problems with a client. One of the major ways it can bog down a broker is by increasing its memory foot print by forcing the broker to hold a large number of messages in memory.
JBoss A-MQ provides two ways of limiting the impact of slow consumers:
  • limiting the number of messages retained for a consumer
    When using non-durable topics, you can specify the number of messages that a destination will hold for a consumer. Once the limit is reached, older messages are discarded when new messages arrive.
  • aborting slow consumers
    JBoss A-MQ determines slowness by monitoring how often a consumer's dispatch buffer is full. You can specify that consistently slow consumers be aborted by closing its connection to the broker.

Limiting message retention

Important
This strategy only works for topics. For queues, the way to manage the number of pending messages is through the message expiry setting.
Topics typically retain a copy of all unacknowledged messages for each of the consumers subscribed to it. For non-durable topics, the messages are stored in the broker's volatile memory, so if messages begin to pile up the broker's memory footprint begins to balloon.
To address this issue you can set the pending message limit strategy (pendingMessageLimitStrategy) on a topic to control the number of messages that are held for slow consumers. When set, the topic will retain the specified number of messages in addition to the consumer's prefetch limit.
Important
The default setting for the strategy is -1, which means that the topic will retain all of the unconsumed messages for a consumer.
There are two ways to configure the pending message limit strategy:
  • specifying a constant number of messages over the prefetch limit
    The constantPendingMessageLimitStrategy implementation allows you to specify constant number of messages to retain as shown in Example 5.1, “Constant Pending Message Limiter”.

    Example 5.1. Constant Pending Message Limiter

    <broker ... >
      <destinationPolicy>
        <policyMap>
          <policyEntries>
            <policyEntry topic=">" >
              <pendingMessageLimitStrategy>
                <constantPendingMessageLimitStrategy limit="50"/>
              </pendingMessageLimitStrategy>
            </policyEntry>
          </policyEntries>
        </policyMap>
      </destinationPolicy>
      ...
    </broker>
  • specifying a multiplier that is applied to the prefetch limit
    The prefetchRatePendingMessageLimitStrategy implementation allows you to specify a multiplier that is applied to the prefect limit. Example 5.2, “Prefectch Limit Based Pending Message Limiter” shown configuration that retains twice the prefect limit. So if the prefect limit is 3, the destination will retain 6 pending messages for each consumer.

    Example 5.2. Prefectch Limit Based Pending Message Limiter

    <broker ... >
      <destinationPolicy>
        <policyMap>
          <policyEntries>
            <policyEntry topic=">" >
              <pendingMessageLimitStrategy>
                <prefetchRatePendingMessageLimitStrategy multiplier="2"/>
              </pendingMessageLimitStrategy>
            </policyEntry>
          </policyEntries>
        </policyMap>
      </destinationPolicy>
      ...
    </broker>

Aborting slow consumers

Another strategy for managing slow consumers is to have the broker detect slow consumers and automatically abort consumers that are consistently slow. When a slow consumer is aborted, its connection to the broker is closed.
The broker marks a consumer slow when the broker has messages to dispatch to the consumer, but the consumer's prefect buffer is full. As the consumer acknowledges consumption of messages from the prefect buffer and the broker can once again start dispatching messages to the consumer, the broker will stop considering the consumer slow. If the consumer's prefect buffer fills up again, the broker will again mark the consumer as slow.
The abort slow consumers strategy allows the broker to abort consumers when one of two conditions is met:
  • a consumer is considered slow for specified amount of time
  • a consumer is considered slow a specified number of times
The abort slow consumer strategy is activated by adding the configuration shown in Example 5.3, “Aborting Slow Consumers” to a destination's configuration.

Example 5.3. Aborting Slow Consumers

<broker ... >
  ...
  <destinationPolicy>
    <policyMap>
      <policyEntries>
        <policyEntry topic=">" >
          <slowConsumerStrategy>
            <abortSlowConsumerStrategy />
          </slowConsumerStrategy>
        </policyEntry>
      </policyEntries>
    </policyMap>
  </destinationPolicy>
  ...
</broker>
The abortSlowConsumerStrategy element activates the abort slow consumer strategy with default settings. Consumers that are considered slow for more than 30 seconds are aborted. You can modify when slow consumers are aborted using the attributes described in Table 5.1, “Settings for Abort Slow Consumer Strategy”.
Table 5.1. Settings for Abort Slow Consumer Strategy
AttributeDefaultDescription
maxSlowCount-1Specifies the number of times a consumer can be considered slow before it is aborted. -1 specifies that a consumer can be considered slow an infinite number of times.
maxSlowDuration30000Specifies the maximum amount of time, in milliseconds, that a consumer can be continuously slow before it is aborted.
checkPeriod30000Specifies, in milliseconds, the time between checks for slow consumers.
abortConnectionfalseSpecifies whether the broker forces the consumer connection to close. The default value specifies that the broker will send a message to the consumer requesting it to close its connection. true specifies that the broker will automatically close the consumer's connection.
For example, Example 5.4, “Aborting Repeatedly Slow Consumers” shows configuration for aborting consumers that have been marked as slow 30 times.

Example 5.4. Aborting Repeatedly Slow Consumers

<abortSlowConsumerStrategy maxSlowCount="30" />
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