RABBITMQCTL(1) | RabbitMQ Service | RABBITMQCTL(1) |
NAME¶
rabbitmqctl - command line tool for managing a RabbitMQ brokerSYNOPSIS¶
rabbitmqctl
[-n node] [-q] {command}
[command options...]
DESCRIPTION¶
RabbitMQ is an implementation of AMQP, the emerging standard for high performance enterprise messaging. The RabbitMQ server is a robust and scalable implementation of an AMQP broker.OPTIONS¶
[-n node]Default node is "rabbit@server",
where server is the local host. On a host named
"server.example.com", the node name of the RabbitMQ Erlang node will
usually be rabbit@server (unless RABBITMQ_NODENAME has been set to some
non-default value at broker startup time). The output of hostname -s is
usually the correct suffix to use after the "@" sign. See
rabbitmq-server(1) for details of configuring the RabbitMQ broker.
[-q]
Quiet output mode is selected with the
"-q" flag. Informational messages are suppressed when quiet mode is
in effect.
COMMANDS¶
Application and Cluster Management¶
stop [pid_file]Stops the Erlang node on which RabbitMQ is
running. To restart the node follow the instructions for Running the Server in
the installation guide[1].
If a pid_file is specified, also waits for the process specified there to
terminate. See the description of the wait command below for details on
this file.
stop_app
Stops the RabbitMQ application, leaving the
Erlang node running.
This command is typically run prior to performing other management actions that
require the RabbitMQ application to be stopped, e.g. reset.
start_app
Starts the RabbitMQ application.
This command is typically run after performing other management actions that
required the RabbitMQ application to be stopped, e.g. reset.
wait {pid_file}
Wait for the RabbitMQ application to start.
This command will wait for the RabbitMQ application to start at the node. It
will wait for the pid file to be created, then for a process with a pid
specified in the pid file to start, and then for the RabbitMQ application to
start in that process. It will fail if the process terminates without starting
the RabbitMQ application.
A suitable pid file is created by the rabbitmq-server script. By default
this is located in the Mnesia directory. Modify the RABBITMQ_PID_FILE
environment variable to change the location.
reset
Return a RabbitMQ node to its virgin state.
Removes the node from any cluster it belongs to, removes all data from the
management database, such as configured users and vhosts, and deletes all
persistent messages.
For reset and force_reset to succeed the RabbitMQ application must
have been stopped, e.g. with stop_app.
force_reset
Forcefully return a RabbitMQ node to its
virgin state.
The force_reset command differs from reset in that it resets the
node unconditionally, regardless of the current management database state and
cluster configuration. It should only be used as a last resort if the database
or cluster configuration has been corrupted.
For reset and force_reset to succeed the RabbitMQ application must
have been stopped, e.g. with stop_app.
rotate_logs {suffix}
Instruct the RabbitMQ node to rotate the log
files.
The RabbitMQ broker appends the contents of its log files to files with names
composed of the original name and the suffix, and then resumes logging to
freshly created files at the original location. I.e. effectively the current
log contents are moved to the end of the suffixed files.
When the target files do not exist they are created. When no suffix is
specified, the empty log files are simply created at the original location; no
rotation takes place.
Cluster management¶
cluster {clusternode ...}
clusternode
Instruct the node to become member of a cluster with the specified nodes. To
cluster with currently offline nodes, use force_cluster.
Cluster nodes can be of two types: disk or ram. Disk nodes replicate data in ram
and on disk, thus providing redundancy in the event of node failure and
recovery from global events such as power failure across all nodes. Ram nodes
replicate data in ram only and are mainly used for scalability. A cluster must
always have at least one disk node.
If the current node is to become a disk node it needs to appear in the cluster
node list. Otherwise it becomes a ram node. If the node list is empty or only
contains the current node then the node becomes a standalone, i.e.
non-clustered, (disk) node.
After executing the cluster command, whenever the RabbitMQ application is
started on the current node it will attempt to connect to the specified nodes,
thus becoming an active node in the cluster comprising those nodes (and
possibly others).
The list of nodes does not have to contain all the cluster's nodes; a subset is
sufficient. Also, clustering generally succeeds as long as at least one of the
specified nodes is active. Hence adjustments to the list are only necessary if
the cluster configuration is to be altered radically.
For this command to succeed the RabbitMQ application must have been stopped,
e.g. with stop_app. Furthermore, turning a standalone node into a
clustered node requires the node be reset first, in order to avoid
accidental destruction of data with the cluster command.
For more details see the clustering guide[2].
force_cluster {clusternode ...}
Subset of the nodes of the cluster to which
this node should be connected.
clusternode
Instruct the node to become member of a cluster with the specified nodes. This
will succeed even if the specified nodes are offline. For a more detailed
description, see cluster.
Note that this variant of the cluster command just ignores the current status of
the specified nodes. Clustering may still fail for a variety of other
reasons.
cluster_status
Subset of the nodes of the cluster to which
this node should be connected.
Displays all the nodes in the cluster grouped
by node type, together with the currently running nodes.
User management¶
Note that rabbitmqctl manages the RabbitMQ internal user database. Users from any alternative authentication backend will not be visible to rabbitmqctl. add_user {username} {password}
username
delete_user {username}
The name of the user to create.
password
The password the created user will use to log
in to the broker.
username
change_password {username} {newpassword}
The name of the user to delete.
username
clear_password {username}
The name of the user whose password is to be
changed.
newpassword
The new password for the user.
username
set_user_tags {username} {tag ...}
The name of the user whose password is to be
cleared.
username
list_users
The name of the user whose tags are to be
set.
tag
Zero, one or more tags to set. Any existing
tags will be removed.
Lists users. Each result row will contain the
user name followed by a list of the tags set for that user.
Access control¶
Note that rabbitmqctl manages the RabbitMQ internal user database. Permissions for users from any alternative authorisation backend will not be visible to rabbitmqctl. add_vhost {vhostpath}
vhostpath
Creates a virtual host.
delete_vhost {vhostpath}
The name of the virtual host entry to
create.
vhostpath
Deletes a virtual host.
Deleting a virtual host deletes all its exchanges, queues, user mappings and
associated permissions.
list_vhosts [vhostinfoitem ...]
The name of the virtual host entry to
delete.
Lists virtual hosts.
The vhostinfoitem parameter is used to indicate which virtual host
information items to include in the results. The column order in the results
will match the order of the parameters. vhostinfoitem can take any
value from the list that follows:
name
If no vhostinfoitems are specified then the vhost name is
displayed.
set_permissions [-p vhostpath] {user} {conf}
{write} { read}
The name of the virtual host with non-ASCII
characters escaped as in C.
tracing
Whether tracing is enabled for this virtual
host.
vhostpath
Sets user permissions.
clear_permissions [-p vhostpath] {username}
The name of the virtual host to which to grant
the user access, defaulting to /.
user
The name of the user to grant access to the
specified virtual host.
conf
A regular expression matching resource names
for which the user is granted configure permissions.
write
A regular expression matching resource names
for which the user is granted write permissions.
read
A regular expression matching resource names
for which the user is granted read permissions.
vhostpath
Sets user permissions.
list_permissions [-p vhostpath]
The name of the virtual host to which to deny
the user access, defaulting to /.
username
The name of the user to deny access to the
specified virtual host.
vhostpath
Lists permissions in a virtual host.
list_user_permissions [-p vhostpath] {username}
The name of the virtual host for which to list
the users that have been granted access to it, and their permissions. Defaults
to /.
username
Lists user permissions.
The name of the user for which to list the
permissions.
Server Status¶
The server status queries interrogate the server and return a list of results with tab-delimited columns. Some queries ( list_queues, list_exchanges, list_bindings, and list_consumers) accept an optional vhost parameter. This parameter, if present, must be specified immediately after the query. The list_queues, list_exchanges and list_bindings commands accept an optional virtual host parameter for which to display results. The default value is "/". list_queues [-p vhostpath] [queueinfoitem ...]Returns queue details. Queue details of the
/ virtual host are returned if the "-p" flag is absent. The
"-p" flag can be used to override this default.
The queueinfoitem parameter is used to indicate which queue information
items to include in the results. The column order in the results will match
the order of the parameters. queueinfoitem can take any value from the
list that follows:
name
If no queueinfoitems are specified then queue name and depth are
displayed.
list_exchanges [-p vhostpath] [exchangeinfoitem ...]
The name of the queue with non-ASCII
characters escaped as in C.
durable
Whether or not the queue survives server
restarts.
auto_delete
Whether the queue will be deleted
automatically when no longer used.
arguments
Queue arguments.
pid
Id of the Erlang process associated with the
queue.
owner_pid
Id of the Erlang process representing the
connection which is the exclusive owner of the queue. Empty if the queue is
non-exclusive.
exclusive_consumer_pid
Id of the Erlang process representing the
channel of the exclusive consumer subscribed to this queue. Empty if there is
no exclusive consumer.
exclusive_consumer_tag
Consumer tag of the exclusive consumer
subscribed to this queue. Empty if there is no exclusive consumer.
messages_ready
Number of messages ready to be delivered to
clients.
messages_unacknowledged
Number of messages delivered to clients but
not yet acknowledged.
messages
Sum of ready and unacknowledged messages
(queue depth).
consumers
Number of consumers.
memory
Bytes of memory consumed by the Erlang process
associated with the queue, including stack, heap and internal
structures.
slave_pids
If the queue is mirrored, this gives the IDs
of the current slaves.
synchronised_slave_pids
If the queue is mirrored, this gives the IDs
of the current slaves which are synchronised with the master - i.e. those
which could take over from the master without message loss.
Returns exchange details. Exchange details of
the / virtual host are returned if the "-p" flag is absent.
The "-p" flag can be used to override this default.
The exchangeinfoitem parameter is used to indicate which exchange
information items to include in the results. The column order in the results
will match the order of the parameters. exchangeinfoitem can take any
value from the list that follows:
name
If no exchangeinfoitems are specified then exchange name and type are
displayed.
list_bindings [-p vhostpath] [bindinginfoitem ...]
The name of the exchange with non-ASCII
characters escaped as in C.
type
The exchange type (one of [direct,
topic, headers, fanout]).
durable
Whether or not the exchange survives server
restarts.
auto_delete
Whether the exchange will be deleted
automatically when no longer used.
internal
Whether the exchange is internal, i.e. cannot
be directly published to by a client.
arguments
Exchange arguments.
Returns binding details. By default the
bindings for the / virtual host are returned. The "-p" flag
can be used to override this default.
The bindinginfoitem parameter is used to indicate which binding
information items to include in the results. The column order in the results
will match the order of the parameters. bindinginfoitem can take any
value from the list that follows:
source_name
If no bindinginfoitems are specified then all above items are
displayed.
list_connections [connectioninfoitem ...]
The name of the source of messages to which
the binding is attached. With non-ASCII characters escaped as in C.
source_kind
The kind of the source of messages to which
the binding is attached. Currently always exchange. With non-ASCII characters
escaped as in C.
destination_name
The name of the destination of messages to
which the binding is attached. With non-ASCII characters escaped as in
C.
destination_kind
The kind of the destination of messages to
which the binding is attached. With non-ASCII characters escaped as in
C.
routing_key
The binding's routing key, with non-ASCII
characters escaped as in C.
arguments
The binding's arguments.
Returns TCP/IP connection statistics.
The connectioninfoitem parameter is used to indicate which connection
information items to include in the results. The column order in the results
will match the order of the parameters. connectioninfoitem can take any
value from the list that follows:
pid
If no connectioninfoitems are specified then user, peer address, peer
port, time since flow control and memory block state are displayed.
list_channels [channelinfoitem ...]
Id of the Erlang process associated with the
connection.
name
Readable name for the connection.
address
Server IP address.
port
Server port.
peer_address
Peer address.
peer_port
Peer port.
ssl
Boolean indicating whether the connection is
secured with SSL.
ssl_protocol
SSL protocol (e.g. tlsv1)
ssl_key_exchange
SSL key exchange algorithm (e.g. rsa)
ssl_cipher
SSL cipher algorithm (e.g. aes_256_cbc)
ssl_hash
SSL hash function (e.g. sha)
peer_cert_subject
The subject of the peer's SSL certificate, in
RFC4514 form.
peer_cert_issuer
The issuer of the peer's SSL certificate, in
RFC4514 form.
peer_cert_validity
The period for which the peer's SSL
certificate is valid.
last_blocked_by
The reason for which this connection was last
blocked. One of 'resource' - due to a memory or disk alarm, 'flow' - due to
internal flow control, or 'none' if the connection was never blocked.
last_blocked_age
Time, in seconds, since this connection was
last blocked, or 'infinity'.
state
Connection state (one of [starting,
tuning, opening, running, blocking,
blocked, closing, closed]).
channels
Number of channels using the connection.
protocol
Version of the AMQP protocol in use (currently
one of {0,9,1} or {0,8,0}). Note that if a client requests an
AMQP 0-9 connection, we treat it as AMQP 0-9-1.
auth_mechanism
SASL authentication mechanism used, such as
PLAIN.
user
Username associated with the connection.
vhost
Virtual host name with non-ASCII characters
escaped as in C.
timeout
Connection timeout.
frame_max
Maximum frame size (bytes).
client_properties
Informational properties transmitted by the
client during connection establishment.
recv_oct
Octets received.
recv_cnt
Packets received.
send_oct
Octets send.
send_cnt
Packets sent.
send_pend
Send queue size.
Returns information on all current channels,
the logical containers executing most AMQP commands. This includes channels
that are part of ordinary AMQP connections, and channels created by various
plug-ins and other extensions.
The channelinfoitem parameter is used to indicate which channel
information items to include in the results. The column order in the results
will match the order of the parameters. channelinfoitem can take any
value from the list that follows:
pid
If no channelinfoitems are specified then pid, user, consumer_count, and
messages_unacknowledged are assumed.
list_consumers [-p vhostpath]
Id of the Erlang process associated with the
connection.
connection
Id of the Erlang process associated with the
connection to which the channel belongs.
name
Readable name for the channel.
number
The number of the channel, which uniquely
identifies it within a connection.
user
Username associated with the channel.
vhost
Virtual host in which the channel
operates.
transactional
True if the channel is in transactional mode,
false otherwise.
confirm
True if the channel is in confirm mode, false
otherwise.
consumer_count
Number of logical AMQP consumers retrieving
messages via the channel.
messages_unacknowledged
Number of messages delivered via this channel
but not yet acknowledged.
messages_uncommitted
Number of messages received in an as yet
uncommitted transaction.
acks_uncommitted
Number of acknowledgements received in an as
yet uncommitted transaction.
messages_unconfirmed
Number of published messages not yet
confirmed. On channels not in confirm mode, this remains 0.
prefetch_count
QoS prefetch count limit in force, 0 if
unlimited.
client_flow_blocked
True if the client issued a
channel.flow{active=false} command, blocking the server from delivering
messages to the channel's consumers.
List consumers, i.e. subscriptions to a
queue's message stream. Each line printed shows, separated by tab characters,
the name of the queue subscribed to, the id of the channel process via which
the subscription was created and is managed, the consumer tag which uniquely
identifies the subscription within a channel, and a boolean indicating whether
acknowledgements are expected for messages delivered to this consumer.
The output is a list of rows containing, in order, the queue name, channel
process id, consumer tag, and a boolean indicating whether acknowledgements
are expected from the consumer.
status
Displays broker status information such as the
running applications on the current Erlang node, RabbitMQ and Erlang versions,
OS name, memory and file descriptor statistics. (See the cluster_status
command to find out which nodes are clustered and running.)
environment
Display the name and value of each variable in
the application environment.
report
Generate a server status report containing a
concatenation of all server status information for support purposes. The
output should be redirected to a file when accompanying a support
request.
eval {expr}
Evaluate an arbitrary Erlang expression.
Miscellaneous¶
close_connection {connectionpid} {explanation}
connectionpid
Instruct the broker to close the connection associated with the Erlang process
id connectionpid (see also the list_connections command),
passing the explanation string to the connected client as part of the
AMQP connection shutdown protocol.
trace_on [-p vhost]
Id of the Erlang process associated with the
connection to close.
explanation
Explanation string.
vhost
Starts tracing.
trace_off [-p vhost]
The name of the virtual host for which to
start tracing.
vhost
Stops tracing.
set_vm_memory_high_watermark {fraction}
The name of the virtual host for which to stop
tracing.
fraction
The new memory threshold fraction at which
flow control is triggered, as a floating point number greater than or equal to
0.
EXAMPLES¶
rabbitmqctl stopThis command instructs the RabbitMQ node to
terminate.
rabbitmqctl stop_app
This command instructs the RabbitMQ node to
stop the RabbitMQ application.
rabbitmqctl start_app
This command instructs the RabbitMQ node to
start the RabbitMQ application.
rabbitmqctl wait /var/run/rabbitmq/pid
This command will return when the RabbitMQ
node has started up.
rabbitmqctl reset
This command resets the RabbitMQ node.
rabbitmqctl force_reset
This command resets the RabbitMQ node.
rabbitmqctl rotate_logs .1
This command instructs the RabbitMQ node to
append the contents of the log files to files with names consisting of the
original logs' names and ".1" suffix, e.g. rabbit@mymachine.log.1
and rabbit@mymachine-sasl.log.1. Finally, logging resumes to fresh files at
the old locations.
rabbitmqctl cluster rabbit@tanto hare@elena
This command instructs the RabbitMQ node to
join the cluster with nodes rabbit@tanto and hare@elena. If the
node is one of these then it becomes a disk node, otherwise a ram node.
rabbitmqctl cluster_status
This command displays the nodes in the
cluster.
rabbitmqctl add_user tonyg changeit
This command instructs the RabbitMQ broker to
create a (non-administrative) user named tonyg with (initial) password
changeit.
rabbitmqctl delete_user tonyg
This command instructs the RabbitMQ broker to
delete the user named tonyg.
rabbitmqctl change_password tonyg newpass
This command instructs the RabbitMQ broker to
change the password for the user named tonyg to newpass.
rabbitmqctl clear_password tonyg
This command instructs the RabbitMQ broker to
clear the password for the user named tonyg. This user now cannot log
in with a password (but may be able to through e.g. SASL EXTERNAL if
configured).
rabbitmqctl set_user_tags tonyg administrator
This command instructs the RabbitMQ broker to
ensure the user named tonyg is an administrator. This has no effect
when the user logs in via AMQP, but can be used to permit the user to manage
users, virtual hosts and permissions when the user logs in via some other
means (for example with the management plugin).
rabbitmqctl set_user_tags tonyg
This command instructs the RabbitMQ broker to
remove any tags from the user named tonyg.
rabbitmqctl list_users
This command instructs the RabbitMQ broker to
list all users.
rabbitmqctl add_vhost test
This command instructs the RabbitMQ broker to
create a new virtual host called test.
rabbitmqctl delete_vhost test
This command instructs the RabbitMQ broker to
delete the virtual host called test.
rabbitmqctl list_vhosts name tracing
This command instructs the RabbitMQ broker to
list all virtual hosts.
rabbitmqctl set_permissions -p /myvhost tonyg "^tonyg-.*"
".*" ".*"
This command instructs the RabbitMQ broker to
grant the user named tonyg access to the virtual host called
/myvhost, with configure permissions on all resources whose names
starts with "tonyg-", and write and read permissions on all
resources.
rabbitmqctl clear_permissions -p /myvhost tonyg
This command instructs the RabbitMQ broker to
deny the user named tonyg access to the virtual host called
/myvhost.
rabbitmqctl list_permissions -p /myvhost
This command instructs the RabbitMQ broker to
list all the users which have been granted access to the virtual host called
/myvhost, and the permissions they have for operations on resources in
that virtual host. Note that an empty string means no permissions
granted.
rabbitmqctl list_user_permissions tonyg
This command instructs the RabbitMQ broker to
list all the virtual hosts to which the user named tonyg has been
granted access, and the permissions the user has for operations on resources
in these virtual hosts.
rabbitmqctl list_queues -p /myvhost messages consumers
This command displays the depth and number of
consumers for each queue of the virtual host named /myvhost.
rabbitmqctl list_exchanges -p /myvhost name type
This command displays the name and type for
each exchange of the virtual host named /myvhost.
rabbitmqctl list_bindings -p /myvhost exchange_name queue_name
This command displays the exchange name and
queue name of the bindings in the virtual host named /myvhost.
rabbitmqctl list_connections send_pend port
This command displays the send queue size and
server port for each connection.
rabbitmqctl list_channels connection messages_unacknowledged
This command displays the connection process
and count of unacknowledged messages for each channel.
rabbitmqctl status
This command displays information about the
RabbitMQ broker.
rabbitmqctl report > server_report.txt
This command creates a server report which may
be attached to a support request email.
rabbitmqctl eval 'node().'
This command returns the name of the node to
which rabbitmqctl has connected.
rabbitmqctl close_connection "<rabbit@tanto.4262.0>" "go
away"
This command instructs the RabbitMQ broker to
close the connection associated with the Erlang process id
<rabbit@tanto.4262.0>, passing the explanation go away to
the connected client.
AUTHOR¶
The RabbitMQ Team <info@rabbitmq.com>NOTES¶
- 1.
- installation guide
- 2.
- clustering guide
06/22/2012 | RabbitMQ Server |