RabbitMQ in 100 Seconds

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 24 окт 2024

Комментарии • 519

  • @stanislavnovikov8880
    @stanislavnovikov8880 2 года назад +965

    Finally I can add RabbitMQ to skill section in my CV

    • @Extys
      @Extys 2 года назад +36

      Based.

    • @yunusozd
      @yunusozd 2 года назад +213

      also add erlang he mentioned too

    • @codeaperture
      @codeaperture 2 года назад +2

      😆

    • @theascendunt9960
      @theascendunt9960 2 года назад +3

      Oh wow. What an original comment.

    • @yunusozd
      @yunusozd 2 года назад +20

      @@theascendunt9960oh another day and another toxic programmer

  • @caradebreno
    @caradebreno 2 года назад +1016

    It's amazing how you always throw a 100 seconds on the tool I just started working on

    • @thmsrttg
      @thmsrttg 2 года назад +11

      haha same!!

    • @ghazouaninagui8567
      @ghazouaninagui8567 2 года назад +12

      same lmao

    • @snk-js
      @snk-js 2 года назад +14

      I have a theory, that developers are the first ones to know the changes in the world, and every connected developer gets instant update about what demands will be going to pop up, thus, every developer is connected between themselves somehow [EDIT]: actually not always only developers but scientist in general, people who seek to be acknowledged using the internet.

    • @microcolonel
      @microcolonel 2 года назад +16

      He's your boss and you don't even know it.

    • @caradebreno
      @caradebreno 2 года назад +4

      @@snk-js Yeah, it makes sense, but in many cases it's a tool I started working on because of my job, not because I found it interesting, and that's what scares me the most.

  • @weiss3903
    @weiss3903 2 года назад +392

    Time to go down this rabbit hole...

  • @isheanesunigelmisi8400
    @isheanesunigelmisi8400 2 года назад +289

    These Fireship videos are multiplying like rabbits and I love it

  • @rfontalva
    @rfontalva 2 года назад +348

    These are great! It would be nice a series of this videos but for more generic topics, like explaining MQTT protocol for example

    • @juleswinnfield1437
      @juleswinnfield1437 2 года назад +2

      Totally agree!

    • @giddy4600
      @giddy4600 2 года назад

      ^^

    • @pheonyxior_5082
      @pheonyxior_5082 2 года назад +2

      Dropping a comment here so that it can be seen by more people :
      A bot/scammer is in the comments, its pseudo is fireship1mpme something ( since I reported the comment it disappeared so I can't tell you the exact name ), and he will answer to your comment like "My dear fan ! You won a price, mp me to get it", so yeah that's def a scam

    • @FacadeMan
      @FacadeMan 2 года назад +1

      The protocol series

    • @lennart5738
      @lennart5738 2 года назад

      MQTT is literally the simplest messaging protocol there is. He could probably do "MQTT in 25 seconds"

  • @wisdomouswanderer
    @wisdomouswanderer 2 года назад +82

    Great video! I would love to see more videos on Big data tools such as Apache Spark, Kafka, Storm as haven't seen enough on your channel and nobody explains them better than you do.
    Keep it up, Jeff.

  • @dottechnoologies
    @dottechnoologies 2 года назад +2

    Guys, this guy is simply amazing. I follow his channel for news, but I just followed along on this Rabbit MQ and it works! Like his code actually works. And I love it because there isn't much explanation, but his code is super easy to understand. I didn't see anyone using async await on this topic, he made it so much easy. I have been figuring out how I could use rabbit mq with my normal express router controller folder structure. With this his code, I think I have figured out how to go about it. Going for the pro membership. This is it for me...

  • @carlyparly6633
    @carlyparly6633 2 года назад +6

    Kafka in 100 seconds would be a great follow up to this video! Thanks for the hard work on these

  • @Omaryllo
    @Omaryllo 2 года назад +2

    There are so many increasingly opaque architectures and devtools that have increasingly PR descriptions that makes no sense to anyone trying to use it. This is the first time I feel like I sorta understand wtf rabbitmq does. tysm! Now I can actually begin to even consider it in any project

  • @brianrdetweiler
    @brianrdetweiler 2 года назад +2

    As someone who has to work tangentially with RabbitMQ but not like, WITH it with it, this is perfect. Thank you!

  • @yinonelbaz5309
    @yinonelbaz5309 Год назад +2

    For the last three days I have been reading 8 hours every day on rabbitmq to get a good introduction to the topic and you managed to reduce my whole three days to 2 minutes!!!!!

  • @SahilP2648
    @SahilP2648 2 года назад +4

    RabbitMQ is amazing. Takes a lot of the plumbing out if you don't want to do fancy stuff like creating UDP level netcode for FPS gaming for example. Most people can deal with a bit of latency and a bit of overhead for saving a bunch of time for asynchronous messaging between client and server and it is extremely easy to use and scalable. It gets work done.

  • @flyingmindzofficial6891
    @flyingmindzofficial6891 2 года назад +41

    Thanks! Your videos are perfect to gain a sufficient overview 😊

  • @ZeekDaGeek
    @ZeekDaGeek 2 года назад +30

    Man this is the thing I've wanted! I've been making and remaking something like this for sockets for the longest time in probably a comparatively crappy way. I could never get Google to give me this as a result.

    • @jepemz873
      @jepemz873 2 года назад +5

      Checkout redis streams too.

    • @lapraswastaken
      @lapraswastaken 2 года назад +2

      that's kinda how i feel with a bunch of these videos - this channel is just great, especially the "100" seconds videos. nice and terse so they're easy to watch and each with more than enough info to see if the topic is up my alley.

  • @tornoutlaw
    @tornoutlaw 8 месяцев назад +3

    Using docker as shown in the video also allows for calling the rmq management UI exposed at port 15672, where one can create, manage & monitor users, exchanges, queues etc.

  • @qtgiebel
    @qtgiebel Год назад +4

    I've been working on a degree in this field for years and this is the first time someone's ever explained the tangible benefits of microservices.

  • @SB-qm5wg
    @SB-qm5wg 2 года назад +4

    I used it a lot at one of my jobs. It was pretty cool. The IT issues were usually the pre and post and rarely with RabbitMQ itself.

  • @JeremyChone
    @JeremyChone 2 года назад +2

    We use redis stream for our backend event bus/queue. Very fast, and the power of consumer groups really makes it shine.

    • @ayayabood
      @ayayabood 2 года назад

      Your stuff looks cool

  • @BillLambert
    @BillLambert 2 года назад +13

    I absolutely love this series. My default stance is to ignore new stuff (old man yelling at cloud), but 100s is just enough to convince me to try something (or reaffirm my snub).

    • @ianfarre314
      @ianfarre314 2 года назад +1

      That's how you become obsolete and jobless man. Unless you know Cobol that is...

    • @MrMudbill
      @MrMudbill 2 года назад +2

      @@ianfarre314 Depends on how new. Jumping on every new trend can absolutely kill your productivity, stability, futureproofing etc. Let it get out of beta and simmer for a bit before using it seriously.

  • @Feronom
    @Feronom 2 года назад +4

    "different computational needs gave rise to microservices" in one sentence I finally understand what bunch of medium articles can't explain

  • @WolfPhoenix0
    @WolfPhoenix0 2 года назад +56

    I can't believe Jeff has covered so many topics that he's now entering the rabbit hole of messaging queues (pun fully intended)
    At least it's not another JS framework. 😂

  • @ismailfateen
    @ismailfateen 2 года назад +4

    I absolutely understand everything. Just like LLVM's video.

  • @snk-js
    @snk-js 2 года назад +4

    the monolith crystal exploding was just awesome cool effect man

  • @clxxiii
    @clxxiii 2 года назад

    Dude this type of software is literally exactly what I've needed. I swear you have mind-reading capabilities

  • @jtothey1993
    @jtothey1993 2 года назад +1

    Thanks, I'll add I'm an expert on RabbitMQ on my resume now.

  • @tds272
    @tds272 2 года назад +6

    Thank you, please keep going with producing such nice videos.
    Now it’s time for „Kafka in 100 seconds“ to compare it in another video with rabbitmq 😂

  • @StefDev
    @StefDev 2 года назад +6

    NOOOOOOOOICE! Thanks for this FireShip🤟

  • @wichaisawangpongkasame9237
    @wichaisawangpongkasame9237 2 года назад

    i bet you don't know how great this vid is at introducing both its concept and simple implementation. Thanks for the good work!

  • @jacksonspector329
    @jacksonspector329 2 года назад +1

    Please do AMPS pub sub framework!
    On a side note, your videos have ignited my curiosity in programming like nothing else has ever been able to. Your channel is a unique outlet that allows people of all levels of experience to learn. And for that I am grateful!

  • @rubenuijtde
    @rubenuijtde 2 года назад +14

    If it’s blazingly fast too, I’d a full tutorial to go down this rabbit hole

  • @crifox16
    @crifox16 2 года назад +11

    rabbitmq is great, used it a few times as a broker between microservices and loved it. it's pretty simple but it's not very forgiving :v especially when you consume the wrong message or use the wrong routing key, when it's gone it's gone

    • @archmad
      @archmad 2 года назад +1

      place it in a state, and log it.

    • @holden5478
      @holden5478 2 года назад +1

      or use Kafka instead

    • @miguelguthridge
      @miguelguthridge 2 года назад

      I suppose errors like that would be relatively simple to catch by writing some integration tests though.

    • @crifox16
      @crifox16 2 года назад

      @@miguelguthridge yeah that was mainly during development. by the time it reached production it was (and still is) pretty damn solid

    • @jepemz873
      @jepemz873 2 года назад +1

      It's a bit old school being so ephemeral. Kafka and redis streams are superior because they're event logs you can keep an amount of history and replay the messages.

  • @vinno97
    @vinno97 2 года назад +1

    I've worked with RabbitMQ for a POC and loved it. Never seen anyone else using it sadly. Seen some large corporations use azure/aws pubsub or Kafka, but never RabbitMQ

  • @jewpcabra666
    @jewpcabra666 2 года назад +16

    you should do one on airflow and Kafka!! amazing stuff per usual

  • @ManikanteswarPunnam
    @ManikanteswarPunnam Год назад

    Amazing Coverage with in just 100 seconds!. Kudos to you man!!!

  • @Kevin192291
    @Kevin192291 2 года назад +2

    You quickly touched on, but didn't mention one of the most awesome parts of RabbitMQ, The fact that if you API is down, or unavailable, Rabbit will attempt to re-send the message when the consumer is available again allowing for messages sent to an api to be processed even if the box that the API is installed on caught on fire!

  • @sergio_8354
    @sergio_8354 Год назад +2

    Docker command from video:
    docker run -it --rm --name rabbitmq -p 5672:5672 -p 15672:15672 rabbitmq:3.10-management

  • @Eagle3302PL
    @Eagle3302PL 2 года назад +5

    Another great thing with rabbitmq is the admin UI, it's super handy if you cba to fuck around with the cli. You can create/modify exchanges and queues, view queue I/O metrics and it also lets you inspect and publish messages manually.

  • @stevemcwin
    @stevemcwin 2 года назад +25

    Hey Jeff, could you make a video explaining the Nim programming language in 100 seconds please?

  • @rajdave7357
    @rajdave7357 2 года назад

    sir please answer this
    1. from where you learn such concepts??
    2. you have made video on almost every cs tech, how are you able to do it?
    3. top 10 website or blog or something else you follow in order to be aware of what's going on around and in tech

  • @dzikiLOS
    @dzikiLOS 2 года назад

    you would have saved me a day or two some time in the past, this so so precise and basically how I was explaining it to my team. Great job!

  • @CheatCodeSam
    @CheatCodeSam 2 года назад

    RabbitMQ is fantastic, I've been using it for a new project to have a Minecraft server communicate with a Nest.js server and its super easy and intuitive to use.

  • @forrestbajbek3900
    @forrestbajbek3900 10 месяцев назад

    What a great video. Literally exactly what I needed for my project right now.

  • @imsleepy620
    @imsleepy620 2 года назад +6

    This sounds incredibly useful for a OCR backend microservice I'm working on. Nice timing.

    • @ALZlper
      @ALZlper 2 года назад

      It's useful for micro service based architectures in general. You can also do RPC and much more

  • @trannusaran6164
    @trannusaran6164 2 года назад +1

    glad to see more love for Erlang and the BEAM vm

  • @scr34m_piu
    @scr34m_piu 2 года назад

    Thank you so much, this is right timing while i need to learn RabbitMQ for my work and your video came up

  • @akhil_sai
    @akhil_sai 2 года назад +3

    Need Kafka 100 seconds and a comparison between Rmq and Kafka as well 🤩

  • @dennyportillo1844
    @dennyportillo1844 2 года назад

    Day was bad until a new Fireship video came

  • @TheMR-777
    @TheMR-777 2 года назад +1

    The Logo looks like a 👌🏻as well as a Rabbit. Amazing!

  • @adrianalbertoromerogranado6528
    @adrianalbertoromerogranado6528 2 месяца назад

    what a great and concise explanation, thanks man !

  • @joshuaomana7740
    @joshuaomana7740 2 года назад +4

    I was literally tasked with researching this to implement it at work, and when checking for turoriala THIS just poped out jaja. Very nice top level overview as always

  • @vojtech_richter
    @vojtech_richter 2 года назад +1

    Great video, i'd love to see ElasticSearch next.

  • @varunsodhani6812
    @varunsodhani6812 Год назад

    Your videos help me decide what I want to use and learn more about

  • @shlokbhakta2893
    @shlokbhakta2893 2 года назад +2

    You should do technologies of the alphabet where you list the most influential/important technology for every letter and explain why

  • @anthonying
    @anthonying 2 года назад +1

    Isn’t it funny how these just pop up at the exact time you need them? Going to be working on an app using RabbitMQ at work soon…

  • @lennytheleopard
    @lennytheleopard Год назад

    I really enjoyed this video (as an IBM MQ SME)

  • @juleswinnfield1437
    @juleswinnfield1437 2 года назад

    Loved this video - great high level demonstration of something super useful! Keep em' coming!

  • @dabbopabblo
    @dabbopabblo 2 года назад +78

    That moment when you realize you basically already made your own version of RabbitMQ but using node and websockets with dispatchers(servers), workers(servers that consume jobs with their data or message) and subdispatchers( servers that connect as a client to the dispatchers but relay jobs for the other worker servers to complete)

    • @davids9096
      @davids9096 2 года назад +42

      Yeah dump it for good and use Rabbit

    • @rogue.ganker
      @rogue.ganker 2 года назад +2

      ZeroMQ if you want to take it to the next level :)

    • @ojcgv21
      @ojcgv21 2 года назад +1

      RabbitMQ is not that easy to use in production, sometimes your server will lose the connection with the rabbitmq server, you have to deal with this properly

    • @dabbopabblo
      @dabbopabblo 2 года назад

      @@ojcgv21 Thats why I am happy using my solution instead. It can be setup with one line of code on the server and one on the edge server or however many edge servers are needed and then re connection attempts are automatically made when it looses connection. And responses to jobs can be defined per server with each having the ability to reject jobs they don't have definitions for and the control server having knowledge of which servers its attempted sending a job so it can retire one if no servers accepted it

    • @dabbopabblo
      @dabbopabblo 2 года назад

      @@rogue.ganker besides the fact it can run without a dedicated broker it looks like its functionality is at least exactly the same as mine just probably way more difficult to setup and maybe a tad bit faster

  • @chiemezienjoku7047
    @chiemezienjoku7047 Год назад +2

    My resume after watching this video:
    RabbitMQ expert.

  • @thehibbi
    @thehibbi 2 года назад

    Visualization on point as always, thanks for the video :)

  • @park2348190
    @park2348190 Год назад

    oh my god this is best video of this channel

  • @johnmcparland3277
    @johnmcparland3277 2 года назад +2

    finally i can use rabbitmq to connect my custom ISO timestamp converter to Omegastar

  • @claytoncastro2734
    @claytoncastro2734 2 года назад +1

    More cloud/microservices content!

  • @andyapp8181
    @andyapp8181 2 года назад +6

    Now do Kafka in 100 seconds!

  • @shaylevinzon540
    @shaylevinzon540 2 месяца назад

    Thanks, exactly what I was looking for

  • @zero0bb
    @zero0bb 2 года назад +1

    can you do more videos on logic and planning coding, usually I have a lot of problem expressing my logic even though it's correct like your technical interview video helped a lot

  • @interrrp_with_three_rs
    @interrrp_with_three_rs 2 года назад

    Finally, an explanation of this mysterious magic tool only professionals use

  • @ADominacja
    @ADominacja 2 года назад

    Now I want rabbitmq in 1000 seconds. I have no need for this tech, but it's very interesting

  • @AROAH
    @AROAH 2 года назад

    Wow, not only is it not JavaScript, but it’s something actually innovative.

  • @dekcode2824
    @dekcode2824 2 года назад

    Nice 100sec coverage as always. Thanks

  • @artrix909
    @artrix909 2 года назад +2

    Next edge functions in 100 seconds next!

  • @erikslorenz
    @erikslorenz 2 года назад +2

    Queues are something I learned about way too late. If you spend time integrating different things they really are amazing. Although I use managed ones from azure and gcp.

  • @pioula1117
    @pioula1117 2 года назад

    Great video. Waiting for Kafka

  • @allmight9991
    @allmight9991 2 года назад

    u need to make a video telling us how you do your research it's really amazing

  • @filmonseare4597
    @filmonseare4597 11 месяцев назад

    Short and amazing need more please

  • @JamieVegas
    @JamieVegas 4 месяца назад

    Microservices have been in use since the early 90s... it was the way EVERYTHING was done. There were no monoliths, because the phone company and the companies that provided the first reference architectures worked like this.,

  • @frog706
    @frog706 2 года назад

    Great video, would love to see a long-from video on RabbitMQ.

  • @saikirandash8574
    @saikirandash8574 9 месяцев назад

    Perfectly explained 👌

  • @NoLongerManic
    @NoLongerManic 2 года назад

    this would of saved me from a year ago haha, glad it's covered at last

  • @Rochie
    @Rochie 2 года назад

    Thanks suggested this a while ago and now I see it

  • @queenkai
    @queenkai 2 года назад +2

    Watching this video makes me feel so painfully aware how wrong I’ve been using RabbitMQ in my project

  • @nisargbhatt300
    @nisargbhatt300 2 года назад +1

    Thank you for the content. 😄 Hard to explain RabbitMQ in 100sec but Great job 👍🤟

  • @johnathanjames2872
    @johnathanjames2872 2 года назад +1

    Awesome. Hey, can you please make a video on declarative vs imperative programming paradigms ^_^

  • @weamhaleemi4984
    @weamhaleemi4984 2 года назад +2

    i feel like this is Microservices in 50 seconds and rabbit mq in 50

  • @nathansavage8692
    @nathansavage8692 2 года назад +2

    Thats really cool! Could you do a video on Elk Stack? Kibana now has an agent system and a bunch of pre-built use cases all for free. One of them is a full blown IDS!

    • @uqwendkasd4809
      @uqwendkasd4809 2 года назад

      What is a IDS? Could not find anything relevant when googling kibana IDS

    • @nathansavage8692
      @nathansavage8692 2 года назад

      @@uqwendkasd4809 try limitless XDR, thats their buzzword of the week for it, basicaly an Intrusion Detection System is a system used in corperate enviroments to detect hacks by analysing network traffic, weird processes on endpoints/servers etc

  • @BrunoGomes-su1bk
    @BrunoGomes-su1bk 2 года назад

    BRUH, just yesterday i've heard about it in class and now you post a video on it... I'm concerned.

  • @NMiller_
    @NMiller_ 2 года назад +1

    Love these videos! Could you do one for Kafka?

  • @soheilnazari6731
    @soheilnazari6731 2 года назад

    I needed this 4 days ago

  • @arigibson1328
    @arigibson1328 2 года назад

    Would love to see a 100 seconds for Tina CMS :)

  • @timothy6992
    @timothy6992 2 года назад +5

    I know it’s technically not a programming-language, but maybe you could do a 100s on LaTeX. I love it as an alternative to MS Word with much more control and as a Developer I prefer to write my formating-instructions in code instead of using bloaded config-menus :)

    • @TheAlchemist1089
      @TheAlchemist1089 2 года назад

      Isn't that for PhD nerds?

    • @timothy6992
      @timothy6992 2 года назад

      @@TheAlchemist1089 yes, it’s mainly used for thesises, but also for CVs

  • @mohammedabdulbary1577
    @mohammedabdulbary1577 2 года назад +1

    I have been following you long ago, and i was always wondering why do you call it 100 seconds but it is a 150 seconds 🧐
    But i love all your videos ❤️

  • @martindimitrov8547
    @martindimitrov8547 2 года назад +1

    You should make a video on rabbitmq Vs Kafka!

  • @porroapp
    @porroapp 2 года назад +1

    Would be great to learn more about CQRS and event streaming architecture.

  • @irshitmukherjee7943
    @irshitmukherjee7943 2 года назад

    thats really great a great tool for microservices........ I was using RabbitMQ in amqpcloud........your video

  • @erminpajazetovic9506
    @erminpajazetovic9506 2 года назад +1

    FIRST!!!
    Can you make a vid on digitalocean n stuff like that or how to create a backend for auth n stuff :) thx

  • @BP-qy2pb
    @BP-qy2pb 2 года назад +1

    Kafka next, please.

  • @Pilosofia
    @Pilosofia 2 года назад +8

    10 years of experience required.

  • @Draxial_
    @Draxial_ 2 года назад

    This is an interesting series, although imo is a bit too compacted, I'd suggest to decompress it a bit and make 5 minutes, I believe it'd have more information and wouldn't feel that rushed;

  • @johnny1815
    @johnny1815 2 года назад +2

    Please do a video with google or azure cloud stuff like the aws one :)

  • @armentorosyan8268
    @armentorosyan8268 2 года назад

    Apache Kafka next please!

  • @krishgarg2806
    @krishgarg2806 2 года назад

    Can you cover Deta please? It's a service made for students and learners to give the internet and the cloud a look without worrying about money. It could also help a lot of your viewers as not many people know about it.
    PS: I am in no way affiliated with them. I just like the product and think it deserves more recognition.