How-To: Route messages to different event handlers
Preview feature
Pub/Sub message routing is currently in preview.
is a messaging pattern that utilizes a DSL instead of imperative application code. PubSub routing is an implementation of this pattern that allows developers to use expressions to route CloudEvents based on their contents to different URIs/paths and event handlers in your application. If no route matches, then an optional default route is used. This becomes useful as your applications expands to support multiple event versions, or special cases. Routing can be implemented with code; however, keeping routing rules external from the application can improve portability.
This feature is available to both the declarative and programmatic subscription approaches.
Enable message routing
This is a preview feature. To enable it, add the feature entry to your application configuration like so:
Learn more about enabling preview features.
For declarative subscriptions, you must use dapr.io/v2alpha1
as the apiVersion
. Here is an example of subscriptions.yaml
using routing.
apiVersion: dapr.io/v2alpha1
kind: Subscription
metadata:
name: myevent-subscription
spec:
pubsubname: pubsub
topic: inventory
routes:
rules:
- match: event.type == "widget"
path: /widgets
- match: event.type == "gadget"
path: /gadgets
default: /products
scopes:
- app1
- app2
Programmatic subscription
Alternatively, the programattic approach varies slightly in that the routes
structure is returned instead of route
. The JSON structure matches the declarative YAML.
import flask
from flask import request, jsonify
from flask_cors import CORS
import json
import sys
app = flask.Flask(__name__)
CORS(app)
@app.route('/dapr/subscribe', methods=['GET'])
def subscribe():
subscriptions = [
{
'pubsubname': 'pubsub',
'topic': 'inventory',
'routes': {
'rules': [
{
'match': 'event.type == "widget"',
'path': '/widgets'
},
{
'match': 'event.type == "gadget"',
'path': '/gadgets'
},
],
'default': '/products'
}
}]
return jsonify(subscriptions)
@app.route('/products', methods=['POST'])
def ds_subscriber():
print(request.json, flush=True)
app.run()
[Topic("pubsub", "inventory", "event.type ==\"widget\"", 1)]
[HttpPost("widgets")]
public async Task<ActionResult<Stock>> HandleWidget(Widget widget, [FromServices] DaprClient daprClient)
{
// Logic
return stock;
}
[HttpPost("gadgets")]
public async Task<ActionResult<Stock>> HandleGadget(Gadget gadget, [FromServices] DaprClient daprClient)
{
// Logic
return stock;
}
[Topic("pubsub", "inventory")]
[HttpPost("products")]
public async Task<ActionResult<Stock>> HandleProduct(Product product, [FromServices] DaprClient daprClient)
{
// Logic
return stock;
}
package main
import (
"encoding/json"
"fmt"
"log"
"net/http"
"github.com/gorilla/mux"
)
const appPort = 3000
type subscription struct {
PubsubName string `json:"pubsubname"`
Topic string `json:"topic"`
Metadata map[string]string `json:"metadata,omitempty"`
Routes routes `json:"routes"`
}
type routes struct {
Rules []rule `json:"rules,omitempty"`
Default string `json:"default,omitempty"`
}
type rule struct {
Match string `json:"match"`
Path string `json:"path"`
}
// This handles /dapr/subscribe
func configureSubscribeHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, _ *http.Request) {
t := []subscription{
{
PubsubName: "pubsub",
Topic: "inventory",
Routes: routes{
Rules: []rule{
{
Match: `event.type == "widget"`,
Path: "/widgets",
},
{
Match: `event.type == "gadget"`,
Path: "/gadgets",
},
},
Default: "/products",
},
},
}
json.NewEncoder(w).Encode(t)
}
router := mux.NewRouter().StrictSlash(true)
router.HandleFunc("/dapr/subscribe", configureSubscribeHandler).Methods("GET")
log.Fatal(http.ListenAndServe(fmt.Sprintf(":%d", appPort), router))
}
In these examples, depending on the type of the event (event.type
), the application will be called on /widgets
, /gadgets
or /products
. The expressions are written as where event
represents the cloud event. Any of the attributes from the CloudEvents core specification can be referenced in the expression.
Match “important” messages
has(event.data.important) && event.data.important == true
Match deposits greater than $10000
event.type == "deposit" && event.data.amount > 10000
Match multiple versions of a message
event.type == "mymessage.v2"
CloudEvent attributes
For reference, the following attributes are from the CloudEvents specification.
data
As defined by the term Data, CloudEvents MAY include domain-specific information about the occurrence. When present, this information will be encapsulated within data
.
- Description: The event payload. This specification does not place any restriction on the type of this information. It is encoded into a media format which is specified by the
datacontenttype
attribute (e.g. application/json), and adheres to thedataschema
format when those respective attributes are present. - Constraints:
- OPTIONAL
Limitation
The following attributes are REQUIRED to be present in all CloudEvents:
id
- Type:
String
- Description: Identifies the event. Producers MUST ensure that
source
+id
is unique for each distinct event. If a duplicate event is re-sent (e.g. due to a network error) it MAY have the sameid
. Consumers MAY assume that Events with identicalsource
andid
are duplicates. - Constraints:
- REQUIRED
- MUST be a non-empty string
- MUST be unique within the scope of the producer
- Examples:
- An event counter maintained by the producer
- A UUID
source
Type:
URI-reference
Description: Identifies the context in which an event happened. Often this will include information such as the type of the event source, the organization publishing the event or the process that produced the event. The exact syntax and semantics behind the data encoded in the URI is defined by the event producer.
Producers MUST ensure that
source
+id
is unique for each distinct event.An application MAY assign a unique
source
to each distinct producer, which makes it easy to produce unique IDs since no other producer will have the same source. The application MAY use UUIDs, URNs, DNS authorities or an application-specific scheme to create uniquesource
identifiers.A source MAY include more than one producer. In that case the producers MUST collaborate to ensure that
source
+id
is unique for each distinct event.Constraints:
- REQUIRED
- MUST be a non-empty URI-reference
- An absolute URI is RECOMMENDED
Examples
- Internet-wide unique URI with a DNS authority.
- https://github.com/cloudevents
- mailto:cncf-wg-serverless@lists.cncf.io
- Universally-unique URN with a UUID:
- urn:uuid:6e8bc430-9c3a-11d9-9669-0800200c9a66
- Application-specific identifiers
- /cloudevents/spec/pull/123
- /sensors/tn-1234567/alerts
- 1-555-123-4567
- Internet-wide unique URI with a DNS authority.
specversion
Type:
String
Description: The version of the CloudEvents specification which the event uses. This enables the interpretation of the context. Compliant event producers MUST use a value of
1.0
when referring to this version of the specification.Currently, this attribute will only have the ‘major’ and ‘minor’ version numbers included in it. This allows for ‘patch’ changes to the specification to be made without changing this property’s value in the serialization. Note: for ‘release candidate’ releases a suffix might be used for testing purposes.
Constraints:
- REQUIRED
- MUST be a non-empty string
type
- Type:
String
- Description: This attribute contains a value describing the type of event related to the originating occurrence. Often this attribute is used for routing, observability, policy enforcement, etc. The format of this is producer defined and might include information such as the version of the
type
- see for more information. - Constraints:
- REQUIRED
- MUST be a non-empty string
- SHOULD be prefixed with a reverse-DNS name. The prefixed domain dictates the organization which defines the semantics of this event type.
- Examples
- com.github.pull_request.opened
- com.example.object.deleted.v2
The following attributes are OPTIONAL to appear in CloudEvents. See the Notational Conventions section for more information on the definition of OPTIONAL.
datacontenttype
Description: Content type of
data
value. This attribute enablesdata
to carry any type of content, whereby format and encoding might differ from that of the chosen event format. For example, an event rendered using the JSON envelope format might carry an XML payload indata
, and the consumer is informed by this attribute being set to “application/xml”. The rules for howdata
content is rendered for differentdatacontenttype
values are defined in the event format specifications; for example, the JSON event format defines the relationship in .For some binary mode protocol bindings, this field is directly mapped to the respective protocol’s content-type metadata property. Normative rules for the binary mode and the content-type metadata mapping can be found in the respective protocol.
In some event formats the
datacontenttype
attribute MAY be omitted. For example, if a JSON format event has nodatacontenttype
attribute, then it is implied that thedata
is a JSON value conforming to the “application/json” media type. In other words: a JSON-format event with nodatacontenttype
is exactly equivalent to one withdatacontenttype="application/json"
.When translating an event message with no
datacontenttype
attribute to a different format or protocol binding, the targetdatacontenttype
SHOULD be set explicitly to the implieddatacontenttype
of the source.Constraints:
- OPTIONAL
- If present, MUST adhere to the format specified in RFC 2046
- For Media Type examples see
dataschema
- Type:
URI
- Description: Identifies the schema that
data
adheres to. Incompatible changes to the schema SHOULD be reflected by a different URI. See for more information. - Constraints:
- OPTIONAL
- If present, MUST be a non-empty URI
subject
Type:
String
Description: This describes the subject of the event in the context of the event producer (identified by
source
). In publish-subscribe scenarios, a subscriber will typically subscribe to events emitted by asource
, but thesource
identifier alone might not be sufficient as a qualifier for any specific event if thesource
context has internal sub-structure.Identifying the subject of the event in context metadata (opposed to only in the
data
payload) is particularly helpful in generic subscription filtering scenarios where middleware is unable to interpret thedata
content. In the above example, the subscriber might only be interested in blobs with names ending with ‘.jpg’ or ‘.jpeg’ and thesubject
attribute allows for constructing a simple and efficient string-suffix filter for that subset of events.Constraints:
- OPTIONAL
- If present, MUST be a non-empty string
Example:
- A subscriber might register interest for when new blobs are created inside a blob-storage container. In this case, the event
source
identifies the subscription scope (storage container), thetype
identifies the “blob created” event, and theid
uniquely identifies the event instance to distinguish separate occurrences of a same-named blob having been created; the name of the newly created blob is carried insubject
:source
:subject
: mynewfile.jpg
- A subscriber might register interest for when new blobs are created inside a blob-storage container. In this case, the event
time
- Type:
- Description: Timestamp of when the occurrence happened. If the time of the occurrence cannot be determined then this attribute MAY be set to some other time (such as the current time) by the CloudEvents producer, however all producers for the same
source
MUST be consistent in this respect. In other words, either they all use the actual time of the occurrence or they all use the same algorithm to determine the value used. - Constraints:
- OPTIONAL
- If present, MUST adhere to the format specified in
Limitation
Currently, comparisons to time (e.g. before or after “now”) are not supported.
Watch on how to use message routing with pub/sub:
Next steps
- Try the
- Learn about topic scoping
- Learn about
- Learn how to configure Pub/Sub components with multiple namespaces
- List of
- Read the API reference