I am looking for a message queue which would replicate messages across a cluster of servers. I am aware that this will cause a performance hit, but that’s what the requirements are – message persistence is very important.
The replication can be asynchronous, but it should be there – if there’s a large backlog of messages waiting for processing, they shouldn’t be lost.
So far I didn’t manage to find anything from the well-known MQs. HornetQ for example supported message replication in 2.0 but in 2.2 it seems to be removed. RabbitMQ doesn’t replicate messages at all, etc.
Is there anything out there that could meet my requirements?
There are at least three ways of tackling this that come to mind, depending upon how robust you need the solution to be.
One: pick any messaging tech, then replicate your disk-storage. Using something like DRBD you can have the file-backed storage copied to another machine under the covers. If your primary box dies, you should be able to restart on your second machine from the replicated files.
Two: Keep looking. There are various commercial systems that definitely do this, two such (no financial benefit on my part) are Informatica Ultra Messaging (formerly 29West) and Solace. These are commonly used in the financial community.
Three: build your own. ZeroMQ is one such toolkit that you could use to roll-your-own system from pre-built messaging blocks. Even a system that does not officially support it could fairly easily be configured to publish all messages to two queues. Your reader would have to drain both somehow, so this may well be a non-starter, but possible in any case.
Overall: do test your performance assumptions, as all of these will have various performance implications in various scenarios.