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Home/ Questions/Q 5985599
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 22, 20262026-05-22T22:33:09+00:00 2026-05-22T22:33:09+00:00

I’ve been looking at using Redis Pub/Sub as a replacement to RabbitMQ. From my

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I’ve been looking at using Redis Pub/Sub as a replacement to RabbitMQ.

From my understanding Redis’s pub/sub holds a persistent connection to each of the subscribers, and if the connection is terminated, all future messages will be lost and dropped on the floor.

One possible solution is to use a list (and blocking wait) to store all the message and pub/sub as just a notification mechanism. I think this gets me most of the way there, but I still have some concerns about the failure cases.

  1. what happens when a subscriber dies, and comes back online, how should it process all it’s pending messages?
  2. when a malformed message comes though the system, how do you handle those exceptions? DeadLetter Queue?
  3. is there a standard practice to implementing a retry policy?
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-22T22:33:10+00:00Added an answer on May 22, 2026 at 10:33 pm

    When a subscriber (consumer) dies, your list will continue to grow until the client returns. Your producer could trim the list (from either side) once it reaches a specific limit, but that is something you would need to handle at the application level. If you include a timestamp within each message, your consumer can then act on the age of a message, assuming you have application logic you want to enforce on message age.

    I’m not sure how a malformed message would enter the system, as the connection to Redis is usually TCP with the its integrity assurances. But if this happens, perhaps due to a bug in message encoding at the producer layer, you could provide a general mechanism for handling errors by keeping a queue-per-producer that received consumer’s exception messages.

    Retry policies will depend greatly on your application needs. If you need 100% assurance that a message has been received and processed, then you should consider using Redis transactions (MULTI/EXEC) to wrap the work done by a consumer, so you can ensure that a client doesn’t remove a message unless it has completed its work. If you need explicit acknowlegement, then you could use an explicit ACK message on a queue dedicated to the producer process(es).

    Without knowing more about your application needs, it’s hard to know how to choose wisely. Generally, if your messages require full ACID protection, then you probably also need to use redis transactions. If your messages are only meaningful when they are timely, then transactions may not be needed. It sounds as though you can’t tolerate dropped messages, so your approach of using a list is good. If you need to implement a priority queue for your messages, you can use the sorted set (the Z-commands) to store your messages, using their priority as the score value, along with a polling consumer.

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