The AMQP Transport Binding for CloudEvents defines how events are mapped to OASIS AMQP 1.0 (OASIS; ISO/IEC 19464:2014) messages.
This document is a working draft.
- 1.1. Conformance
- 1.2. Relation to AMQP
- 1.3. Content Modes
- 1.4. Event Formats
- 1.5. Security
- 2.1. contentType Attribute
- 2.2. data Attribute
- 3.2. Binary Content Mode
- 3.1. Structured Content Mode
CloudEvents is a standardized and transport-neutral definition of the structure and metadata description of events. This specification defines how the elements defined in the CloudEvents specification are to be used in AMQP messages.
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in RFC2119.
This specification does not prescribe rules constraining transfer or settlement of event messages with AMQP; it solely defines how CloudEvents are expressed as AMQP 1.0 messages.
AMQP-based messaging and eventing infrastructures often provide higher-level programming-level abstractions that do not expose all AMQP protocol elements, or map AMQP protocol elements or names to proprietary constructs. This specification uses AMQP terminology, and implementers can refer the the respective infrastructure's AMQP documentation to determine the mapping into a programming-level abstraction.
This specification assumes use of the default AMQP message format.
The specification defines two content modes for transferring events: structured and binary. Every compliant implementation SHOULD support both modes.
In the structured content mode, event metadata attributes and event data are placed into the AMQP message's application data section using an event format.
In the binary content mode, the value of the event data
attribute is placed
into the AMQP message's application data section as-is, with
the contentType
attribute value declaring its media type; all other event
attributes are mapped to the AMQP application-properties section.
Event formats, used with the stuctured content mode, define how an event is expressed in a particular data format. All implementations of this specification MUST support the JSON event format as well as the AMQP event format for the application-properties section, but MAY support any additional, including proprietary, formats.
This specification does not introduce any new security features for AMQP, or mandate specific existing features to be used.
This specification does not further define any of the CloudEvents event attributes.
Two of the event attributes, contentType
and data
are handled specially
and mapped onto AMQP constructs, all other attributes are transferred as
metadata without further interpretation.
This mapping is intentionally robust against changes, including the addition
and removal of event attributes, and also accommodates vendor extensions to the
event metadata. Any mention of event attributes other than contentType
and
data
is exemplary.
The contentType
attribute is assumed to contain a RFC2046
compliant media-type expression.
The data
attribute is assumed to contain opaque application data that is
encoded as declared by the contentType
attribute.
An application is free to hold the information in any in-memory representation
of its choosing, but as the value is transposed into AMQP as defined in this
specification, the assumption is that the data
attribute value is made
available as a sequence of bytes.
For instance, if the declared contentType
is
application/json;charset=utf-8
, the expectation is that the data
attribute
value is made available as UTF-8 encoded JSON text for use in
AMQP.
The content mode is chosen by the sender of the event, which is either the requesting or the responding party. Protocol interaction patterns that might allow solicitation of events using a particular content mode might be defined by an application, but are not defined here.
The receiver of the event can distinguish between the two modes by inspecting
the content-type
message property field. If the value is prefixed with the
CloudEvents media type application/cloudevents
, indicating the use of a
known event format, the receiver uses structured mode,
otherwise it defaults to binary mode.
If a receiver detects the CloudEvents media type, but with an event format that
it cannot handle, for instance application/cloudevents+avro
, it MAY still
treat the event as binary and forward it to another party as-is.
The binary content mode accommodates any shape of event data, and allows for efficient transfer and without transcoding effort.
For the binary mode, the AMQP content-type
property field value maps
directly to the CloudEvents contentType
attribute.
The data
attribute byte-sequence is used as the AMQP
application-data section.
All CloudEvents attributes with exception of contentType
and data
are individually mapped to and from the AMQP
application-properties section.
Cloud Event attributes are prefixed with "cloudEvents:" for use in the application-properties section.
Examples:
* `eventTime` maps to `cloudEvents:eventTime`
* `eventID` maps to `cloudEvents:eventID`
* `cloudEventsVersion` maps to `cloudEvents:cloudEventsVersion`
The value for each AMQP application property is constructed from the respective attribute's AMQP type representation, compliant with the AMQP event format specification.
This example shows the binary mode mapping of an event into the bare message sections of AMQP:
--------------- properties ------------------
to: myqueue
content-type: application/json; charset=utf-8
----------- application-properties -----------
cloudEvents:cloudEventsVersion: "0.1"
cloudEvents:eventType: "com.example.someevent"
cloudEvents:eventTime: "2018-04-05T03:56:24Z"
cloudEvents:eventID: "1234-1234-1234"
cloudEvents:source: "/mycontext/subcontext"
.... further attributes ...
------------- application-data ---------------
{
... application data ...
}
----------------------------------------------
The structured content mode keeps event metadata and data together in the payload, allowing simple forwarding of the same event across multiple routing hops, and across multiple transports.
The AMQP content-type
property field is set to the media type
of an event format.
Example for the JSON format:
content-type: application/cloudevents+json; charset=UTF-8
The chosen event format defines how all attributes,
including the data
attribute, are represented.
The event metadata and data is then rendered in accordance with the event format specification and the resulting data becomes the AMQP application data section.
Implementations MAY include the same AMQP application-properties as defined for the binary mode.
This example shows a JSON event format encoded event:
--------------- properties ------------------------------
to: myqueue
content-type: application/cloudevents+json; charset=utf-8
----------- application-properties ----------------------
------------- application-data --------------------------
{
"cloudEventsVersion" : "0.1",
"eventType" : "com.example.someevent",
... further attributes omitted ...
"data" : {
... application data ...
}
}
---------------------------------------------------------
- RFC2046 Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) Part Two: Media Types
- RFC2119 Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels
- RFC3629 UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO 10646
- RFC4627 The application/json Media Type for JavaScript Object Notation (JSON)
- RFC7159 The JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) Data Interchange Format
- OASIS-AMQP-1.0 OASIS Advanced Message Queuing Protocol (AMQP) Version 1.0