🔴 To support my channel, I'd like to offer Mentorship/On-the-Job Support/Consulting (me@antonputra.com)
@slavapol-v1553Ай бұрын
Похоже Elixir так и не дождемся
@nehua6164Ай бұрын
Great video! Could you do a comparison between Go and Swift? They're both compiled languages that can be used for backend, but Go is super minimalistic, while Swift feels more like Rust with its rich feature set. Would love to see how they stack up against eack other.
@JonCanningАй бұрын
Golang vs Node Kafka consumer
@n3v3rd1eАй бұрын
would be very nice to add NATS to this comparison
@MDFireX5Ай бұрын
@@slavapol-v1553 мы fastapi ждем уже полжизни
@sweetcapitan5690Ай бұрын
I think a battle between NATS and Kafka would be a good continuation of this comparison.
@TheBatmintun13Ай бұрын
Kafka vs redpanda 😊
@unom8Ай бұрын
Yes, NATS please
@PragmaticITАй бұрын
Nats please
@praveenpereraАй бұрын
yes NATS Jetstream comparison please
@Z3U5.0gАй бұрын
Hell yeah I thought I was the only one who liked NATS
@x31tr0n7Ай бұрын
NATS vs KAFKA vs Pulsar vs AutoMQ should be a great addition to this series. This will be helpful for a lot of audience.
@joshuadunham4954Ай бұрын
+1 For pulsar
@stealth-350Ай бұрын
And +1 for NATS
@TheCarlitozgАй бұрын
Try comparison with NATS
@minhnguyen-jg3qzАй бұрын
like
@jm-alanАй бұрын
My company uses RabbitMQ as our communication backbone for an IOT-type deployment right now, so this is actually super interesting to see Also, I might have a PR - it looks like you're instantiating a connection for every RabbitMQ consumer, when Rabbit generally prefers that you try to use only one connection and multiple channels to dole out multiple logical connections to the broker. There might be performance to gain/some wasted CPU resources there, depending on how many individual consumers you're actually constructing
@fisnik8965Ай бұрын
Definitely, the way of setting up connection & channels on RabbitMQ may have an impact on this performance test. Although, I know Kafka beats RabbitMQ in high loads of requests
@Demodude123Ай бұрын
Redpanda vs kafka would be an interesting test
@davebrooks4605Ай бұрын
I agree. This would be a very interesting comparison
@a.nk.r7209Ай бұрын
We're using redpanda in prod for our workload. Would love to see this comparison
@drksbrАй бұрын
Yesssss!
@TheForge47Ай бұрын
Redpanda does not delivery what it promised, but there was a Problem with journaling File system in the past...
@johnvindahlfabienke470428 күн бұрын
Definitely a test to watch! Panda closely mimics Kafka's functionality to the extend that it is API-compatible. Throwing Redpanda against Kafka would be interesting because of the implementation differences, meaning Redpanda is C++-based and Kafka is mainly implemented in Scala.
@Qrzychu92Ай бұрын
As usual, great video. I never expected you to add a face cam, but it gives your videos a bit more personality, good job!
@supermamoruАй бұрын
Hello, just come through a few videos of you and I LOVE them immediately. Seeing moving charts and benchmark stuff made me happy
@AntonPutraАй бұрын
thank you!
@trinhngo220413 күн бұрын
Respect for your well-prepared environment and scenario! For everyone who want to make a `comparison`, that is how you should do
@AntonPutra13 күн бұрын
thank you!
@unom8Ай бұрын
Nice, please try NATS Would love to see IBM message queue as well
@yunocodeАй бұрын
Thank you for the videos, very useful Would love to see some kind of websocket benching for number of connections and throughput with go, rust, js, erlang/elixir
@murtuzabagasrawala3324Ай бұрын
This is a good idea. This would be interesting to see
@joswayskiАй бұрын
I don’t know about rabbit MQ streams, but the catch with things like Redis streams and even NATS is that you can process things out of order on the same partition or message subject if you have multiple consumers which makes it a non starter for a lot of projects As always, thanks for making these videos :)
@predator1292Ай бұрын
Probably caused by NATS and Redis not having partitions. You can emulate partition behavior in NATS though using subject patterns, but in contrast to Kafka the clients don't rebalance automatically for you, so you need to make a conscious decision which consumer is supposed to consume from which "partition".
@longshin4299Ай бұрын
Why you test Rabbit MQ with option keep msg memory but Kafka written to disk? That's is not fair. Can you test RabbitMQ ( Amazon MQ in AWS) with config mode lazy( written to disk).
@artursradionovs9543Ай бұрын
Thanks for a video. Can we also check Kafka vs Redpanda?
@NatanStreppel16 күн бұрын
Thanks!
@TweakMDSАй бұрын
Love this, I would also love to see NATS thrown into the mix.
@uwontlikeitАй бұрын
Yes!🎉 Glad you got your talented hands on queues finally :) great job. Can't wait to see benchmarks of Apache Pulsar, NATS and RedPanda
@ttrel787Ай бұрын
It would also be excellent to see a comparison when using production best practices, being 3 replications and min isr of 2. Not sure if rabbit mq streams has an analogue but it would be really interesting if so
@spruslaks26Ай бұрын
Thanks!
@AntonPutraАй бұрын
thank you!!
@krissukoco9294Ай бұрын
This channel keeps getting better and better! Kinda my breakfast companion at this time. A bit curious, do you have Indonesian or south east asia parents? Due to the "Putra" last name.
@mitchellmnrАй бұрын
So, I do feel your comparison and wording is a bit misleading. Since both can be clustered Its not a true apples to apples comparison. Now although we do know Kafka can push more due to the way it is designed. Rabbit can handle 50k msgs per second on a single node - ive tested and seen that. But it also depends on the node specs. However when you cluster, which is what most people would do (HA, reliability and scalability) - then we can see a really good test. Although I do get having the single nodes - but that should really be said. Since its not rabbit vs kafka - its a single rabbit and kafka node vs eachother - since both are designed to be clustered
@a0flj0Ай бұрын
IME, RabbitMQ is a better choice when your messages are spread over a large number of queues/topics to which many distinct clients subscribe. It can't beat Kafka on throughput on a single queue on a single node, but IME Kafka can, in principle, manage many topics, but doesn't like it - it may unexpectedly crash nodes. If you scale your RabbitMQ cluster dynamically, based on node load, you can a humongous number of queues shared by an equally humongous number of clients with zero problems. Then again, my experience with both is a bit dated.
@wety789Ай бұрын
Would love to see comparison of kafka against NATS and/or redpanda
@AntonPutraАй бұрын
soon
@ucretsiztakipci6612Ай бұрын
Great job. My deducation after video is this, Kafka is too big to start but perfect for the large scale in case of long term.
@AntonPutraАй бұрын
yes, Kafka requires a lot of maintenance in production. if you have a large cluster, you may need a dedicated person just to keep it up and running
@plefebvreАй бұрын
It would be interesting to see how these two cope with slow consumers or consumer outages. One of the advantages of Kafka or Redpanda is the ability to accommodate differences in speed of processing between producer and consumer.
@PrestonThorpe-d1xАй бұрын
I have to +1 asking for the NATS v. kafka test next!
@AntonPutraАй бұрын
ok
@jansyren2252Ай бұрын
What you have in Kafka which is quite essential for many due to security is the append only and immutable lugs, the fact that they are stored to disk also retains the documents even in case of a crash. So for a banking system etc it is very important that you know the last transaction and that it isn't lost. RabbitMQ is more for less serious workloads, maybe in a web application backend but nothing I would use for anything that needs security.
@docal2Ай бұрын
I'm not sure what exactly you imply by "security", but if you think that the data in Kafka is somehow tamper-proof due to append-only immutable logs, that's not entirely true. Anyone with access to storage can modify the data and there is no mechanism in Kafka that can protect against intentional tampering with data. RabbitMQ can also be configured to persist the data on disk, and unlike Kafka, it actually supports transactions. Albeit if you need *distributed* transactions ActiveMQ and its derivatives might suit you better. Anyway, if you're looking for ultimate security, neither Kafka nor RabbitMQ will qualify on their own.
@ericzorn3735Ай бұрын
Comparing two different AMQP message brokers such as RabbitMQ and LavinMQ would be really helpful. LavinMQ writes to disk as well, similar to Kafka
@kronosthesoulshakerАй бұрын
Please do a SQLite3 vs MySQL2 vs Postgres next. Thank you!
@LawZistАй бұрын
Love your videos!
@БорисМатвеев-в2иАй бұрын
Beautiful video, best job, sugar.! 😊
@raine-worksАй бұрын
You should include NATS
@AntonPutraАй бұрын
yes soon
@Z3U5.0gАй бұрын
@@AntonPutraCLOUD NATIVE 💪
@andrestadelmannАй бұрын
It would be interesting to see Apache Kafta VS Apache Pulsar!
@AntonPutraАй бұрын
will do soon!
@vorandrew10 күн бұрын
Nice video, let's compare redpanda - it's drop-in replacement for kafka written in C and has higher performance
@AntonPutra10 күн бұрын
sure will do!
@faressaleh3693Ай бұрын
Dude I love your videosss
@mobu-o1g16 күн бұрын
Fantastic videos
@AntonPutra16 күн бұрын
thank you!
@nuanda82Ай бұрын
thank you, very interesting
@AntonPutraАй бұрын
my pleasure, i'll do nats soon as well
@Pratik25888 күн бұрын
Great video as always. However, have you tested with persistence enabled on RabbitMQ ?
@AntonPutra8 күн бұрын
well the second test uses write-ahead logging as well
@recklessrogesАй бұрын
Thank you. This is very useful reference information.
@gahshunkerАй бұрын
Great stuff🎉
@Serizon_Ай бұрын
could you compare redwood and kafka and all other and give them points in term of specific points (like throughput , from 0 to 10) , and also a general winner when we add all the points from all metrics. This could be an interesting form of benchmark
@gobdovanАй бұрын
are you referring to redpanda vs kafka? I would also be interested in seeing that
@sPanKyZzZ1Ай бұрын
So my take from this is running a bunch of rabbitMQ instances with a load balancer might be a more efficient and cost effective solution then kafka.
@efimovvАй бұрын
In this configuration you have single point of failure while Kafka brokers distribute load across cluster without it.
@sPanKyZzZ1Ай бұрын
@@efimovv okay, maybe I m missing more on kafka architecture but I guess if you really want rabbitmq you can find a way
@efimovvАй бұрын
@@sPanKyZzZ1 Sure, if someone want to use RMQ it will use despite of any tests :)
@GabrielPozoАй бұрын
Great video! I hope you will try Kafka vs. Nats!! Can I ask you how much you spent on this test?
@abessesmahi4888Ай бұрын
@AntonPutra Thank you so much for this great content. Could you do a benchmark comparison between Kafka, RabbitMq Streams and Nats Jeststream? Thank you in advance.
@oztro12345Ай бұрын
Please add comparase with NATS
@VampireSilenceАй бұрын
How about a comparison between time-series databases for the next videos? Like InfluxDB vs. TimescaleDB. :)
@DavidDLeeАй бұрын
Not sure this tells you very much. Kafka and RabbitMQ guarantees are very different. Sure, if you are OK to lose data by holding it in memory, go for RabbitMQ. If you can't, then RabbitMQ will be a dumb choice. While it is interesting to see what happens when CPU usage reaches 100%, it's not a safe place to be.
@sharon8811Ай бұрын
In RabbitMQ each queue is bound to one cpu core, did you publish to many queues or to just one queue, it makes a lot of difference
@AntonPutraАй бұрын
i created kafka topic/rabbitmq queue for each producer/consumer pair so a lot
@StoneWeaver_RUАй бұрын
I think RabbitMQ streams matches better with Kafka Streams over usual Kafka. And no words said about kafka partitions count
@AntonPutraАй бұрын
well i have only 1 kafka broker 😊 you can only scale throughput if your partitions located on different brokers
@StoneWeaver_RUАй бұрын
@@AntonPutra of course. What I meant was - kafka can perform much better in cluster mode over rabbitmq in cluster mode. You're right, it's different case
@docal2Ай бұрын
I frankly don’t get the obsession with using Kafka for everything. Yes, you can scale it to much higher throughput, and sometimes it’s beneficial to have long-term data persistence. But not only do you get it at the expense of much higher I/O, significantly higher CPU usage, greater latency, and setup complexity, but you’re also losing so much advanced functionality if you don’t need that scale. Advanced message routing, transactions, support for different protocols, RPC-style messaging - if you need any of these and choose Kafka “just in case” you’ll need to scale your application to infinity and beyond, well, good luck implementing it all on the client!
@AntonPutraАй бұрын
true, but it's very popular and almost all large companies use kafka in some form
@j________kАй бұрын
Would like to see kafka vs redpanda
@AndreiBurchackАй бұрын
If RMQ uses default settings - RMQ use some sort of "swap" for messages (which works ugly). It need to make some changes into config.
@ramblexDaАй бұрын
NATS vs Kafka would be a really interesting battle
@WeeDv2Ай бұрын
For these tests to be more meaningful, I believe you should use clustered versions of these services. And additionally test what happens when one of the broker nodes dies.
@AntonPutraАй бұрын
true, but it's quite expensive. I'll see if I have the budget for it in the future
@WeeDv2Ай бұрын
Absolutely, thanks already for spending the time and money to do this test. Just in case, I don’t think you need 3 super big nodes, but you can do smaller nodes, but 3 brokers instead.
@sonk4x4Ай бұрын
Nice vídeo, it could be nice to compare also RabbitMQ vs Amazon SNS, SQS vs Azure service bus. Thank you 😄
@AntonPutraАй бұрын
ok will do :)
@Математик-л7ыАй бұрын
Thank U. Can you compare cluster of kafka and rabbit.
@AntonPutraАй бұрын
well, maybe in the future. it's quite expensive, and you can scale both messaging systems horizontally based on the load...
@nedotraxxxxАй бұрын
Did you bind stream into large queues setup or something else? I mean the kind of topology configuration that could affect the test? It seems to be weird as we easily handled 1kk message workload (RabbitMQ) with binary protocol client and there was a spot to get more. The all results are to be reasonable and expected (Kafka is definitely has maturity on a stream processing) but the numbers should be higher.
@marko95gАй бұрын
Can you compere pulsar with kafka?
@KadiiiriowАй бұрын
I wonder how this will go with the new GraalVM image for kafka.
@spxnrАй бұрын
Nice! What is the dashboard where you have your plots set up in?
@thomaseckert5691Ай бұрын
I would love to see a comparison between Kafka and Redpanda. Redpanda is a drop in Kafka replacement in C++. (I work at Redpanda)
@NizamRamli-vg3ilАй бұрын
Comparing the performance for which one is better i think not suitable. It is more sense when as a solution architect or developer to decide which broker you will choose as your solution for specific project requirement and if choose one of its you know at what time you need to scale and estimating additional cost.
@liandermedeirosАй бұрын
Excellent content as always!! If possible, could you do Kafka vs ActiveMQ in a future video?
@AntonPutraАй бұрын
ok will do
@k16styleАй бұрын
Dump question. Which software Do you use to create those metrics?
@marknefedovАй бұрын
I know it is barely used by anyone, but I'm curious how Pulsar will perform.
@lufenmartofilia5804Ай бұрын
Me too !
@LtdJorgeАй бұрын
Worse than NATS and Kafka from the benchmarks I’ve seen.
@ПавелПавлович-д8цАй бұрын
НУ НАКОНЕЦ ТО! )))
@konga8165Ай бұрын
You should do NATS
@AntonPutraАй бұрын
will do
@rafaeltabАй бұрын
Could you also include redpanda and NATS?
@winterboltgamesАй бұрын
Would it be possible to do Laravel vs Next.js (or any JavaScript framework) next time?
@kvs7720Ай бұрын
your videos all heplfull
@darksam1212Ай бұрын
Kafka vs Redpanda? NATs at some point would also be cool
@AntonPutraАй бұрын
ok noted!
@mateusz5216Ай бұрын
Unfortunately this test is flawed: it does not show completely what use case is, 99% of the time you'll use both for different use cases, not for performance itself. If you use Kafka/RabbitMQ for performance, simply sending/receiving then you probably doing this wrong. As a result, this is essentially comparing apples vs oranges. RabbitMQ has superstream, introduced not very long time ago, which is close to Kafka in way how it works, but it still not Kafka, it does not have Kafka guarantees and replication of data (replication is random and can't be changed by anything or key). Moreover, rabbit and kafka can be tuned for performance, but still - use case is a king here, you probably will sacrifice some capabilities that you need.
@huuphong3657Ай бұрын
please compare fastapi and golang (gin)
@alexanderalexander8902Ай бұрын
Please compare NATS and Kafka
@AntonPutraАй бұрын
ok
@arfathahmed3433Ай бұрын
I would love timescaleDB vs clickhouse and to make sense of clickbench.
@efimovvАй бұрын
Nice compare. But now I really curious about how topic(s) are created in Kafka. I found num.partitions=1 in Kafka config, if topic created without explicit number of partitions it basically mean single thread for producer/consumer.
@AntonPutraАй бұрын
i have a topic and single partition per producer/consumer pair just for the test - github.com/antonputra/tutorials/blob/main/lessons/218/client/kafka/producer.go#L31
@strange-m6uАй бұрын
Please do kafka vs nsq
@AntonPutraАй бұрын
ok added to my list
@miladamiryshahrabi6503Ай бұрын
What about using a cluster of kafka brokers because no one will use a single instance of kafka in real production environments
@AntonPutraАй бұрын
you can scale both by increasing number of brokers, this gives you a baseline for single broker/node
@miladamiryshahrabi6503Ай бұрын
@@AntonPutra As long as my knowledge helps me kafka cluster is active-active, means load and data is distributed between its nodes according to topic partitions and each partition has a different leader in cluster but rabbitmq cluster is meant for HA (active-passive cluster). a replica of master node is there so if something bad happens for master node the replica node takes its place (May be im wrong but if im correct then kafka cluster is Way stronger than a rabbitmq cluster)
@dimasarestu2043Ай бұрын
helo bro, can you compare laravel with some other framework thx
@SAsquirtleАй бұрын
FastAPI benchmarks pls!
@AntonPutraАй бұрын
ok :)
@soufianosse333Ай бұрын
Can you do Kafka vs Pulsar? Thanks in advance ☺️
@budhalantara197315 күн бұрын
NATS JetStream vs Kafka please
@mustafayazlmc3973Ай бұрын
nice work
@forKotlinskyАй бұрын
Kafka vs Red Panda vs NATS vs Apache Pulsar 🙏
@vani_makiАй бұрын
I’d live to see ZeroMQ vs Kafka. zmq claims to be the fastest message broker
@ThomazMartinezАй бұрын
What about BullMQ?
@WaseemAshrafАй бұрын
Redis queue vs RabbitMQ should be interesting.
@AntonPutraАй бұрын
redis queue?
@isenewotheophilus648527 күн бұрын
@@AntonPutra Redis PubSub
@mrpocockАй бұрын
Now you've got me wanting to write a message broker :/ I'm guessing there are a ton of tricks to improve stability and throughout which would be fun to explore.
@zeroowsАй бұрын
Please add Nats and Redpanda to the mix
@marvin_hansen12 күн бұрын
Iggy vs Kafka please. I think you would be surprised to see the results.
@chivesltdАй бұрын
kafka vs automq!
@hegelwinАй бұрын
Please compare Pulsar and Kafka
@LiveTypeАй бұрын
Before even watching Kafka is going to "win". Source: my own experience
@AntonPutraАй бұрын
well, yeah, except for latency and more advanced routing 😊
@arytiwa4351Ай бұрын
Benchmarking guru
@aaliboyevАй бұрын
Yo, interesting comparison
@_vk03Ай бұрын
Anton putra please fast api vs node js 23.. vs deno 2..
@spicynoodle7419Ай бұрын
Kafka and RabbitMQ are used in different scenarios. It's kind of apples and oranges
@Qrzychu92Ай бұрын
RabbitMQ Streams are basically Kafka
@toTheMuhАй бұрын
There is a difference between RabbitMQ and RabbitMQ Streams
@Qrzychu92Ай бұрын
@@toTheMuh yeah, and he is testing both
@dy0mber847Ай бұрын
What the difference?
@god_of_godsАй бұрын
kafka vs redpanda vs nats please!!
@AntonPutraАй бұрын
yes i'll do nats soon
@patronovski14 күн бұрын
Kafka vs Pulsar please
@prosenjitjoyАй бұрын
please add pulsar and nats too
@AntonPutraАй бұрын
ok
@PavelMalejikАй бұрын
try to simulate consumers scaling up and down during operations ... looks like RabbitMQ works good in this cloud scenario, but kafka stuck on rebalancing