Mochi MQTT
Mochi MQTT is an embeddable high-performance MQTT broker server written in Go, and compliant with the MQTT v3.0 and v3.1.1 specification for the development of IoT and smarthome projects. The server can be used either as a standalone binary or embedded as a library in your own projects. Mochi MQTT message throughput is comparable with everyone's favourites such as Mosquitto, Mosca, and VerneMQ.
What is MQTT?
MQTT stands for MQ Telemetry Transport. It is a publish/subscribe, extremely simple and lightweight messaging protocol, designed for constrained devices and low-bandwidth, high-latency or unreliable networks. Learn more
Mochi MQTT Features
- Paho MQTT 3.0 / 3.1.1 compatible.
- Full MQTT Feature-set (QoS, Retained, $SYS)
- Trie-based Subscription model.
- Ring Buffer packet codec.
- TCP, Websocket, (including SSL/TLS) and Dashboard listeners.
- Interfaces for Client Authentication and Topic access control.
- Bolt-backed persistence and storage interfaces.
Roadmap
- Inline Pub-sub (without client) and event hooks
- Docker Image
- MQTT v5 compatibility
Performance benchmarks were tested using MQTT-Stresser on a 13-inch, Early 2015 Macbook Pro (2.7 GHz Intel Core i5). Taking into account bursts of high and low throughput, the median scores are the most useful. Higher is better. SEND = Publish throughput, RECV = Subscribe throughput.
As usual, any performance benchmarks should be taken with a pinch of salt, but are shown to demonstrate typical throughput compared to the other leading MQTT brokers.
Single Client, 10,000 messages
With only 1 client, there is no variation in throughput so the benchmark is reports the same number for high, low, and median.
mqtt-stresser -broker tcp://localhost:1883 -num-clients=1 -num-messages=10000
|
Mochi |
Mosquitto |
EMQX |
VerneMQ |
Mosca |
SEND Max |
36505 |
30597 |
27202 |
32782 |
30125 |
SEND Min |
36505 |
30597 |
27202 |
32782 |
30125 |
SEND Median |
36505 |
30597 |
27202 |
32782 |
30125 |
RECV Max |
152221 |
59130 |
7879 |
17551 |
9145 |
RECV Min |
152221 |
59130 |
7879 |
17551 |
9145 |
RECV Median |
152221 |
59130 |
7879 |
17551 |
9145 |
10 Clients, 1,000 Messages
mqtt-stresser -broker tcp://localhost:1883 -num-clients=10 -num-messages=1000
|
Mochi |
Mosquitto |
EMQX |
VerneMQ |
Mosca |
SEND Max |
37193 |
15775 |
17455 |
34138 |
36575 |
SEND Min |
6529 |
6446 |
7714 |
8583 |
7383 |
SEND Median |
15127 |
7813 |
10305 |
9887 |
8169 |
RECV Max |
33535 |
3710 |
3022 |
4534 |
9411 |
RECV Min |
7484 |
2661 |
1689 |
2021 |
2275 |
RECV Median |
11427 |
3142 |
1831 |
2468 |
4692 |
10 Clients, 10,000 Messages
mqtt-stresser -broker tcp://localhost:1883 -num-clients=10 -num-messages=10000
|
Mochi |
Mosquitto |
EMQX |
VerneMQ |
Mosca |
SEND Max |
13153 |
13270 |
12229 |
13025 |
38446 |
SEND Min |
8728 |
8513 |
8193 |
6483 |
3889 |
SEND Median |
9045 |
9532 |
9252 |
8031 |
9210 |
RECV Max |
20774 |
5052 |
2093 |
2071 |
43008 |
RECV Min |
10718 |
3995 |
1531 |
1673 |
18764 |
RECV Median |
16339 |
4607 |
1620 |
1907 |
33524 |
500 Clients, 100 Messages
mqtt-stresser -broker tcp://localhost:1883 -num-clients=500 -num-messages=100
|
Mochi |
Mosquitto |
EMQX |
VerneMQ |
Mosca |
SEND Max |
70688 |
72686 |
71392 |
75336 |
73192 |
SEND Min |
1021 |
2577 |
1603 |
8417 |
2344 |
SEND Median |
49871 |
33076 |
33637 |
35200 |
31312 |
RECV Max |
116163 |
4215 |
3427 |
5484 |
10100 |
RECV Min |
1044 |
156 |
56 |
83 |
169 |
RECV Median |
24398 |
208 |
94 |
413 |
474 |
Using the Broker
Mochi MQTT can be used as a standalone broker. Simply checkout this repository and run the main.go
entrypoint in the cmd
folder which will expose tcp (:1883), websocket (:1882), and dashboard (:8080) listeners. A docker image is coming soon.
cd cmd
go build -o mqtt && ./mqtt
Quick Start
import (
mqtt "github.com/cfeeling/mqtt/server"
)
func main() {
// Create the new MQTT Server.
server := mqtt.New()
// Create a TCP listener on a standard port.
tcp := listeners.NewTCP("t1", ":1883")
// Add the listener to the server with default options (nil).
err := server.AddListener(tcp, nil)
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
// Start the broker. Serve() is blocking - see examples folder
// for usage ideas.
err = server.Serve()
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
}
Examples of running the broker with various configurations can be found in the examples
folder.
Network Listeners
The server comes with a variety of pre-packaged network listeners which allow the broker to accept connections on different protocols. The current listeners are:
listeners.NewTCP(id, address string)
- A TCP Listener, taking a unique ID and a network address to bind.
listeners.NewWebsocket(id, address string)
A Websocket Listener
listeners.NewHTTPStats()
An HTTP $SYS info dashboard
Configuring Network Listeners
When a listener is added to the server using server.AddListener
, a *listeners.Config
may be passed as the second argument.
Authentication and ACL
Authentication and ACL may be configured on a per-listener basis by providing an Auth Controller to the listener configuration. Custom Auth Controllers should satisfy the auth.Controller
interface found in listeners/auth
. Two default controllers are provided, auth.Allow
, which allows all traffic, and auth.Disallow
, which denies all traffic.
err := server.AddListener(tcp, &listeners.Config{
Auth: new(auth.Allow),
})
If no auth controller is provided in the listener configuration, the server will default to Disallowing all traffic to prevent unintentional security issues.
SSL
SSL may be configured on both the TCP and Websocket listeners by providing a public-private PEM key pair to the listener configuration as []byte
slices.
err := server.AddListener(tcp, &listeners.Config{
Auth: new(auth.Allow),
TLS: &listeners.TLS{
Certificate: publicCertificate,
PrivateKey: privateKey,
},
})
Note the mandatory inclusion of the Auth Controller!
Data Persistence
Mochi MQTT provides a persistence.Store
interface for developing and attaching persistent stores to the broker. The default persistence mechanism packaged with the broker is backed by Bolt and can be enabled by assigning a *bolt.Store
to the server.
// import "github.com/cfeeling/mqtt/server/persistence/bolt"
err = server.AddStore(bolt.New("mochi.db", nil))
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
Persistence is on-demand (not flushed) and will potentially reduce throughput when compared to the standard in-memory store. Only use it if you need to maintain state through restarts.
Paho Interoperability Test
You can check the broker against the Paho Interoperability Test by starting the broker using examples/paho/main.go
, and then running the test with python3 client_test.py
from the interoperability folder.
Contributions
Contributions and feedback are both welcomed and encouraged! Open an issue to
report a bug, ask a question, or make a feature request.