Apart from this help page, all URIs will serve only resources
of type application/json
, and will require HTTP basic
authentication (using the standard RabbitMQ user database). The
default user is guest/guest.
Many URIs require the name of a virtual host as part of the
path, since names only uniquely identify objects within a virtual
host. As the default virtual host is called "/
", this
will need to be encoded as "%2F
".
PUTing a resource creates it. The JSON object you upload must have certain mandatory keys (documented below) and may have optional keys. Other keys are ignored. Missing mandatory keys constitute an error.
Since bindings do not have names or IDs in AMQP we synthesise one based on all its properties. Since predicting this name is hard in the general case, you can also create bindings by POSTing to a factory URI. See the example below.
Many URIs return lists. Such URIs can have the query string
parameters sort
and sort_reverse
added. sort
allows you to select a primary field to
sort by, and sort_reverse
will reverse the sort order
if set to true
. The sort
parameter can
contain subfields separated by dots. This allows you to sort by a
nested component of the listed items; it does not allow you to
sort by more than one field. See the example below.
You can also restrict what information is returned per item
with the columns
parameter. This is a comma-separated
list of subfields separated by dots. See the example below.
Most of the GET queries return many fields per object. The second part of this guide covers those.
A few quick examples for Windows and Unix, using the command line
tool curl
:
:: Windows C:\> curl -i -u guest:guest http://localhost:15672/api/vhosts # Unix $ curl -i -u guest:guest http://localhost:15672/api/vhosts HTTP/1.1 200 OK cache-control: no-cache content-length: 196 content-security-policy: default-src 'self' content-type: application/json date: Mon, 02 Sep 2019 07:51:49 GMT server: Cowboy vary: accept, accept-encoding, origin [{"cluster_state":{"rabbit@localhost":"running"},"description":"Default virtual host" ... (remainder elided)
:: Windows C:\> curl -i -u guest:guest "http://localhost:15672/api/channels?sort=message_stats.publish_details.rate&sort_reverse=true&columns=name,message_stats.publish_details.rate,message_stats.deliver_get_details.rate" # Unix $ curl -i -u guest:guest 'http://localhost:15672/api/channels?sort=message_stats.publish_details.rate&sort_reverse=true&columns=name,message_stats.publish_details.rate,message_stats.deliver_get_details.rate' HTTP/1.1 200 OK cache-control: no-cache content-length: 2 content-security-policy: default-src 'self' content-type: application/json date: Mon, 02 Sep 2019 07:54:35 GMT server: Cowboy vary: accept, accept-encoding, origin [{"message_stats":{"publish_details":{"rate" ... (remainder elided)
:: Windows C:\> curl -i -u guest:guest -H "content-type:application/json" ^ -XPUT http://localhost:15672/api/vhosts/foo # Unix $ curl -i -u guest:guest -H "content-type:application/json" \ -XPUT http://localhost:15672/api/vhosts/foo HTTP/1.1 201 Created content-length: 0 content-security-policy: default-src 'self' date: Mon, 02 Sep 2019 07:55:24 GMT server: Cowboy vary: accept, accept-encoding, origin
Note: you must specify application/json
as the
mime type.
Note: the name of the object is not needed in the JSON object uploaded, since it is in the URI. As a virtual host has no properties apart from its name, this means you do not need to specify a body at all!
:: Windows C:\> curl -i -u guest:guest -H "content-type:application/json" ^ -XPUT -d"{""type"":""direct"",""durable"":true}" ^ http://localhost:15672/api/exchanges/%2F/my-new-exchange # Unix $ curl -i -u guest:guest -H "content-type:application/json" \ -XPUT -d'{"type":"direct","durable":true}' \ http://localhost:15672/api/exchanges/%2F/my-new-exchange HTTP/1.1 201 Created content-length: 0 content-security-policy: default-src 'self' date: Mon, 02 Sep 2019 07:56:06 GMT server: Cowboy vary: accept, accept-encoding, origin
Note: we never return a body in response to a PUT or DELETE, unless it fails.
:: Windows C:\> curl -i -u guest:guest -H "content-type:application/json" ^ -XDELETE http://localhost:15672/api/exchanges/%2F/my-new-exchange # Unix $ curl -i -u guest:guest -H "content-type:application/json" \ -XDELETE http://localhost:15672/api/exchanges/%2F/my-new-exchange HTTP/1.1 204 No Content content-security-policy: default-src 'self' date: Mon, 02 Sep 2019 07:56:59 GMT server: Cowboy vary: accept, accept-encoding, origin
GET | PUT | DELETE | POST | Path | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
X | /api/overview | Various random bits of information that describe the whole system. | |||
X | X | /api/cluster-name | Name identifying this RabbitMQ cluster. | ||
X | /api/nodes | A list of nodes in the RabbitMQ cluster. | |||
X | /api/nodes/name | An individual node in the RabbitMQ cluster. Add "?memory=true" to get memory statistics, and "?binary=true" to get a breakdown of binary memory use (may be expensive if there are many small binaries in the system). | |||
X | /api/extensions | A list of extensions to the management plugin. | |||
X | X | /api/definitions /api/all-configuration (deprecated) |
The server definitions - exchanges, queues, bindings, users,
virtual hosts, permissions, topic permissions, and parameters. Everything apart from
messages. POST to upload an existing set of definitions. Note
that:
multipart/form-data as
well as application/json ) in which case the
definitions should be uploaded as a form field named
"file".
|
||
X | X | /api/definitions/vhost |
The server definitions for a given virtual host -
exchanges, queues, bindings and policies.
POST to upload an existing set of definitions. Note that:
multipart/form-data as
well as application/json ) in which case the
definitions should be uploaded as a form field named
"file".
|
||
X | /api/connections | A list of all open connections. Use pagination parameters to filter connections. | |||
X | /api/vhosts/vhost/connections | A list of all open connections in a specific virtual host. Use pagination parameters to filter connections. | |||
X | X | /api/connections/name | An individual connection. DELETEing it will close the connection. Optionally set the "X-Reason" header when DELETEing to provide a reason. | ||
X | X | /api/connections/username/username | A list of all open connections for a specific username. Use pagination parameters to filter connections. DELETEing a resource will close all the connections for a username. Optionally set the "X-Reason" header when DELETEing to provide a reason. | ||
X | /api/connections/name/channels | List of all channels for a given connection. | |||
X | /api/channels | A list of all open channels. Use pagination parameters to filter channels. | |||
X | /api/vhosts/vhost/channels | A list of all open channels in a specific virtual host. Use pagination parameters to filter channels. | |||
X | /api/channels/channel | Details about an individual channel. | |||
X | /api/consumers | A list of all consumers. | |||
X | /api/consumers/vhost | A list of all consumers in a given virtual host. | |||
X | /api/exchanges | A list of all exchanges. Use pagination parameters to filter exchanges. | |||
X | /api/exchanges/vhost | A list of all exchanges in a given virtual host. Use pagination parameters to filter exchanges. | |||
X | X | X | /api/exchanges/vhost/name |
An individual exchange. To PUT an exchange, you will need a body looking something like this:
{"type":"direct","auto_delete":false,"durable":true,"internal":false,"arguments":{}}The type key is mandatory; other keys are optional.
When DELETEing an exchange you can add the query string
parameter |
|
X | /api/exchanges/vhost/name/bindings/source | A list of all bindings in which a given exchange is the source. | |||
X | /api/exchanges/vhost/name/bindings/destination | A list of all bindings in which a given exchange is the destination. | |||
X | /api/exchanges/vhost/name/publish |
Publish a message to a given exchange. You will need a body
looking something like:
{"properties":{},"routing_key":"my key","payload":"my body","payload_encoding":"string"}All keys are mandatory. The payload_encoding
key should be either "string" (in which case the payload
will be taken to be the UTF-8 encoding of the payload field)
or "base64" (in which case the payload field is taken to be
base64 encoded).If the message is published successfully, the response will look like: {"routed": true} routed will be true if the message was sent to
at least one queue.
Please note that the HTTP API is not ideal for high performance publishing; the need to create a new TCP connection for each message published can limit message throughput compared to AMQP or other protocols using long-lived connections. |
|||
X | /api/queues | A list of all queues. Use pagination parameters to filter queues. | |||
X | /api/queues/vhost | A list of all queues in a given virtual host. Use pagination parameters to filter queues. | |||
X | X | X | /api/queues/vhost/name |
An individual queue. To PUT a queue, you will need a body looking something like this:
{"auto_delete":false,"durable":true,"arguments":{},"node":"rabbit@smacmullen"}All keys are optional.
When DELETEing a queue you can add the query string
parameters |
|
X | /api/queues/vhost/name/bindings | A list of all bindings on a given queue. | |||
X | /api/queues/vhost/name/contents | Contents of a queue. DELETE to purge. Note you can't GET this. | |||
X | /api/queues/vhost/name/actions |
Actions that can be taken on a queue. POST a body like:
{"action":"sync"}Currently the actions which are supported are sync and cancel_sync .
|
|||
X | /api/queues/vhost/name/get |
Get messages from a queue. (This is not an HTTP GET as it
will alter the state of the queue.) You should post a body looking like:
{"count":5,"ackmode":"ack_requeue_true","encoding":"auto","truncate":50000}
Please note that the get path in the HTTP API is intended for diagnostics etc - it does not implement reliable delivery and so should be treated as a sysadmin's tool rather than a general API for messaging. |
|||
X | /api/bindings | A list of all bindings. | |||
X | /api/bindings/vhost | A list of all bindings in a given virtual host. | |||
X | X | /api/bindings/vhost/e/exchange/q/queue |
A list of all bindings between an exchange and a queue. Remember, an exchange and a queue can be bound together many times!
To create a new binding, POST to this
URI. Request body should be a JSON object optionally containing
two fields, {"routing_key":"my_routing_key", "arguments":{"x-arg": "value"}}All keys are optional. The response will contain a Location header
telling you the URI of your new binding.
|
||
X | X | /api/bindings/vhost/e/exchange/q/queue/props | An individual binding between an exchange and a queue. The props part of the URI is a "name" for the binding composed of its routing key and a hash of its arguments. props is the field named "properties_key" from a bindings listing response. | ||
X | X | /api/bindings/vhost/e/source/e/destination |
A list of all bindings between two exchanges, similar to the list of all bindings between an exchange and a queue, above.
To create a new binding, POST to this
URI. Request body should be a JSON object optionally containing
two fields, {"routing_key":"my_routing_key", "arguments":{"x-arg": "value"}}All keys are optional. The response will contain a Location header
telling you the URI of your new binding.
|
||
X | X | /api/bindings/vhost/e/source/e/destination/props | An individual binding between two exchanges. Similar to the individual binding between an exchange and a queue, above. | ||
X | /api/vhosts | A list of all vhosts. | |||
X | X | X | /api/vhosts/name | An individual virtual host. As a virtual host usually only
has a name, you do not need an HTTP body when PUTing one of
these. To set metadata on creation, provide a body like the following:
{"description":"virtual host description", "tags":"accounts,production"} tags is a comma-separated list of tags.
These metadata fields are optional.
To enable / disable tracing, provide a body looking like:
{"tracing":true} |
|
X | /api/vhosts/name/permissions | A list of all permissions for a given virtual host. | |||
X | /api/vhosts/name/topic-permissions | A list of all topic permissions for a given virtual host. | |||
X | /api/vhosts/name/start/node | Starts virtual host name on node node. | |||
X | /api/users/ | A list of all users. | |||
X | /api/users/without-permissions | A list of users that do not have access to any virtual host. | |||
X | /api/users/bulk-delete | Bulk deletes a list of users. Request body must contain the list:
{"users" : ["user1", "user2", "user3"]} |
|||
X | X | X | /api/users/name | An individual user. To PUT a user, you will need a body looking something like this:
{"password":"secret","tags":"administrator"}or: {"password_hash":"2lmoth8l4H0DViLaK9Fxi6l9ds8=", "tags":"administrator"}The tags key is mandatory. Either
password or password_hash
can be set. If neither are set the user will not be able to log in with a password,
but other mechanisms like client certificates may be used.
Setting password_hash to "" will ensure the
user cannot use a password to log in. tags is a
comma-separated list of tags for the user. Currently recognised tags
are administrator , monitoring and management .
password_hash must be generated using the algorithm described
here.
You may also specify the hash function being used by adding the hashing_algorithm
key to the body. Currently recognised algorithms are rabbit_password_hashing_sha256 ,
rabbit_password_hashing_sha512 , and rabbit_password_hashing_md5 .
|
|
X | /api/users/user/permissions | A list of all permissions for a given user. | |||
X | /api/users/user/topic-permissions | A list of all topic permissions for a given user. | |||
X | /api/user-limits | Lists per-user limits for all users. | |||
X | /api/user-limits/user | Lists per-user limits for a specific user. | |||
X | X | /api/user-limits/user/name |
Set or delete per-user limit for user . The name URL path element
refers to the name of the limit (max-connections , max-channels ).
Limits are set using a JSON document in the body: {"value": 100}. Example request: curl -4u 'guest:guest' -H 'content-type:application/json' -X PUT localhost:15672/api/user-limits/guest/max-connections -d '{"value": 50}' |
||
X | /api/whoami | Details of the currently authenticated user. | |||
X | /api/permissions | A list of all permissions for all users. | |||
X | X | X | /api/permissions/vhost/user | An individual permission of a user and virtual host. To PUT a permission, you will need a body looking something like this:
{"configure":".*","write":".*","read":".*"}All keys are mandatory. |
|
X | /api/topic-permissions | A list of all topic permissions for all users. | |||
X | X | X | /api/topic-permissions/vhost/user | Topic permissions for a user and virtual host. To PUT a topic permission, you will need a body looking something like this:
{"exchange":"amq.topic","write":"^a","read":".*"}All keys are mandatory. |
|
X | /api/parameters | A list of all vhost-scoped parameters. | |||
X | /api/parameters/component | A list of all vhost-scoped parameters for a given component. | |||
X | /api/parameters/component/vhost | A list of all vhost-scoped parameters for a given component and virtual host. | |||
X | X | X | /api/parameters/component/vhost/name | An individual vhost-scoped parameter. To PUT a parameter, you will need a body looking something like this:
{"vhost": "/","component":"federation","name":"local_username","value":"guest"} |
|
X | /api/global-parameters | A list of all global parameters. | |||
X | X | X | /api/global-parameters/name | An individual global parameter. To PUT a parameter, you will need a body looking something like this:
{"name":"user_vhost_mapping","value":{"guest":"/","rabbit":"warren"}} |
|
X | /api/policies | A list of all policies. | |||
X | /api/policies/vhost | A list of all policies in a given virtual host. | |||
X | X | X | /api/policies/vhost/name |
An individual policy. To PUT a policy, you will need a body looking something like this:
{"pattern":"^amq.", "definition": {"federation-upstream-set":"all"}, "priority":0, "apply-to": "all"} pattern and definition are mandatory, priority and apply-to are optional.
|
|
X | /api/operator-policies | A list of all operator policy overrides. | |||
X | /api/operator-policies/vhost | A list of all operator policy overrides in a given virtual host. | |||
X | X | X | /api/operator-policies/vhost/name |
An individual operator policy. To PUT a policy, you will need a body looking something like this:
{"pattern":"^amq.", "definition": {"expires":100}, "priority":0, "apply-to": "queues"} pattern and definition are mandatory, priority and apply-to are optional.
|
|
X | /api/aliveness-test/vhost | Declares a test queue on the target node, then publishes and consumes a message. Intended to be used as a very basic health check. Responds a 200 OK if the check succeeded, otherwise responds with a 503 Service Unavailable. | |||
X | /api/health/checks/alarms | Responds a 200 OK if there are no alarms in effect in the cluster, otherwise responds with a 503 Service Unavailable. | |||
X | /api/health/checks/local-alarms | Responds a 200 OK if there are no local alarms in effect on the target node, otherwise responds with a 503 Service Unavailable. | |||
X | /api/health/checks/certificate-expiration/within/unit |
Checks the expiration date on the certificates for every listener configured to use TLS. Responds a 200 OK if all certificates are valid (have not expired), otherwise responds with a 503 Service Unavailable. Valid units: days, weeks, months, years. The value of the within argument is the number of units. So, when within is 2 and unit is "months", the expiration period used by the check will be the next two months. |
|||
X | /api/health/checks/port-listener/port | Responds a 200 OK if there is an active listener on the give port, otherwise responds with a 503 Service Unavailable. | |||
X | /api/health/checks/protocol-listener/protocol | Responds a 200 OK if there is an active listener for the given protocol, otherwise responds with a 503 Service Unavailable. Valid protocol names are: amqp091, amqp10, mqtt, stomp, web-mqtt, web-stomp. | |||
X | /api/health/checks/virtual-hosts | Responds a 200 OK if all virtual hosts and running on the target node, otherwise responds with a 503 Service Unavailable. | |||
X | /api/health/checks/node-is-mirror-sync-critical | Checks if there are classic mirrored queues without synchronised mirrors online (queues that would potentially lose data if the target node is shut down). Responds a 200 OK if there are no such classic mirrored queues, otherwise responds with a 503 Service Unavailable. | |||
X | /api/health/checks/node-is-quorum-critical | Checks if there are quorum queues with minimum online quorum (queues that would lose their quorum and availability if the target node is shut down). Responds a 200 OK if there are no such quorum queues, otherwise responds with a 503 Service Unavailable. | |||
X | /api/vhost-limits | Lists per-vhost limits for all vhosts. | |||
X | /api/vhost-limits/vhost | Lists per-vhost limits for specific vhost. | |||
X | X | /api/vhost-limits/vhost/name |
Set or delete per-vhost limit for vhost . The name URL path element
refers to the name of the limit (max-connections , max-queues ).
Limits are set using a JSON document in the body: {"value": 100}. Example request: curl -4u 'guest:guest' -H 'content-type:application/json' -X PUT localhost:15672/api/vhost-limits/my-vhost/max-connections -d '{"value": 50}' |
||
X | /api/auth |
Details about the OAuth2 configuration. It will return HTTP
status 200 with body: {"oauth_enabled":"boolean", "oauth_client_id":"string", "oauth_provider_url":"string"} |
|||
X | /api/rebalance/queues |
Rebalances all queues in all vhosts. This operation is asynchronous therefore please check
the RabbitMQ log file for messages regarding the success or failure of the operation.
curl -4u 'guest:guest' -XPOST localhost:15672/api/rebalance/queues/ |
|||
X | /api/federation-links /api/federation-links/vhost |
Provides status for all federation links. Requires the rabbitmq_federation_management plugin to be enabled.
|
|||
X | X | /api/auth/attempts/node | A list of authentication attempts. | ||
X | X | /api/auth/attempts/node/source | A list of authentication attempts by remote address and username. |
Most of the GET requests you can issue to the HTTP API return JSON objects with a large number of keys. While a few of these keys represent things you set yourself in a PUT request or AMQP command (e.g. queue durability or arguments), most of them represent statistics to do with the object in question. This page attempts to document them.
It should be read in conjunction with the manual page
for rabbitmqctl
(see your installation if on Unix / Linux,
or the
RabbitMQ website for the latest version). Any field which can
be returned by a command of the form rabbitmqctl
list_something
will also be returned in the
equivalent part of the HTTP API, so all those keys are not
documented here. However, the HTTP API also adds a lot of extra
fields which are not available in rabbitmqctl
.
Many fields represent a count of some kind: queue length,
messages acknowledged, bytes received and so on. Such absolute
counts returned by the HTTP API will often have a
corresponding _details
object which offers
information on how this count has changed. So for example, from
a queue:
"messages": 123619, "messages_details": { "avg": 41206.333333333336, "avg_rate": 1030.1583333333333, "rate": 24723.8, "samples": [ { "sample": 123619, "timestamp": 1400680560000 }, { "sample": 0, "timestamp": 1400680500000 }, { "sample": 0, "timestamp": 1400680440000 } ] }
Here we have a messages
count (the total messages
in the queue), with some additional data:
avg |
The average value for the requested time period (see below). |
avg_rate |
The average rate for the requested time period. |
rate |
How much the count has changed per second in the most recent sampling interval. |
samples |
Snapshots showing how the value has changed over the requested time period. |
avg
, avg_rate
and samples
will only appear if you request a specific time period by
appending query parameters to the URL. To do this you need to
set an age and an increment for the samples you want. The end of
the range returned will always correspond to the present.
Different types of data take different query parameters to return samples, as in the following table. You can specify more than one set of parameters if the resource you are requesting can generate more than one type of sample (for example, queues can return message rates and queue lengths).
Messages sent and received | msg_rates_age / msg_rates_incr |
Bytes sent and received | data_rates_age / data_rates_incr
|
Queue lengths | lengths_age / lengths_incr |
Node statistics (e.g. file descriptors, disk space free) | node_stats_age / node_stats_incr |
For example,
appending ?lengths_age=3600&lengths_incr=60
will
return the last hour's data on queue lengths, with a sample for
every minute.
Many objects (including queues, exchanges and channels) will
return counts of messages passing through them. These are
included in a message_stats
object (which in turn
will contain _details
objects for each count, as
described above).
These can contain:
publish |
Count of messages published. |
publish_in |
Count of messages published "in" to an exchange, i.e. not taking account of routing. |
publish_out |
Count of messages published "out" of an exchange, i.e. taking account of routing. |
confirm |
Count of messages confirmed. |
deliver |
Count of messages delivered in acknowledgement mode to consumers. |
deliver_no_ack |
Count of messages delivered in no-acknowledgement mode to consumers. |
get |
Count of messages delivered in acknowledgement mode in response to basic.get. |
get_no_ack |
Count of messages delivered in no-acknowledgement mode in response to basic.get. |
deliver_get |
Sum of all four of the above. |
redeliver |
Count of subset of messages in deliver_get
which had the redelivered flag set.
|
drop_unroutable |
Count of messages dropped as unroutable. |
return_unroutable |
Count of messages returned to the publisher as unroutable. |
Only fields for which some activity has taken place will appear.
In addition, queues, exchanges and channels can return a
breakdown of message stats for each of their neighbours
(i.e. adjacent objects in the chain: channel -> exchange ->
queue -> channel). This will only happen if
the rates_mode
configuration item has been switched
to detailed
from its default of basic
.
As this possibly constitutes a large quantity of data, it is also only returned when querying a single channel, queue or exchange rather than a list. Note also that the default sample retention policy means that these detailed message stats do not retain historical data for more than a few seconds.
The detailed message stats objects have different names
depending on where they are (documented below). Each set of
detailed stats consists of a list of objects with two fields,
one identifying the partner object and one stats
which is a message_stats object as described above.
For example, from a queue:
"incoming": [ { "stats": { "publish": 352593, "publish_details": { "rate": 100.2 } }, "exchange": { "name": "my-exchange", "vhost": "/" } } { "stats": { "publish": 543784, "publish_details": { "rate": 54.6 } }, "exchange": { "name": "amq.topic", "vhost": "/" } } ],
This queue is currently receiving messages from two exchanges: 100.2 msg/s from "my-exchange" and 54.6 msg/s from "amq.topic".
This has the following fields:
cluster_name |
The name of the entire cluster, as set with rabbitmqctl
set_cluster_name .
|
contexts |
A list of web application contexts in the cluster. |
erlang_full_version |
A string with extended detail about the Erlang VM and how it was compiled, for the node connected to. |
erlang_version |
A string with the Erlang version of the node connected to. As clusters should all run the same version this can be taken as representing the cluster. |
exchange_types |
A list of all exchange types available. |
listeners |
All (non-HTTP) network listeners for all nodes in the
cluster. (See contexts
in /api/nodes for HTTP).
|
management_version |
Version of the management plugin in use. |
message_stats |
A message_stats object for everything the user can see - for
all vhosts regardless of permissions in the case
of monitoring and administrator
users, and for all vhosts the user has access to for other
users.
|
node |
The name of the cluster node this management plugin instance is running on. |
object_totals |
An object containing global counts of all connections,
channels, exchanges, queues and consumers, subject to the
same visibility rules as for message_stats .
|
queue_totals |
An object containing sums of
the messages , messages_ready
and messages_unacknowledged fields for all
queues, again subject to the same visibility rules as
for message_stats .
|
rabbitmq_version |
Version of RabbitMQ on the node which processed this request. |
rates_mode |
'none', 'basic' or 'detailed'. |
statistics_db_event_queue |
Number of outstanding statistics events yet to be processed by the database. |
statistics_db_node |
Name of the cluster node hosting the management statistics database. |
This has the following fields:
applications |
List of all Erlang applications running on the node. |
auth_mechanisms |
List of all SASL authentication mechanisms installed on the node. |
cluster_links |
A list of the other nodes in the cluster. For each node, there are details of the TCP connection used to connect to it and statistics on data that has been transferred. |
config_files |
List of config files read by the node. |
contexts |
List of all HTTP listeners on the node. |
db_dir |
Location of the persistent storage used by the node. |
disk_free |
Disk free space in bytes. |
disk_free_alarm |
Whether the disk alarm has gone off. |
disk_free_limit |
Point at which the disk alarm will go off. |
enabled_plugins |
List of plugins which are both explicitly enabled and running. |
exchange_types |
Exchange types available on the node. |
fd_total |
File descriptors available. |
fd_used |
Used file descriptors. |
io_read_avg_time |
Average wall time (milliseconds) for each disk read operation in the last statistics interval. |
io_read_bytes |
Total number of bytes read from disk by the persister. |
io_read_count |
Total number of read operations by the persister. |
io_reopen_count |
Total number of times the persister has needed to recycle file handles between queues. In an ideal world this number will be zero; if the number is large, performance might be improved by increasing the number of file handles available to RabbitMQ. |
io_seek_avg_time |
Average wall time (milliseconds) for each seek operation in the last statistics interval. |
io_seek_count |
Total number of seek operations by the persister. |
io_sync_avg_time |
Average wall time (milliseconds) for each fsync() operation in the last statistics interval. |
io_sync_count |
Total number of fsync() operations by the persister. |
io_write_avg_time |
Average wall time (milliseconds) for each disk write operation in the last statistics interval. |
io_write_bytes |
Total number of bytes written to disk by the persister. |
io_write_count |
Total number of write operations by the persister. |
log_files |
List of log files used by the node. If the node also sends
messages to stdout, "<stdout> " is also
reported in the list.
|
mem_used |
Memory used in bytes. |
mem_alarm |
Whether the memory alarm has gone off. |
mem_limit |
Point at which the memory alarm will go off. |
mnesia_disk_tx_count |
Number of Mnesia transactions which have been performed that required writes to disk. (e.g. creating a durable queue). Only transactions which originated on this node are included. |
mnesia_ram_tx_count |
Number of Mnesia transactions which have been performed that did not require writes to disk. (e.g. creating a transient queue). Only transactions which originated on this node are included. |
msg_store_read_count |
Number of messages which have been read from the message store. |
msg_store_write_count |
Number of messages which have been written to the message store. |
name |
Node name. |
net_ticktime |
Current kernel net_ticktime setting for the node. |
os_pid |
Process identifier for the Operating System under which this node is running. |
partitions |
List of network partitions this node is seeing. |
proc_total |
Maximum number of Erlang processes. |
proc_used |
Number of Erlang processes in use. |
processors |
Number of cores detected and usable by Erlang. |
queue_index_journal_write_count |
Number of records written to the queue index journal. Each record represents a message being published to a queue, being delivered from a queue, and being acknowledged in a queue. |
queue_index_read_count |
Number of records read from the queue index. |
queue_index_write_count |
Number of records written to the queue index. |
rates_mode |
'none', 'basic' or 'detailed'. |
run_queue |
Average number of Erlang processes waiting to run. |
running |
Boolean for whether this node is up. Obviously if this is false, most other stats will be missing. |
sasl_log_file |
Location of sasl log file. |
sockets_total |
File descriptors available for use as sockets. |
sockets_used |
File descriptors used as sockets. |
type |
'disc' or 'ram'. |
uptime |
Time since the Erlang VM started, in milliseconds. |
All of the above, plus:
memory |
Detailed memory use statistics. Only appears
if ?memory=true is appended to the URL.
|
binary |
Detailed breakdown of the owners of binary memory. Only
appears if ?binary=true is appended to the
URL. Note that this can be an expensive query if there are
many small binaries in the system.
|
See documentation for rabbitmqctl
list_connections
. No additional fields,
although pid
is replaced by node
.
Note also that while non-AMQP connections will appear in this
list (unlike rabbitmqctl list_connections
), they
will omit many of the connection-level statistics.
See documentation for rabbitmqctl list_channels
,
with pid
replaced by node
, plus:
connection_details |
Some basic details about the owning connection. |
message_stats |
See the section on message_stats above. |
All the above, plus
publishes |
Detailed message stats (see section above) for publishes to exchanges. |
deliveries |
Detailed message stats for deliveries from queues. |
consumer_details |
List of consumers on this channel, with some details on each. |
See documentation for rabbitmqctl list_exchanges
, plus:
message_stats |
See the section on message_stats above. |
All the above, plus:
incoming |
Detailed message stats (see section above) for publishes from channels into this exchange. |
outgoing |
Detailed message stats for publishes from this exchange into queues. |
See documentation for rabbitmqctl list_queues
, with
all references to pid
s replaced by node
s
plus:
message_stats |
See the section on message_stats above. |
All the above, plus:
incoming |
Detailed message stats (see section above) for publishes from exchanges into this queue. |
deliveries |
Detailed message stats for deliveries from this queue into channels. |
consumer_details |
List of consumers on this channel, with some details on each. |
All the fields from rabbitmqctl list_vhosts
(i.e. name
and tracing
) plus:
message_stats |
Global message_stats for this vhost. Note that activity for
other users in this vhost is shown, even for users
without the monitoring tag.
|
messages messages_ready messages_acknowledged |
Sum of these fields for all queues in the vhost. |
recv_oct send_oct |
Sum of these fields for all connections to the vhost. |
Below are the query parameters that can be used.
page |
Positive integer | Page number |
page_size |
Positive integer | Number of elements for page (default value: 100) |
name |
String | Filter by name, for example queue name, exchange name etc.. |
use_regex |
Boolean | Enables regular expression for the param name |
Examples:
http://localhost:15672/api/queues?page=1&page_size=50 |
Fetches the first queue page with 50 elements |
http://localhost:15672/api/queues/my-vhost?page=1&page_size=100&name=&use_regex=false&pagination=true |
Filter the first queues page for the virtual host "my-vhost" |
http://localhost:15672/api/exchanges?page=1&page_size=100&name=%5Eamq&use_regex=true&pagination=true |
Filter the first exchanges page, 100 elements, with named filtered using the regular expression "^amq" |