tencent cloud

TDMQ for RabbitMQ

Release Notes and Announcements
Release Notes
Announcements
Product Introduction
Introduction and Selection of the TDMQ Product Series
What Is TDMQ for RabbitMQ
Strengths
Use Cases
Description of Differences Between Managed Edition and Serverless Edition
Open-Source Version Support Description
Comparison with Open-Source RabbitMQ
High Availability
Use Limits
TDMQ for RabbitMQ-Related Concepts
Regions
Related Cloud Services
Billing
Billing Overview
Pricing
Billing Example
Convert to Monthly Subscription from Hourly Postpaid
Renewal
Viewing Consumption Details
Overdue Payments
Refund
Getting Started
Getting Started Guide
Step 1: Preparations
Step 2: Creating a RabbitMQ Cluster
Step 3: Configuring a Vhost
Step 4: Using the SDK to Send and Receive Messages
Step 5: Querying a Message
Step 6: Deleting Resources
User Guide
Usage Process Guide
Configuring the Account Permission
Creating a Cluster
Configuring a Vhost
Connecting to the Cluster
Managing Messages
Configure Advanced Feature
Managing the Cluster
Viewing Monitoring Data and Configuring Alarm Policy
Use Cases
Use Instructions of Use Cases
RabbitMQ Client Use Cases
RabbitMQ Message Reliability Use Cases
Usage Instructions for MQTT Protocol Supported by RabbitMQ
Migrate Cluster
Migrating RabbitMQ to Cloud
Step 1. Purchasing a TDMQ Instance
Step 2: Migrating Metadata to the Cloud
Step 3: Enabling Dual Read-Write
API Reference (Managed Edition)
API Overview
API Reference (Serverless Edition)
History
Introduction
API Category
Making API Requests
Relevant APIs for RabbitMQ Serverless PAAS Capacity
RabbitMQ Serverless Instance Management APIs
Data Types
Error Codes
SDK Documentation
SDK Overview
Spring Boot Starter Integration
Spring Cloud Stream Integration
Java SDK
Go SDK
Python SDK
PHP SDK
Security and Compliance
Permission Management
Network Security
Deletion Protection
Change Records
CloudAudit
FAQs
Service Level Agreement
Contact Us

High Availability

PDF
Mode fokus
Ukuran font
Terakhir diperbarui: 2026-01-04 14:53:46
TDMQ for RabbitMQ provides multi-dimensional high-availability capabilities, such as cross-AZ deployment and data persistence, effectively enhancing the stability and disaster recovery capabilities of the message service.

Cluster-Level High Availability

Cluster Type
High-Availability Capability
Description
Managed Edition
Cross-AZ deployment
When you purchase a TDMQ for RabbitMQ Managed Edition cluster in a region that has more than 2 availability zones (AZs), you can deploy the cluster across 2 to 3 AZs. This way, the nodes can be evenly distributed across these AZs. This deployment method ensures that the cluster remains operational even if a single AZ becomes unavailable.
Serverless Edition
Clusters are automatically deployed across multiple AZs at the underlying layer without requiring manual AZ selection. Cluster nodes are automatically distributed across these AZs, ensuring service continuity if a single AZ fails and providing IDC-level disaster recovery.

Data High Availability

Cluster Type
High-Availability Capability
Description
Managed Edition
Mirrored queue
Multi-node deployments support enabling mirrored queues, which can be configured for multi-replica synchronization.
Mirrored queues can replicate messages across multiple nodes in a RabbitMQ cluster, ensuring that messages in the queue will not be lost if a node fails and maintaining service availability.
Serverless Edition
Data persistence with a three-replica configuration
Clusters support data persistence with three replicas by default. Combining persistent storage with multi-node redundancy ensures that business data is protected from loss and service continuity is maintained in all scenarios.


Bantuan dan Dukungan

Apakah halaman ini membantu?

masukan