Event Brokers
An event broker allows you to connect your running assistant to other services that process the data coming in from conversations. The event broker publishes messages to a message streaming service, also known as a message broker, to forward Rasa Events from the Rasa server to other services.
Format
All events are streamed to the broker as serialized dictionaries every time
the tracker updates its state. An example event emitted from the default
tracker looks like this:
The event
field takes the event's type_name
(for more on event
types, check out the events docs).
Pika Event Broker
The example implementation we're going to show you here uses Pika , the Python client library for RabbitMQ.
Adding a Pika Event Broker Using the Endpoint Configuration
You can instruct Rasa to stream all events to your Pika event broker by adding an event_broker
section to your
endpoints.yml
:
A comprehensive list of all arguments that can be customized in the endpoints.yml
file can be found in the reference documentation.
Rasa will automatically start streaming events when you restart the Rasa server.
Adding SSL options to the Pika Event Broker
You can create RabbitMQ SSL options by setting the following required environment variables:
RABBITMQ_SSL_CLIENT_CERTIFICATE
: path to the SSL client certificateRABBITMQ_SSL_CLIENT_KEY
: path to the SSL client key
Please note that specifying 'RABBITMQ_SSL_CA_FILE' via environment variables is no longer supported, as well as
specifying RABBITMQ_SSL_KEY_PASSWORD
environment variable - please use a key file that is not encrypted instead.
Adding a Pika Event Broker in Python
Here is how you add it using Python code:
Implementing a Pika Event Consumer
You need to have a RabbitMQ server running, as well as another application
that consumes the events. This consumer to needs to implement Pika's
start_consuming()
method with a callback
action. Here's a simple
example:
Kafka Event Broker
While RabbitMQ is the default event broker, it is possible to use Kafka as the main broker for your events. Rasa uses the confluent-kafka library, a Kafka client written in Python. You will need a running Kafka server.
Partition Key
Rasa's Kafka producer can optionally be configured to partition messages by conversation ID.
This can be configured by setting partition_by_sender
in the endpoints.yml
file to True.
By default, this parameter is set to False
and the producer will randomly assign a partition to each message.
Authentication and Authorization
Rasa's Kafka producer accepts the following types of security protocols: SASL_PLAINTEXT
, SSL
, PLAINTEXT
and SASL_SSL
.
For development environments, or if the brokers servers and clients are located
into the same machine, you can use simple authentication with SASL_PLAINTEXT
or PLAINTEXT
.
By using this protocol, the credentials and messages exchanged between the clients and servers
will be sent in plaintext. Thus, this is not the most secure approach, but since it's simple
to configure, it is useful for simple cluster configurations.
SASL_PLAINTEXT
protocol requires the setup of the username
and password
previously configured in the broker server.
If the clients or the brokers in the kafka cluster are located in different
machines, it's important to use the SSL
or SASL_SSL
protocol to ensure encryption of data
and client authentication. After generating valid certificates for the brokers and the
clients, the path to the certificate and key generated for the producer must
be provided as arguments, as well as the CA's root certificate.
When using the SASL_PLAINTEXT
and SASL_SSL
protocols, the sasl_mechanism
can be
optionally configured and is set to PLAIN
by default. Valid values for sasl_mechanism
are: PLAIN
, GSSAPI
, OAUTHBEARER
, SCRAM-SHA-256
, and SCRAM-SHA-512
.
If GSSAPI
is used for the sasl_mechanism
, you will need to additionally install
python-gssapi and the necessary C library
Kerberos dependencies.
If the ssl_check_hostname
parameter is enabled, the clients will verify
if the broker's hostname matches the certificate. It's used on client's connections
and inter-broker connections to prevent man-in-the-middle attacks.
Adding a Kafka Event Broker Using the Endpoint Configuration
You can instruct Rasa to stream all events to your Kafka event broker by adding an event_broker
section to your
endpoints.yml
.
Using the SASL_PLAINTEXT
protocol the endpoints file must have the following entries:
Using the PLAINTEXT
protocol the endpoints file must have the following entries:
If using the SSL
protocol, the endpoints file should look like:
If using the SASL_SSL
protocol, the endpoints file should look like:
SQL Event Broker
It is possible to use an SQL database as an event broker. Connections to databases are established using SQLAlchemy, a Python library which can interact with many different types of SQL databases, such as SQLite, PostgreSQL and more. The default Rasa installation allows connections to SQLite and PostgreSQL databases. To see other options, please see the SQLAlchemy documentation on SQL dialects.
Adding a SQL Event Broker Using the Endpoint Configuration
To instruct Rasa to save all events to your SQL event broker, add an event_broker
section to your
endpoints.yml
. For example, a valid SQLite configuration
could look like this:
PostgreSQL databases can be used as well:
With this configuration applied, Rasa will create a table called events
on the database,
where all events will be added.
FileEventBroker
It is possible to use the FileEventBroker
as an event broker. This implementation will log events to a file in json format.
You can provide a path key in the endpoints.yml
file if you wish to override the default file name: rasa_event.log
.
Custom Event Broker
If you need an event broker which is not available out of the box, you can implement your own.
This is done by extending the base class EventBroker
.
Your custom event broker class must also implement the following base class methods:
from_endpoint_config
: creates anEventBroker
object from the endpoint configuration. (source code - see for signature).publish
: publishes a json-formatted Rasa event into an event queue. (source code - see for signature).is_ready
: determine whether or not the event broker is ready. (source code - see for signature).close
: close the connection to an event broker. (source code - see for signature).
Configuration
Put the module path to your custom event broker and the parameters you require in your endpoints.yml
: