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MQSeries.net Forum IndexGeneral IBM MQ SupportNumber of subscriptions in MQ 7.0

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manoj.pacha
PostPosted: Wed May 23, 2012 7:48 am Post subject: Number of subscriptions in MQ 7.0 Reply with quote

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Joined: 24 Apr 2011
Posts: 7

Can i know whether there is any restrictions on number of subscriptions in MQ 7.0 ? I tried to google, but was not lucky!
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Vitor
PostPosted: Wed May 23, 2012 7:53 am Post subject: Re: Number of subscriptions in MQ 7.0 Reply with quote

Grand High Poobah

Joined: 11 Nov 2005
Posts: 26093
Location: Texas, USA

manoj.pacha wrote:
Can i know whether there is any restrictions on number of subscriptions in MQ 7.0 ?


Nothing you're going to hit in any reasonable design.
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bruce2359
PostPosted: Wed May 23, 2012 8:36 am Post subject: Reply with quote

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Joined: 05 Jan 2008
Posts: 9469
Location: US: west coast, almost. Otherwise, enroute.

A simple test: write an infinite-loop application that continuously creates subscriptions.

Let us know the results.
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gbaddeley
PostPosted: Wed May 23, 2012 10:23 pm Post subject: Reply with quote

Jedi Knight

Joined: 25 Mar 2003
Posts: 2538
Location: Melbourne, Australia

Why do you ask? I imagine the limits in MQ would be greater than any realistic or practical design would require. I haven't looked in the product documentation, it could be in there somewhere.

The first contstraint would be available resources on the system (memory, disk, CPU, network) to handle such a workload.
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manoj.pacha
PostPosted: Thu May 24, 2012 7:42 am Post subject: Reply with quote

Newbie

Joined: 24 Apr 2011
Posts: 7

since i was not able to found in the documentation, i posted this question. Currently, we are using 700+ subscriptions in production and just wanted to make sure that there wont be any such restrictions. Since one of my colleague came back that there is restriction of 999, i was cautious
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bruce2359
PostPosted: Thu May 24, 2012 7:44 am Post subject: Reply with quote

Poobah

Joined: 05 Jan 2008
Posts: 9469
Location: US: west coast, almost. Otherwise, enroute.

manoj.pacha wrote:
... one of my colleague came back that there is restriction of 999, i was cautious

Seems to be an unusually, and painfully low number to me. Did your colleague offer a reference for 999? Or was it a SWAG?

Is 999 the total maximum subs per qmgr? Or max subs per topic?
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mqjeff
PostPosted: Thu May 24, 2012 7:47 am Post subject: Reply with quote

Grand Master

Joined: 25 Jun 2008
Posts: 17447

I do not believe there is a hard-coded limit that MQ will enforce.

There are a number of capacity kinds of limits that depend on the machine hosting the queue manager and etc.. The performance report for the platform hosting the queue manager is a reasonable place to start. It will help you understand what the performance team found on the hardware they had, which you can then compare to your hardware and your requirements.

The real limit you'll hit is not "the number of active subscriptions". What you'll run into is "the number of subscription messages being delivered simultaneously".

That is, it's entirely likely that I can register 10 Million subscriptions on a single queue manager to 1 million different topics on a single queue manager on a relatively small capacity machine. But if I then try to publish to all 1 million topics at once or even to say 1 thousand topics, everything will fall over.

That is, don't think about the number of registered publishers and subscribers. Think about the number of concurrent messages.
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PeterPotkay
PostPosted: Fri May 25, 2012 5:20 am Post subject: Reply with quote

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Joined: 15 May 2001
Posts: 7722

mqjeff wrote:
I do not believe there is a hard-coded limit that MQ will enforce.

There are a number of capacity kinds of limits that depend on the machine hosting the queue manager and etc.. The performance report for the platform hosting the queue manager is a reasonable place to start. It will help you understand what the performance team found on the hardware they had, which you can then compare to your hardware and your requirements.

The real limit you'll hit is not "the number of active subscriptions". What you'll run into is "the number of subscription messages being delivered simultaneously".

That is, it's entirely likely that I can register 10 Million subscriptions on a single queue manager to 1 million different topics on a single queue manager on a relatively small capacity machine. But if I then try to publish to all 1 million topics at once or even to say 1 thousand topics, everything will fall over.

That is, don't think about the number of registered publishers and subscribers. Think about the number of concurrent messages.

There's knowledge...and then there is wisdom.
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Peter Potkay
Keep Calm and MQ On
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Vitor
PostPosted: Fri May 25, 2012 5:23 am Post subject: Reply with quote

Grand High Poobah

Joined: 11 Nov 2005
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Location: Texas, USA

PeterPotkay wrote:
There's knowledge...and then there is wisdom.


And then there's answering ever question with "take a training class"
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bruce2359
PostPosted: Fri May 25, 2012 5:47 am Post subject: Reply with quote

Poobah

Joined: 05 Jan 2008
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Location: US: west coast, almost. Otherwise, enroute.

But I do appreciate curiosity. "What's the maximum..." is a good question. It's good to ponder limits as we architect solutions.

As a speculation, I'm going to... wisely guess that the total number (of whatever) would fit into one of WMQs ever-popular 32-bit signed binary fields.

I'll be waiting over here ...
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gbaddeley
PostPosted: Sun May 27, 2012 4:30 pm Post subject: Reply with quote

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Joined: 25 Mar 2003
Posts: 2538
Location: Melbourne, Australia

bruce2359 wrote:
But I do appreciate curiosity. "What's the maximum..." is a good question. It's good to ponder limits as we architect solutions.

As a speculation, I'm going to... wisely guess that the total number (of whatever) would fit into one of WMQs ever-popular 32-bit signed binary fields.

I'll be waiting over here ...

Or WMQs ever-popular 999,999,999 maximum number....
Quote:
Since one of my colleague came back that there is restriction of 999, i was cautious

I would be high cautious of the sense of humour of your colleague.
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bruce2359
PostPosted: Sun May 27, 2012 6:34 pm Post subject: Reply with quote

Poobah

Joined: 05 Jan 2008
Posts: 9469
Location: US: west coast, almost. Otherwise, enroute.

gbaddeley wrote:

I would be high cautious of the sense of humour of your colleague.

Their sense of humor, too.
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zpat
PostPosted: Sun May 27, 2012 11:14 pm Post subject: Reply with quote

Jedi Council

Joined: 19 May 2001
Posts: 5866
Location: UK

Why do Americans drop the “u” when they spell words like neighbour, colour, and humour, but leave it in other words like contour and velour?


The American Declaration of Independence (or as it was known in Britain “Fine, See If We Care”) was followed by immensely difficult years for the newly-formed US government. Up to that point the erstwhile colonies had imported all letters of the alphabet from Britain, but in an attempt to undermine the prestige and name of the newly-formed USA in 1776 the British banned all trans-Atlantic trade in the letter U. The Americans were determined to keep the U in pride of place in their new nation’s name and so made sacrifices elsewhere, salvaging non-essential “u”s from words like “honour”, “harbour” and “elephaunt” (a usage that eventually became adopted back in Britain too) to keep the new national sobriquet intact. As the blockade continued patriotic mums became “moms” and farmers exchanged their ploughs for plows while ukulele players took up the banjo. Eventually however the masses complained of this hand-to-moth existence, and there was even talk of a second revoltion so that by winter 1789 the Fonding Fathers had to face up to the possibility of becoming a Nited States of America. But as grim preparations were made to make do without the letter U altogether and George Washington prepared a sombre State of the Onion address a French schooner, L’Ululation, carrying several tons of fresh letter “u”s wrapped in the finest contoured velour broke the British blockade of the ports. The Americans fell on the vowel-rich cargo and the letter flooded back into the New World. But the years of shortage had left their scars and American spelling was never the same again.

http://somekindofexplanation.blogspot.co.uk/2012/04/how-american-spelling-happened-and.html
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bruce2359
PostPosted: Mon May 28, 2012 4:58 am Post subject: Reply with quote

Poobah

Joined: 05 Jan 2008
Posts: 9469
Location: US: west coast, almost. Otherwise, enroute.

What, then, explains why Brits (and a limited number of other countries) drive on the wrong side of the road?
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exerk
PostPosted: Mon May 28, 2012 6:08 am Post subject: Reply with quote

Jedi Council

Joined: 02 Nov 2006
Posts: 6339

bruce2359 wrote:
What, then, explains why Brits (and a limited number of other countries) drive on the wrong side of the road?

Actually dear boy, it's the other way around...
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