I've used a topology where small networked clusters (an enclave) each had a gateway broker that was networked with the gateway brokers of other enclaves. We configured the gateways so that only certain specific destinations were allowed to forward through the gateways to the other enclaves, based on the business logic of our system.
Tim On Dec 10, 2017 5:13 PM, "Hadrian Zbarcea" <hzbar...@gmail.com> wrote: > Erwin, > > The NOB topology is very used, from my experience the most used in the > past years especially for redundancy and high availability. I regularly > deploy network of brokers with tens of brokers. It could go even higher, > but there's rarely enough traffic to justify that. > > The topology is also dependent on your messaging apps. Star (hub/spoke) is > very popular, full mesh is good with few brokers (advisories will kill > you). Line I rarely useful. I prefer dynamic topologies. > > I hope this helps, > Hadrian > > > On 12/10/2017 05:06 PM, Erwim Dondorp wrote: > >> Hello, >> >> I've implemented ActiveMQ with a distributed application using the >> Network-of-Brokers (see >> http://activemq.apache.org/networks-of-brokers.html). >> Now I'm trying to figure out whether Network-of-Brokers is a common >> pattern; >> and on which scale it is actually used with other applications out there. >> >> Can you please boast about your Network-of-ActiveMQ-brokers? >> For me, a rough indication about the tolopogy (star, mesh, line, etc) and >> the number of brokers will do. >> >> thx! >> Erwin >> >> >> >> -- >> Sent from: http://activemq.2283324.n4.nabble.com/ActiveMQ-User-f2341805 >> .html >> >>