Hexeract
The 6-dimension Rust messaging framework: Mediator, Bus, Outbox, Sagas, Scheduler, Request/Reply.
Hexeract is a server-side messaging framework written in Rust. It unifies in-process mediator handlers, external message bus transports, transactional outbox and inbox, long-running sagas, scheduled messages and request/reply RPC in a single coherent SDK. The framework relies on Rust's type system and procedural macros to provide compile-time guarantees in place of runtime reflection.
Hexeract is sponsored by Nubster.
Status
🚀 v0.3.0: Mediator, middlewares and #[handler] macro shipped. The in-process mediator dispatches commands, queries and notifications through a type-safe, reflection-free registry. Two built-in middlewares (TracingMiddleware, TimeoutMiddleware) cover observability and dispatch deadlines. The #[handler] attribute proc-macro generates trait implementations and emits link-time metadata for MediatorBuilder::verify_handlers() to catch missing registrations in CI. Outbox MVP and Bus RabbitMQ remain stable from v0.1.0 and v0.2.0.
| Feature | v0.1.0 | v0.2.0 | v0.3.0 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Transactional outbox (PostgreSQL) | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
Worker poll loop with SKIP LOCKED |
✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| Fluent builder API | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
hexeract outbox CLI |
✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
Bus core (Message, BusEnvelope, Transport, Handler<M>) |
⏳ | ✅ | ✅ |
RabbitMQ backend (lapin connection pool, publish, consume, retry) |
⏳ | ✅ | ✅ |
Topology types (Exchange, Queue, Binding, RoutingKey) |
⏳ | ✅ | ✅ |
hexeract bus declare / peek / purge CLI |
⏳ | ✅ | ✅ |
In-process CQRS mediator (send, query, publish) |
⏳ | ⏳ | ✅ |
Built-in TracingMiddleware and TimeoutMiddleware |
⏳ | ⏳ | ✅ |
#[handler] attribute macro with verify_handlers() |
⏳ | ⏳ | ✅ |
| Polyglot bus (NATS, Kafka, SQS) | ⏳ v0.9.0 | ⏳ v0.9.0 | ⏳ v0.9.0 |
| Sagas, Scheduler, Request and Reply | ⏳ later | ⏳ later | ⏳ later |
See the CHANGELOG for the detailed history.
Quick start
Outbox (PostgreSQL)
Add the umbrella crate with the outbox-postgres feature to your Cargo.toml:
[]
= { = "0.3", = ["outbox-postgres"] }
Power users who prefer a strict SemVer per crate can keep depending on
hexeract-outbox,hexeract-outbox-postgres,hexeract-bus,hexeract-bus-rabbitmqetc. directly.
Declare a domain event, a handler and wire a worker:
use Duration;
use HandlerContext;
use ;
use ;
use ;
use CancellationToken;
use Uuid;
;
# async
See docs/tutorial/getting-started.md and the runnable examples/ for the full integration walkthrough.
Bus (RabbitMQ)
Add the umbrella crate with the bus-rabbitmq feature to your Cargo.toml:
[]
= { = "0.3", = ["bus-rabbitmq"] }
Declare a domain message, a handler and wire a publisher plus a worker:
use ;
use ;
use HandlerContext;
use ;
use CancellationToken;
use Uuid;
;
# async
In production, declare your topology once at service startup (or out of band through the CLI). The
topology::ensure_topologyhelper and the CLI live for dev convenience; do not call them on the hot path.
The hexeract bus CLI provisions and inspects a broker without writing ad-hoc lapin scripts:
# 1. Apply a typed topology described in TOML.
# 2. Peek the first messages of a queue (non-destructive, requeues each delivery).
# 3. Drop every message in a queue (gated by an explicit safety flag).
See the runnable crates/hexeract-bus-rabbitmq/examples/03_bus_pubsub.rs for an end-to-end pub/sub against a real RabbitMQ container, and crates/hexeract-cli/examples/topology.toml for the topology file format consumed by hexeract bus declare.
Mediator (in-process)
Add the umbrella crate with the mediator feature to your Cargo.toml:
[]
= { = "0.3", = ["mediator"] }
Register a command handler and dispatch through the mediator:
use ;
use MediatorBuilder;
;
# async
Queries (Mediator::query) and notifications (Mediator::publish) follow the same pattern. Notifications fan out to every handler registered for the type in registration order; failures are aggregated so siblings keep running. Wire your own [Middleware] implementations through MediatorBuilder::with_middleware to add tracing, timeouts or any cross-cutting behavior around every dispatch.
Why Hexeract
Building event-driven services in Rust today means manually wiring a broker client, an outbox table, a job queue, a workflow library and a saga state machine together. Hexeract closes that gap with a single SDK that covers the full surface area while keeping each feature independently usable:
- Mediator, dispatch commands to handlers in-process, type-safe and reflection-free.
- Bus, send messages to RabbitMQ, NATS, Kafka or AWS SQS through a unified transport abstraction.
- Outbox, save business state and outgoing messages atomically in a single database transaction.
- Sagas, orchestrate long-running workflows with persisted state, retries and compensations.
- Scheduler, schedule messages for later delivery, with cron, delays, exponential backoff retries and dead-letter handling.
- Request/Reply, perform RPC-style synchronous calls on top of an asynchronous bus via correlation identifiers.
The bet behind Hexeract is that Rust's compile-time guarantees turn the outbox pattern from a vigilance discipline into something the type system enforces.
What Hexeract is not
To stay focused, the following are explicitly out of scope:
- Not a service mesh. No automatic mTLS or network policies between services. Use Linkerd or Istio.
- Not a broker. Hexeract is a client; you keep your existing RabbitMQ, NATS or Kafka.
- Not a standalone workflow engine. Sagas live inside your services, not in a dedicated cluster. Use Temporal or Airflow when you need that shape.
- Not an event streaming engine. No real-time stream processing. Use Kafka Streams or Apache Flink.
Audience
- Rust backend teams building microservices who want a cohesive messaging toolkit instead of stacking incompatible crates.
- Developers migrating to Rust looking for a cohesive messaging SDK.
- Polyglot teams with part of their stack moving to Rust and the need to stay interoperable on a shared bus alongside their Node, Python or Go services.
Contributing
Contributions are welcome. Please read CONTRIBUTING.md first for the workflow and conventions, and CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md for the community guidelines. For vulnerability reports, see SECURITY.md. For open-ended questions and design conversations, use GitHub Discussions.
Stability and versioning are documented in docs/SEMVER_POLICY.md and docs/MSRV_POLICY.md.
License
Licensed under either of:
- Apache License, Version 2.0 (LICENSE-APACHE)
- MIT License (LICENSE-MIT)
at your option.
Contribution
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual-licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.
See CONTRIBUTING.md for details, including the Contributor License Agreement (CLA).
Copyright © Nubster.