Best Message-Oriented Middleware for InfluxDB

Find and compare the best Message-Oriented Middleware for InfluxDB in 2025

Use the comparison tool below to compare the top Message-Oriented Middleware for InfluxDB on the market. You can filter results by user reviews, pricing, features, platform, region, support options, integrations, and more.

  • 1
    HiveMQ Reviews

    HiveMQ

    HiveMQ

    $0.34/hour
    66 Ratings
    See Software
    Learn More
    The HiveMQ Platform provides a scalable, reliable data backbone with an event-driven MQTT architecture. Here are a few highlights: 1. MQTT Broker: At the heart of the HiveMQ platform is a fully MQTT-compliant broker purpose-built for fast, reliable, bi-directional data movement between IoT devices and enterprise systems. 2. Edge Data Integration: HiveMQ Edge seamlessly integrates edge data by converting industrial protocols into standardized MQTT, enabling an interoperable IIoT infrastructure. 3. IoT Streaming Governance: Data Hub transforms data in flight, passing only the most relevant, contextualized data to cloud and enterprise systems. 4. UNS & IT/OT convergence Enabler: Commonly used as the backbone for Unified Namespace architectures and seamlessly connects OT devices with IT systems for full visibility and interoperability. 5. Distributed Data Intelligence: HiveMQ Pulse unifies and contextualizes data across the enterprise for smarter decisions exactly where they matter most. 6. Maximum Interoperability: Runs anywhere on-premises or in public or private clouds. Efficiently connects to streaming applications, databases and data lakes with a Java SDK to build your own 7. Scalability to Support Growth: Elastic scaling with automatic data balancing and smart message distribution. Proven benchmark of up to 200M active clients with 1.8B messages/hour 8. Business Critical Reliability: Zero message loss with persistence to disk and offline queuing. No single point of failure due to masterless cluster architecture and zero downtime upgrades
  • 2
    RabbitMQ Reviews
    RabbitMQ is a lightweight solution that can be effortlessly deployed both on-premises and in cloud environments. It is compatible with various messaging protocols, making it versatile for different use cases. Furthermore, RabbitMQ can be configured in distributed and federated setups, which cater to demanding scalability and high availability needs. With a vast user base, it stands out as one of the leading open-source message brokers available today. Organizations ranging from T-Mobile to Runtastic leverage RabbitMQ, showcasing its adaptability for both startups and large enterprises. Additionally, RabbitMQ is compatible with numerous operating systems and cloud platforms, offering a comprehensive suite of development tools for popular programming languages. Users can deploy RabbitMQ using tools like Kubernetes, BOSH, Chef, Docker, and Puppet, facilitating seamless integration into their existing workflows. Developers can also create cross-language messaging solutions using their preferred programming languages, such as Java, .NET, PHP, Python, JavaScript, Ruby, and Go, enhancing its utility across various projects.
  • 3
    Apache Kafka Reviews

    Apache Kafka

    The Apache Software Foundation

    1 Rating
    Apache Kafka® is a robust, open-source platform designed for distributed streaming. It can scale production environments to accommodate up to a thousand brokers, handling trillions of messages daily and managing petabytes of data with hundreds of thousands of partitions. The system allows for elastic growth and reduction of both storage and processing capabilities. Furthermore, it enables efficient cluster expansion across availability zones or facilitates the interconnection of distinct clusters across various geographic locations. Users can process event streams through features such as joins, aggregations, filters, transformations, and more, all while utilizing event-time and exactly-once processing guarantees. Kafka's built-in Connect interface seamlessly integrates with a wide range of event sources and sinks, including Postgres, JMS, Elasticsearch, AWS S3, among others. Additionally, developers can read, write, and manipulate event streams using a diverse selection of programming languages, enhancing the platform's versatility and accessibility. This extensive support for various integrations and programming environments makes Kafka a powerful tool for modern data architectures.
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