Compare the Top Event Brokers that integrate with Netdata as of July 2025

This a list of Event Brokers that integrate with Netdata. Use the filters on the left to add additional filters for products that have integrations with Netdata. View the products that work with Netdata in the table below.

What are Event Brokers for Netdata?

Event brokers are middleware platforms that manage the flow of events between different systems or applications in an event-driven architecture (EDA). These brokers facilitate the decoupling of event producers and consumers by handling the publishing, routing, and consumption of events in real time. They allow systems to asynchronously process and respond to events such as data changes, user actions, or external triggers without direct interaction between the components. Event brokers are often used in microservices architectures, IoT ecosystems, and real-time data processing systems to enable efficient and scalable communication. Compare and read user reviews of the best Event Brokers for Netdata currently available using the table below. This list is updated regularly.

  • 1
    RabbitMQ

    RabbitMQ

    RabbitMQ

    RabbitMQ is lightweight and easy to deploy on-premises and in the cloud. It supports multiple messaging protocols. RabbitMQ can be deployed in distributed and federated configurations to meet high-scale, high-availability requirements. With tens of thousands of users, RabbitMQ is one of the most popular open-source message brokers. From T-Mobile to Runtastic, RabbitMQ is used worldwide at small startups and large enterprises. RabbitMQ is lightweight and easy to deploy on-premises and in the cloud. It supports multiple messaging protocols. RabbitMQ can be deployed in distributed and federated configurations to meet high-scale, high-availability requirements. RabbitMQ runs on many operating systems and cloud environments and provides a wide range of developer tools for most popular languages. Deploy with Kubernetes, BOSH, Chef, Docker and Puppet. Develop cross-language messaging with favorite programming languages such as Java, .NET, PHP, Python, JavaScript, Ruby, Go, etc.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 2
    Apache Kafka

    Apache Kafka

    The Apache Software Foundation

    Apache Kafka® is an open-source, distributed streaming platform. Scale production clusters up to a thousand brokers, trillions of messages per day, petabytes of data, hundreds of thousands of partitions. Elastically expand and contract storage and processing. Stretch clusters efficiently over availability zones or connect separate clusters across geographic regions. Process streams of events with joins, aggregations, filters, transformations, and more, using event-time and exactly-once processing. Kafka’s out-of-the-box Connect interface integrates with hundreds of event sources and event sinks including Postgres, JMS, Elasticsearch, AWS S3, and more. Read, write, and process streams of events in a vast array of programming languages.
  • 3
    Azure Service Bus
    Depend on Service Bus when you need highly reliable cloud messaging service between applications and services even when they’re offline. Available in every Azure region, this fully managed service eliminates the burdens of server management and licensing. Get more flexibility when brokering messaging between client and server with asynchronous operations along with structured first-in, first-out (FIFO) messaging and publish/subscribe capabilities. Leverage the power of asynchronous messaging patterns to reliably scale your enterprise applications. Integrate cloud resources such as Azure SQL Database, Azure Storage, and Web Apps with Service Bus messaging to get smooth operation under variable loads and the durability to survive intermittent failures. Improve availability by building messaging topologies with complex routing. Use Service Bus to deliver messages to multiple subscribers and fan out message delivery at scale to downstream systems.
    Starting Price: $0.05 per million operations
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