Amazon SNS vs deepstream.io
This Amazon SNS vs deepstream.io comparison was created based on reviews from developers and our best attempts to perform analysis by looking at documentation and other publicly available resources.
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Take our APIs for a spinAmazon SNS | deepstream.io | |
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Getting started and developer experience | ||
Time to "hello world" Reviewed by 3+ independent developers Ratings were given based on the average amount of time it takes to sign up to a new account and publish the first message. | 4 / 5 5 = <30 min | 4 / 5 5 = <30 min |
Demos / Tutorials A selection of online demos and tutorials so you can test and see the code in action. Explore Ably's tutorials for our pub/sub messaging platform | ||
Documentation Reviewed by 3+ independent developers Explore Ably's documentation for our pub/sub messaging platform | 4 / 5 Getting started guides / 5 Information architecture and developer journey / 5 API reference documentation / 5 Readability, design and navigation / 5 Quality of code / 5 Breadth and quality of tutorials / 5 "The Amazon documentation is comprehensive and, unlike many other products, clearly states what you can use Amazon SNS for. Several pages are dedicated to explaining in detail how FIFO topics (which provide superior quality of service) work. Overall, the developer guide might not deserve its name since it’s mostly a product guide. Its primary focus is on explaining things conceptually and performing operations in the AWS console. There’s a limited number of code snippets embedded in the dev guide, and only in a couple of languages. Fortunately, the API documentation is very detailed, although it’s inconsistently presented across languages, and you won’t always find code snippets in your language of choice. The official tutorials are poor, only cover some basics, and focus almost entirely on the AWS console." | 4 / 5 Getting started guides / 5 Information architecture and developer journey / 5 API reference documentation / 5 Readability, design and navigation / 5 Quality of code / 5 Breadth and quality of tutorials / 5 The deepstream.io documentation is nicely written and features several components: GitHub, guides, tutorials, docs, blog, and miscellaneous info, such as FAQs. There’s a Getting Started guide using HTTP API, JavaScript Client API, and Java Client API, with code snippets throughout. The API reference is detailed for each SDK and information architecture is pretty nice. Most sections of the documentation are well cross-linked; however, the navigation experience could be improved, especially around the API reference – some links return 404. Also, some documentation pages need to be revamped. The documentation provides tutorials for most deepstream.io features but unfortunately, there’s no demos. The documentation for the core features (data-sync, records, auth, permissions, events, rpc, etc.) is well written, but could be more detailed. |
Dashboard or dev console Reviewed by 3+ independent developers Sign up for free and explore Ably's pub/sub messaging platform | 4 / 5 Ease of use / 5 Stats and reports / 5 Functionality / 5 "Getting started with the SNS console as a new user can be a confusing and slightly painful experience (unless you look at the documentation in parallel). That’s because the website itself is clunky and not very easy to navigate. On the other hand, the console allows you to configure your pipeline down to the smallest details, so it’s hard to wrap up all the existing features in an easy to use package. The reporting available is good, but there’s always room for improvement. Analytics on message origin would be beneficial." | 4 / 5 Ease of use / 5 Stats and reports / 5 Functionality / 5 The deepstream.io dashboard might be a bit overwhelming to use or understand without documentation. The dashboard allows you to explore realtime data, configure permission, as well as view important metrics over time such as total messages used, active connections, cluster size, and CPU usage. The UI design is a bit outdated and could perhaps benefit from a revamp. |
SDKs Note: Only official SDKs were taken into account. Explore Ably's 25+ SDKs for our pub/sub messaging platform | 9 SDKs Including:
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API structure Reviewed by 3+ independent developers | 3.75 / 5 API consistency across SDKs / 5 Well structured / 5 Intuitive / 5 Simple / 5 "The API has a good naming convention, which makes it intuitive. Syntactically, the API structure is mostly uniform across different programming languages. The extensive API reference is an invaluable resource for getting started with Amazon SNS. It’s not the most straightforward service to use - for example, the opt-in process for e-mail and SMS notifications is cumbersome, and there aren’t enough debugging options." | 3 / 5 API consistency across SDKs / 5 Well structured / 5 Intuitive / 5 Simple / 5 deepstream.io tries to keep its APIs as consistent as possible across SDKs on the client side. However, the APIs are quite complex and counter-intuitive – too many methods make it not straightforward to perform operations in the same order. There’s a separate reference page for each API, which is not great. Developers need to take their time to go through the API reference to be able to use them properly. Documentation and tutorials are helpful in this regard. |
Amazon SNS | deepstream.io |
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"Hello world" code example | |
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Amazon SNS | deepstream.io | |
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Realtime features | ||
Pub/Sub messaging Pub/Sub is a design pattern that lets any number of publishers (producers) push messages to channels (also known as topics). Multiple subscribers (consumers) can subscribe to a channel to consume published messages. Explore Ably's pub/sub messaging implementation | ||
Message queues A message queue is a form of asynchronous service-to-service communication. Messages are stored on a queue until they are processed. Note that each message is only consumed by one subscriber (consumer). Explore Ably's message queues implementation | Limited Amazon SNS integrates with Amazon SQS (Simple Queue Service) in order to offer traditional message queue functionality. However, Amazon SNS does not provide message queues by itself. | |
Presence Presence enables you to track the online and offline status of devices and end-users in real time and to store their state. Essential for chat apps and multiplayer games. Explore Ably's presence implementation | ||
Message history Message history provides a means to retrieve previously published messages. For this to be possible, message data must be stored (persisted) somewhere. Explore Ably's message history implementation | ||
Connection state recovery (stream resume) In the case of unreliable network conditions, clients may suddenly disconnect.Connection state recovery ensures that when they reconnect, the data stream resumes exactly where it left off. Explore Ably' s connection state recovery implementation | N/A | |
Guaranteed message ordering Ordering ensures that messages are delivered to consumers in the same order that producers publish them. Explore Ably' s guaranteed message ordering implementation | Limited Amazon SNS guarantees message ordering via FIFO topics. However, ordering is only guaranteed when sending messages to Amazon SQS FIFO queues. | |
Exactly-once semantics Exactly-once is a system-wide data integrity guarantee that ensures each message is delivered to consumers exactly-once. Explore Ably' s idempotent publishing implementation | Limited Amazon SNS guarantees exactly-once semantics via FIFO topics. However, it only supports exactly-once when sending messages to Amazon SQS FIFO queues. | |
Message delta compression Message delta compression enables you to only send the changes from the previous message to subscribers each time there’s an update, instead of the entire message. Useful for use cases where there is a significant degree of similarity between successive messages. Explore Ably' s message delta compression implementation | ||
Native push notifications Native push notifications can be used to deliver messages even when clients are offline. Useful for geolocation updates or news alerts. Explore Ably's push notifications implementation | ||
Webhooks Webhooks provide a mechanism to get messages and other types of events (such as clients entering or leaving channels) pushed to your servers over HTTP. Explore Ably's webhooks implementation | Limited deepstream.io only uses webhooks for user authentication. | |
Serverless functions A serverless function is essentially an isolated, single-purpose piece of code that is only executed when it’ triggered by an event. For example, you can use serverless functions to send a welcome message to clients when they become present on chat channels. Note that serverless functions are usually fully managed by cloud vendors. Explore Ably's serverless functions implementation | Limited Can only invoke AWS Lambda Functions. Amazon SNS does not support other serverless platforms, such as Azure Functions or Google Cloud Functions. | |
Built-in integrations Which popular services & systems are Amazon SNS and deepstream.io integrated with? Explore Ably's library of integrations | Webhooks
Serverless functions
Streaming
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Serverless functions
Streaming
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Known limits and constraints Find out practical limits, such as the maximum message size, or the maximum number of concurrent connections. Explore the practical limits of the Ably pub/sub messaging platform | Publisher throughput Default quota of 20 SMS messages per second, and 10 email messages per second. Maximum message size 256 KB Maximum number of topics Default quota of 100.000 standard topics/account and 1.000 FIFO topics/account Maximum number of subscriptions Default quota of 12.500.000 subscriptions / standard topic and 100 subscriptions / FIFO topic | Publisher throughput 160.000-200.000 updates per second for Single Node 4,000,000,000 messages per hour for Cluster Maximum message size 1MB Maximum number of topics Unknown Maximum number of connections 250 for Single Node 750 for Cluster |
Supported development platforms, languages, open protocols and cloud models | ||
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Development platforms & operating systems Which popular development platforms and operating systems do Amazon SNS and deepstream.io support via official SDKs? Explore the development platforms supported by Ably |
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Languages Which popular programming languages do Amazon SNS and deepstream.io support via offical SDKs? Explore the programming languages supported by Ably |
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Open protocols Which popular open protocols do Amazon SNS and deepstream.io support? Explore the open protocols supported by Ably |
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Cloud models Which popular cloud models do Amazon SNS and deepstream.io support? |
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Global and reliable edge service | ||
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Edge messaging network with latency-based routing Latency-based routing ensures that clients are always routed to the nearest datacenter and point of presence. Explore Ably's routing mechanism that mitigates network and DNS issues | ||
Multi-region data replication (message durability) Multi-region data replication (storage) protects against single points of failure and ensures message data durability. Learn how Ably ensures message durability | Limited deepstream.io stores data in a combination of storage and cache layers for distribution across multiple nodes. However this platform also relies on shared devices such as a Redis for a message bus which itself (Redis layer) might become a point of failure and congestion. | |
Uptime SLAs Here’s what the most common SLAs amount to in terms of downtime over a calendar year: 99.999% SLA = 5m 15s downtime per year 99.99% SLA = 52m 35s downtime per year 99.95% SLA = 4h 22m 58s downtime per year 99.9% SLA = 8h 45m 56s downtime per year 99% SLA = 3d 15h 39m 29s downtime per year Source: https://uptime.is/ | 99.9% | No specific uptime SLA |
Quality of Service What QoS guarantees do Amazon SNS and deepstream.io provide natively? Explore Ably's availability and uptime guarantees for our pub/sub messaging platform |
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Security | ||
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API key authentication The simplest way to authenticate. Involves using private API keys that you can usually create and edit via a dashboard. Recommended to be used server-side, as private API keys shouldn’t be shared with untrusted parties. Explore Ably's implementation of API key authentication | ||
Token-based authentication Which popular token-based authentication mechanisms do Amazon SNS and deepstream.io support? Note that token-based authentication is usually the recommended strategy on the client-side as it provides more fine-grained access control and limits the risk of credentials being compromised. Explore Ably's implementation of token-based authentication |
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Configurable rules and permissions Which types of configurable rules and permissions do Amazon SNS and deepstream.io support? Explore Ably's configurable rules and permissions |
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Message encryption Which types of message encryption do Amazon SNS and deepstream.io support? Explore Ably's message encryption mechanisms |
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Formal certifications Which formal certifications are Amazon SNS and deepstream.io compliant with? Explore Ably's security and compliance for our pub/sub messaging platform |
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Pricing & Support | ||
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Free package What do the free packages offered by Amazon SNS and deepstream.io consist of? Explore Ably's free package for our pub/sub messaging platform | Each month, Amazon SNS offers the following for free, but only for Standard topics: - 1 million requests per month - 100 SMS notifications (sent to US phone numbers) -1.000 Email/JSON notifications - 100.000 HTTP/s notifications Note: with the exception of SMS messages, each 64KB chunk of delivered data is billed as 1 delivery. For example, a single notification with a 256KB payload is billed as four deliveries. | N/A |
Pricing model How are the Amazon SNS and deepstream.io pricing models calculated? Explore Ably's pricing model for our pub/sub messaging platform | Amazon SNS pricing is usage-based. Standard topics Once you deplete the free tier usage, the pricing is: - $0.50 per million Amazon SNS requests - $0.50 per million mobile push notifications - $2 per 100.000 email/JSON notifications - $0.60 per million HTTP/s notifications FIFO topics Pricing is calculated based on the number of published messages, the number of subscribed messages, and payload data: - publish requests are $0.30 per 1 million and $0.017 per GB of payload data - subscription messages are $0.01 per 1 million and $0.001 per GB of payload data Data transfer out of Amazon SNS is also charged. Pricing varies depending on the volume of data. For example, the first 1 GB per month is free, while the next 9.999 TB costs $0.09 per GB. Note that we have used US East (Ohio) as a reference point, but the pricing values differ across regions. | deepstream.io pricing is usage-based and calculated per hour. $0.052 per hour for a six-instance cluster on AWS EC2 t2.medium $0.008 per hour for a single node on cache.t2.medium It’s unclear how pricing is calculated for the Enterprise package. |
Enterprise package What benefits do the Amazon SNS and deepstream.io enterprise packages offer? Explore Ably's enterprise package for our pub/sub messaging platform | There is no Amazon SNS-specific enterprise package. | No Enterprise package is explicitly specified. However, it can be obtained by contacting the vendor directly. |
Community Reviewed by 3+ independent developers Explore Ably's community support channel for our pub/sub messaging platform | 4 / 5 Presence on multiple channels / 5 Size and activity / 5 “The global AWS community is present on a multitude of platforms, ranging from Stack Overflow and GitHub to Medium, Discourse, and even Reddit. Of course, the SNS community is significantly smaller in size, but objectively speaking, still pretty big. To be more specific, there seem to be a lot of people interested in the product. If you look at the AWS SNS forum, you can see that some of the threads have even 20.000 or 30.000 views. Unfortunately, there seem to be a lot of questions without an answer. You can find some cool stuff on GitHub, such as an extended client library for Java that enables you to publish messages bigger than 256 KB.“ | 5 / 5 Presence on multiple channels / 5 Size and activity / 5 deepstream.io has a strong community presence on various channels, such as Stack Overflow, Slack, GitHub, and Twitter. Their community is active, approachable, and helpful, and generates a lot of content: 110 repositories, 6.8K stars, and 383 forks on GitHub. Similarly, there are over 100 questions on Stack Overflow, 690 users on Slack and more than 1000 followers on Twitter. There are no events, and no community presence on Discourse, and Gitter. |
Support What types of support options and response times do Amazon SNS and deepstream.io offer? Explore Ably's support options for our pub/sub messaging platform | General support options Email, support ticket, phone, technical documentation, community support (e.g. forums or Stack Overflow). Enterprise support Amazon offers an enterprise package, which includes 24/7 phone, email, and chat access to Cloud Support Engineers, Infrastructure Event Management support, and a designated technical account manager. Response time < 24 hours for general guidance queries < 1 hour for Production system down incidents (only applies to Business & Enterprise support packages). | General Support Options Email, technical documentation, community support. Response time < 24 hours for non-technical queries < 1 hour for production system down incident (only applies to Enterprise support package) |
Disclaimer: The information presented for Amazon SNS was last updated on 30 November 2020 and on 28 February 2021 for deepstream.io. It is possible that some details may now be out of date. If you think that’s the case, please let us know so we can update them. In any case, you should not rely solely on the information presented here and must check with each provider before deciding to integrate or buy any of these two solutions.
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Ably is an enterprise-ready pub/sub messaging platform. We make it easy to efficiently design, quickly ship, and seamlessly scale critical realtime functionality delivered directly to end-users. Everyday we deliver billions of realtime messages to millions of users for thousands of companies.
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