Crates.io | azservicebus |
lib.rs | azservicebus |
version | 0.20.3 |
source | src |
created_at | 2023-01-10 22:38:14.427436 |
updated_at | 2024-08-14 01:39:04.880019 |
description | An unofficial AMQP 1.0 rust client for Azure Service Bus |
homepage | https://github.com/minghuaw/azservicebus |
repository | https://github.com/minghuaw/azservicebus |
max_upload_size | |
id | 755887 |
size | 766,200 |
An unofficial and experimental AMQP 1.0 client for Azure Service Bus.
This crate follows a similar structure to the dotnet sdk (Azure.Messaging.ServiceBus) and provides more features than azure_messaging_servicebus. The list of supported Service Bus features can be found below (Supported Service Bus Features). A complete comparison of supported features in REST client and AMQP 1.0 client can be found here.
Because this crate currently lives in a fork of azure-sdk-for-rust
and GitHub doesn't seem to
allow raising issue in forks. Please use the upstream AMQP 1.0 crate
fe2o3-amqp GitHub repo should you have any
issue/feature request.
Below are two examples of sending and receiving messages from a queue. More examples can be found in the examples
use azservicebus::prelude::*;
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> {
// Replace "<NAMESPACE-CONNECTION-STRING>" with your connection string,
// which can be found in the Azure portal and should look like
// "Endpoint=sb://<NAMESPACE>.servicebus.windows.net/;SharedAccessKeyName=<KEY_NAME>;SharedAccessKey=<KEY_VALUE>"
let mut client = ServiceBusClient::new_from_connection_string(
"<NAMESPACE-CONNECTION-STRING>",
ServiceBusClientOptions::default()
)
.await?;
// Replace "<QUEUE-NAME>" with the name of your queue
let mut sender = client.create_sender(
"<QUEUE-NAME>",
ServiceBusSenderOptions::default()
)
.await?;
// Create a batch
let mut message_batch = sender.create_message_batch(Default::default())?;
for i in 0..3 {
// Create a message
let message = ServiceBusMessage::new(format!("Message {}", i));
// Try to add the message to the batch
if let Err(e) = message_batch.try_add_message(message) {
// If the batch is full, an error will be returned
println!("Failed to add message {} to batch: {:?}", i, e);
break;
}
}
// Send the batch of messages to the queue
match sender.send_message_batch(message_batch).await {
Ok(()) => println!("Batch sent successfully"),
Err(e) => println!("Failed to send batch: {:?}", e),
}
sender.dispose().await?;
client.dispose().await?;
Ok(())
}
use azservicebus::prelude::*;
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> {
// Replace "<NAMESPACE-CONNECTION-STRING>" with your connection string,
// which can be found in the Azure portal and should look like
// "Endpoint=sb://<NAMESPACE>.servicebus.windows.net/;SharedAccessKeyName=<KEY_NAME>;SharedAccessKey=<KEY_VALUE>"
let mut client = ServiceBusClient::new_from_connection_string(
"<NAMESPACE-CONNECTION-STRING>",
ServiceBusClientOptions::default()
)
.await?;
// Replace "<QUEUE-NAME>" with the name of your queue
let mut receiver = client.create_receiver_for_queue(
"<QUEUE-NAME>",
ServiceBusReceiverOptions::default()
)
.await?;
// Receive messages from the queue
// This will wait indefinitely until at least one message is received
let messages = receiver.receive_messages(3).await?;
for message in &messages {
let body = message.body()?;
println!("Received message: {:?}", std::str::from_utf8(body)?);
// Complete the message so that it is removed from the queue
receiver.complete_message(message).await?;
}
receiver.dispose().await?;
client.dispose().await?;
Ok(())
}
Below shows supported Service Bus features
Feature | Supported |
---|---|
Send messages to queue/topic | Yes |
Receive messages from queue/subscription | Yes |
Session receivers for queue/subscription | Yes |
Prefetch | Yes |
Schedule messages | Yes |
Cancel scheduled messages | Yes |
Peek messages | Yes |
Complete messages | Yes |
Abandon messages | Yes |
Defer messages | Yes |
Receive deferred messages | Yes |
Dead-letter messages | Yes |
Receive dead-lettered messages | Yes |
Batching | Yes |
Manage rule filters for subscriptions | Yes |
Lock renewal | Yes |
Transaction | Not yet |
Processor | Not yet |
Session processor | Not yet |
Communication between a client application and an Azure Service Bus namespace is encrypted using
Transport Layer Security (TLS). The TLS implementation is exposed to the user through the
corresponding feature flags (please see the feature flag section below). The user should ensure
either the rustls
or native-tls
feature is enabled, and one and only one TLS implementation
is enabled. Enabling both features is not supported and will result in a compile-time error.
The native-tls
feature is enabled by default, and it will use the native-tls
crate to
provide TLS support. The rustls
feature will use the rustls
crate and webpki-roots
crate
to provide TLS support.
This crate supports the following feature flags:
Feature | Description |
---|---|
default |
Enables "native-tls" feature |
rustls |
Enables the use of the rustls crate for TLS support |
native-tls |
Enables the use of the native-tls crate for TLS support |
transaction |
This is reserved for future support of transaction and is not implemented yet |
WebAssembly is supported. Please see the wasm32_in_browser
example
for more details.
1.75.0
License: MIT