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Azure ServiceBus in .NET Core 2.0

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1 Sep 2017CPOL 8.7K   1   3
How to use Azure Service Bus in .NET Core. Continue reading...

Problem

How to use Azure Service Bus in .NET Core.

Solution

Create a class library and add NuGet package: Microsoft.Azure.ServiceBus.

Add a class to encapsulate settings:

C#
public class AzureQueueSettings
    {
        public AzureQueueSettings(string connectionString, string queueName)
        {
            if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(connectionString))
                throw new ArgumentNullException("connectionString");

            if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(queueName))
                throw new ArgumentNullException("queueName");

            this.ConnectionString = connectionString;
            this.QueueName = queueName;
        }

        public string ConnectionString { get; }
        public string QueueName { get; }
    }

Add a class to wrap functionality of sending messages to queue:

C#
public class AzureQueueSender<T> : IAzureQueueSender<T> where T : class
    {
        public AzureQueueSender(AzureQueueSettings settings)
        {
            this.settings = settings;
            Init();
        }

        public async Task SendAsync(T item, Dictionary<string, object> properties)
        {
            var json = JsonConvert.SerializeObject(item);
            var message = new Message(Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes(json));

            if (properties != null)
            {
                foreach (var prop in properties)
                {
                    message.UserProperties.Add(prop.Key, prop.Value);
                }
            }

            await client.SendAsync(message);
        }

        private AzureQueueSettings settings;
        private QueueClient client;

        private void Init()
        {
            client = new QueueClient(
                     this.settings.ConnectionString, this.settings.QueueName);
        }
    }

Add a class to wrap functionality of receiving messages from the queue:

C#
public void Receive(
            Func<T, MessageProcessResponse> onProcess,
            Action<Exception> onError,
            Action onWait)
        {
            var options = new MessageHandlerOptions(e =>
            {
                onError(e.Exception);
                return Task.CompletedTask;
            })
            {
                AutoComplete = false,
                MaxAutoRenewDuration = TimeSpan.FromMinutes(1)
            };

            client.RegisterMessageHandler(
                async (message, token) =>
                {
                    try
                    {
                        // Get message
                        var data = Encoding.UTF8.GetString(message.Body);
                        T item = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<T>(data);

                        // Process message
                        var result = onProcess(item);

                        if (result == MessageProcessResponse.Complete)
                            await client.CompleteAsync(message.SystemProperties.LockToken);
                        else if (result == MessageProcessResponse.Abandon)
                            await client.AbandonAsync(message.SystemProperties.LockToken);
                        else if (result == MessageProcessResponse.Dead)
                            await client.DeadLetterAsync(message.SystemProperties.LockToken);

                        // Wait for next message
                        onWait();
                    }
                    catch (Exception ex)
                    {
                        await client.DeadLetterAsync(message.SystemProperties.LockToken);
                        onError(ex);
                    }
                }, options);
        }

Now you can use these wrapper classes to send message:

C#
var settings = new AzureQueueSettings(
                connectionString: config["ServiceBus_ConnectionString"],
                queueName: config["ServiceBus_QueueName"]);

            var message = new Message { Text = "Hello Queue" };

            IAzureQueueSender<Message> sender = new AzureQueueSender<Message>(settings);
            await sender.SendAsync(message);

And receive messages:

C#
IAzureQueueReceiver<Message> receiver =
new AzureQueueReceiver<Message>(settings);
            receiver.Receive(
                message =>
                {
                    Console.WriteLine(message.Text);
                    return MessageProcessResponse.Complete;
                },
                ex => Console.WriteLine(ex.Message),
                () => Console.WriteLine("Waiting..."));

NOTE: The sample code also includes wrappers for topics and subscriptions.

Discussion

The sample code will require you to setup Azure account and Service Bus. Instructions for these could be found here.

License

This article, along with any associated source code and files, is licensed under The Code Project Open License (CPOL)



Comments and Discussions

 
QuestionMore complicated question Pin
Alexey KK7-Sep-17 1:34
professionalAlexey KK7-Sep-17 1:34 
AnswerRe: More complicated question Pin
User 10432647-Sep-17 2:39
User 10432647-Sep-17 2:39 
GeneralMy vote of 4 Pin
Alexey KK7-Sep-17 1:04
professionalAlexey KK7-Sep-17 1:04 
Looks your articles are structured simplier than Azure docs

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