Skip to main content

Service Bus Topic - Automatic forward messages from a subscription to a topic

Windows Azure Service Bus Topic is a service that enables us to distribute the same messages to different consumers without having to know each consumer. The only think that we need to do is to know the topic name. Each consumer will need to create and connect to a different subscription. Each message added to topic will be forward to each subscription.
There are times when we need to forward a message from a subscription to another topic or queue. Until now we had to use a worker role that took the message from the subscription and adding it to the second topic.
From now, a subscription supports this great functionality, by default. We only need to set the name of the topic or queue of the Service Bus where we want to forward the message.
SubscriptionDescription description = new SubscriptionDescription("topic1","subscription1");
description.ForwardTo = "topic2";
SqlFilter filter = new SqlFilter("FW = true");
namespaceManager.CreateSubscription(description, filter);
In this setup, all the messages that have the property FW set to true will be send automatically from subscription1 to topic2.
MessagingFactory messageFactory =
    MessagingFactory.CreateFromConnectionString(connectionString);
MessageSender messageSender = messageFactory.CreateMessageSender("topic1");
BrokeredMessage message = new BrokeredMessage();
messageToSend.Properties.Add("FW", true);
messageSender.Send(message);
Don’t forget that the message is not automatically forward to the next topic. Because of this, if you write a unit test you will need to wait 5-10 seconds before checking the second subscription.
SubscriptionClient messageReceiver =
     messageFactory.CreateSubscriptionClient("topic2", "subscription1");
BrokeredMessage message = messageReceiver.Receive(new TimeSpan(0, 0, 5));
We saw how easy is to forward a message from one subscription to another topic. We don’t need a consumer for a subscription or something similar. This is a great feature that permit us to define workflows using Service Bus Topic.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Windows Docker Containers can make WIN32 API calls, use COM and ASP.NET WebForms

After the last post , I received two interesting questions related to Docker and Windows. People were interested if we do Win32 API calls from a Docker container and if there is support for COM. WIN32 Support To test calls to WIN32 API, let’s try to populate SYSTEM_INFO class. [StructLayout(LayoutKind.Sequential)] public struct SYSTEM_INFO { public uint dwOemId; public uint dwPageSize; public uint lpMinimumApplicationAddress; public uint lpMaximumApplicationAddress; public uint dwActiveProcessorMask; public uint dwNumberOfProcessors; public uint dwProcessorType; public uint dwAllocationGranularity; public uint dwProcessorLevel; public uint dwProcessorRevision; } ... [DllImport("kernel32")] static extern void GetSystemInfo(ref SYSTEM_INFO pSI); ... SYSTEM_INFO pSI = new SYSTEM_INFO(

Azure AD and AWS Cognito side-by-side

In the last few weeks, I was involved in multiple opportunities on Microsoft Azure and Amazon, where we had to analyse AWS Cognito, Azure AD and other solutions that are available on the market. I decided to consolidate in one post all features and differences that I identified for both of them that we should need to take into account. Take into account that Azure AD is an identity and access management services well integrated with Microsoft stack. In comparison, AWS Cognito is just a user sign-up, sign-in and access control and nothing more. The focus is not on the main features, is more on small things that can make a difference when you want to decide where we want to store and manage our users.  This information might be useful in the future when we need to decide where we want to keep and manage our users.  Feature Azure AD (B2C, B2C) AWS Cognito Access token lifetime Default 1h – the value is configurable 1h – cannot be modified

ADO.NET provider with invariant name 'System.Data.SqlClient' could not be loaded

Today blog post will be started with the following error when running DB tests on the CI machine: threw exception: System.InvalidOperationException: The Entity Framework provider type 'System.Data.Entity.SqlServer.SqlProviderServices, EntityFramework.SqlServer' registered in the application config file for the ADO.NET provider with invariant name 'System.Data.SqlClient' could not be loaded. Make sure that the assembly-qualified name is used and that the assembly is available to the running application. See http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=260882 for more information. at System.Data.Entity.Infrastructure.DependencyResolution.ProviderServicesFactory.GetInstance(String providerTypeName, String providerInvariantName) This error happened only on the Continuous Integration machine. On the devs machines, everything has fine. The classic problem – on my machine it’s working. The CI has the following configuration: TeamCity .NET 4.51 EF 6.0.2 VS2013 It see