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Azure Service Bus Topology Basics
Azure Service Bus is a transport layer comprises of messaging entities. Learn what is Topology in messaging world and how N-Service bus makes life easy by giving built-in configurations for creating topologies.
Queues offer First In, First Out (FIFO)
message delivery to one or more competing consumers. That is, receivers typically receive and process messages in the order in which they were added to the queue
.
You can create queues using the Azure portal, PowerShell, CLI, or Resource Manager templates
. Then, send and receive messages using clients written in C#, Java, Python, JavaScript, PHP, and Ruby
.
Topic is just like a virtual queue where messages are pushed and get broad-casted to multiple receivers.
Subscription has one virtual input queue via that it receives a specific message and executes the receivers.
Topics and subscriptions provide a one-to-many
form of communication in a publish and subscribe pattern. It’s useful for scaling to large numbers of recipients.
Once you send a message to a Queue
and if there is any Function
listening to the queue gets triggered and they execute the function.
You can treat these kind of messages as command
.
When you have an event
that has to be consumed by multiple systems
. Then we should consider using Pub/Sub pattern. It helps you to create loosely coupled, scalable architecture.
There is a Topic
few subscribers are listening to that topic with some filter rule. Then if you publish an event to that Topic
. Then subscribers will receive the event if the rules are satisfied.
Request/Reply
pattern is also treated as Producer/Consumer
pattern. If you are working with distributed architecture including cloud. Then it is difficult to do synchronous actions. However, using Request/Reply pattern you can work just like synchronous operation. Example: Suppose you have UI says create order and once order is created you must show order-id in the UI. We will use Azure Function and Azure Service Bus in order to Achieve this.
You will create Azure Function-1
to trigger by Http
request. Then it will send a message
to the Queue
and you will write another Azure Function-2
to get triggered by the Queue & execute the use case. However, once the Function-2
is done it will reply back
to the Function-1
. Finally the result will be returned back to the UI/Client.
Below is the pseudo code for above example:
[HttpGet("orders/create")]
public async Task<IActionResult> CreateOrder(Order order) {
const result = await requestReplyService.Request();
return Ok(result);
}
Request/Reply
is not the same as Request/Response
. Request/Reply is usually associated with asynchronous
messages while Request/Response with the web
.
For Request/Reply
to work, both the sender and the receiver require a designated queue. There is a dedicated handler and receiver for a message Request/Reply.
Messaging topology is a specific arrangement of the messaging entities, such as queues, topics, subscriptions, and rules. Azure Service Bus transport operates on a topology created on the broker. Topology handles exchanging messages between endpoints , by creating and configuring Azure Service Bus entities.
Azure Service Bus Topology one has to create manually. If you are using N-Service Bus then you get 2 built-in topologies out of the box.
- EndpointOrientedTopology
- ForwardingTopology (recommended👍)
Both topologies create a single input queue per endpoint and implement Publish-Subscribe mechanism. No default topology is set by the Azure Service Bus transport. Topology has to be explicitly configured using configuration API.
Learn more about all Topologies here.. Pre-built topology is ForwardingTopology
.
When a publisher raises an event, it is published to the publisher topic. Then the subscription entities filter events using the associated rules. Finally, the subscriber endpoint pulls events for processing.
The example below demonstrates a publisher
called Publisher
and a subscriber
called Subscriber
. Publisher can raise two events, EventA
and EventB
. The Subscriber subscribes to both events and two subscription entities are created, one per event type. Each subscription entity filters out events using a rule associated with the subscription.
I don’t prefer this topology because In order to subscribe to an event, the subscriber must know the publishing endpoint’s name, causing coupling between publisher and subscriber.
The forwarding topology defines a queue
per endpoint
and a shared topic
to do the publishing
. The ForwardingTopology
was introduced to take advantage of the broker nature of the Azure Service Bus and to leverage its native capabilities.
Azure Service Bus has facility to forward a event from a Subscription
to the Queue
. We will use this technique to setup this topology.
In above example Subscriptions
are created under topic bundle
with one subscription entity per subscribing endpoint. Each subscription contains multiple rules; there’s one rule per event type that the subscribing endpoint is interested in. This enables a complete decoupling between publishers and subscribers. All messages received by subscription are forwarded to the input queue of the subscriber.
For N-Service Bus this is the recommended option for all new projects.
bundle-1
has Subscriptions
across the endpoints and each Subscription has Rules
. Rules are the filters defined by the subscribers and once the Rule satisfied then only message arrives to the subscriber. Whenever, receiver defines the filter in the source code then only the rules are created.
📦Topics
└ 📂bundle-1
│ └ 📂Subscribers
│ │ ├ 📂Subscriber.Endpoint1
│ │ │ └ 📂Rules
│ │ │ │ └ 📜$default 👈FalseFilter Rule 1=0
│ │ └ 📂Subscriber.Endpoint2
│ │ │ └ 📂Rules
│ │ │ │ ├ 📜$default
│ │ │ │ └ 📜only-prime 👈Custom Rule
Whenever message will comes to a Topic that runs to the rules of each subscriber of the endpoint. And if the message has prime number then it will only go to Endpoint2
only-prime
subscriber.
So this arrangement of Topic, Subscription, Queue and Rules are called Forwarding Topology.
Azure Concept | N-Service Bus Concept |
---|---|
Topic | End Point |
Azure Function | Message Handler |
N-Service bus has enableInstaller
method once you call it. Then N-Service Bus creates Forwarding Topology and does below for a given endpoint:
- Creates a
Topic
with namebundle
. - Creates
Subscription
for thattopic
. - Creates default Rule in the message of the subscription with default condition
FalseFilter Rule
i.e.1=0
. So that message will not satisfy this rule by default any all events will not arrive to this endpoint. - Creates a input queue for the endpoint. Subscription forwards the message to the
Input Queue
of theendpoint
once Rules get satisfied.
endpoint
is N-Service Bus concept that is coupled to Azure Service Bus Queue
. Using endpoint
you can either send or receive messages.
Important
N-Service Bus is not able to create the topology when it is hosted on the Azure Function as of now. Learn how you can do by your own topology setup in Azure Function here
Get the connection string and open the connection string on the Azure Explorer.
You can download the Service Bus Explorer
an open source windows UI that helps us to visualize the Topologies.
Connect to your Azure Service Bus Namespace by using connection string.
Note: N-Service Bus helps us to retrieve the message and search for subscriber and invoke the handle method of the Handler. All of this code is already written in N-Service Bus. That helps a lot when you are working with Azure Service Bus Transport. I recommend using N-Service Bus.
Thanks for reading my article till end. I hope you learned something special today. If you enjoyed this article then please share to your friends and if you have suggestions or thoughts to share with me then please write in the comment box.
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