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Getting started with the Azure Queue Storage integration

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Azure Queue Storage is a service for storing large numbers of messages. The Aspire Azure Queue Storage Hosting integration provides methods to create Azure Queue Storage resources from code in your Aspire AppHost project.

In this introduction, you’ll see how to install and use the Aspire Azure Queue Storage integrations in a simple configuration. If you already have this knowledge, see Azure Queue Storage Hosting integration for full reference details.

To begin, install the Aspire Azure Storage Hosting integration in your Aspire AppHost project. This integration allows you to create and manage Azure Queue Storage resources from your Aspire hosting projects:

Aspire CLI — Adicionar pacote Aspire.Hosting.Azure.Storage
aspire add azure-storage

A CLI Aspire é interativa; escolhe o resultado apropriado quando solicitado:

Aspire CLI — Exemplo de saída
Select an integration to add:
> azure-storage (Aspire.Hosting.Azure.Storage)
> Other results listed as selectable options...

Next, in the AppHost project, create an Azure Queue Storage resource and pass it to the consuming client projects:

C# — AppHost.cs
var builder = DistributedApplication.CreateBuilder(args);
var queues = builder.AddAzureStorage("storage")
.AddQueues("queues");
var myService = builder.AddProject<Projects.MyService>()
.WithReference(queues);
// After adding all resources, run the app...
builder.Build().Run();

The preceding code adds an Azure Storage resource named storage to the AppHost project, adds a queue storage resource to it named queues, and passes the queue storage connection information to the consuming project.

To use Azure Queue Storage from your client applications, install the Aspire Azure Queue Storage client integration in your client project:

.NET CLI — Add Aspire.Azure.Storage.Queues package
dotnet add package Aspire.Azure.Storage.Queues

In the Program.cs file of your client-consuming project, call the AddAzureQueueServiceClient extension method to register a QueueServiceClient for use via the dependency injection container:

builder.AddAzureQueueServiceClient(connectionName: "queues");

Use injected Azure Queue Storage properties

Section titled “Use injected Azure Queue Storage properties”

In the AppHost, when you used the WithReference method to pass an Azure Queue Storage resource to a consuming client project, Aspire injects several configuration properties that you can use in the consuming project.

Aspire exposes each property as an environment variable named [RESOURCE]_[PROPERTY]. For instance, the Uri property of a resource called queues becomes QUEUES_URI.

Use the GetValue() method to obtain these environment variables in consuming projects:

C# — Obtain configuration properties
string queueUri = builder.Configuration.GetValue<string>("QUEUES_URI");

Add Azure Queue Storage resources in client code

Section titled “Add Azure Queue Storage resources in client code”

After adding the QueueServiceClient, you can retrieve the connection instance using dependency injection:

public class ExampleService(QueueServiceClient client)
{
// Use client...
}

For full details on using the client integration, see Azure Queue Storage Client integration.