Azure Queue Storage - Client integration
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Client integration
Section titled “Client integration”To get started with the Aspire Azure Queue Storage client integration, install the 📦 Aspire.Azure.Storage.Queues NuGet package:
dotnet add package Aspire.Azure.Storage.Queues#:package Aspire.Azure.Storage.Queues@*<PackageReference Include="Aspire.Azure.Storage.Queues" Version="*" />Add Azure Queue Storage client
Section titled “Add Azure Queue Storage client”In the Program.cs file of your client-consuming project, call the AddAzureQueueServiceClient extension method to register a QueueServiceClient for dependency injection. The method takes a connection name parameter:
builder.AddAzureQueueServiceClient("queues");You can then retrieve the QueueServiceClient instance using dependency injection:
public class ExampleService(QueueServiceClient client){ // Use client...}Properties of the Azure Queue Storage resources
Section titled “Properties of the Azure Queue Storage resources”When you use the WithReference method to pass an Azure Queue Storage resource from the AppHost project to a consuming client project, several properties are available to 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.
Azure Queue Storage
Section titled “Azure Queue Storage”The Azure Queue Storage resource exposes the following connection properties:
| Property Name | Description |
|---|---|
Uri | The queue service endpoint |
In emulator mode, an additional property is available:
| Property Name | Description |
|---|---|
ConnectionString | The full connection string for the emulator |
Azure Queue Storage queue
Section titled “Azure Queue Storage queue”The Azure Queue Storage queue resource inherits all properties from its parent storage and adds:
| Property Name | Description |
|---|---|
QueueName | The queue name |
For example, if you reference a Queue Storage resource named queues in your AppHost project, the following environment variables will be available in the consuming project:
QUEUES_URI
Configuration
Section titled “Configuration”The Azure Queue Storage integration provides multiple options to configure the QueueServiceClient.
Use a connection string
Section titled “Use a connection string”When using a connection string from the ConnectionStrings configuration section, provide the name when calling AddAzureQueueServiceClient:
builder.AddAzureQueueServiceClient("queues");Two connection formats are supported:
Service URI
Section titled “Service URI”The recommended approach is to use a ServiceUri, which works with the Credential property. If no credential is configured, the DefaultAzureCredential is used:
{ "ConnectionStrings": { "queues": "https://{account_name}.queue.core.windows.net/" }}Connection string
Section titled “Connection string”Alternatively, an Azure Storage connection string can be used:
{ "ConnectionStrings": { "queues": "AccountName=myaccount;AccountKey=myaccountkey" }}Use configuration providers
Section titled “Use configuration providers”The Azure Queue Storage integration supports Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration. It loads the AzureStorageQueuesSettings and QueueClientOptions from configuration using the Aspire:Azure:Storage:Queues key. Example appsettings.json:
{ "Aspire": { "Azure": { "Storage": { "Queues": { "DisableHealthChecks": true, "DisableTracing": false, "ClientOptions": { "Diagnostics": { "ApplicationId": "myapp" } } } } } }}Use named configuration
Section titled “Use named configuration”The Azure Queue Storage integration supports named configuration for multiple instances:
{ "Aspire": { "Azure": { "Storage": { "Queues": { "queue1": { "DisableHealthChecks": true, "ClientOptions": { "Diagnostics": { "ApplicationId": "myapp1" } } }, "queue2": { "DisableTracing": true, "ClientOptions": { "Diagnostics": { "ApplicationId": "myapp2" } } } } } } }}Use the connection names when calling AddAzureQueueServiceClient:
builder.AddAzureQueueServiceClient("queue1");builder.AddAzureQueueServiceClient("queue2");Use inline delegates
Section titled “Use inline delegates”You can also pass the Action<AzureStorageQueuesSettings> delegate to set up options inline:
builder.AddAzureQueueServiceClient( "queues", settings => settings.DisableHealthChecks = true);You can also configure the QueueClientOptions:
builder.AddAzureQueueServiceClient( "queues", configureClientBuilder: clientBuilder => clientBuilder.ConfigureOptions( options => options.Diagnostics.ApplicationId = "myapp"));Client integration health checks
Section titled “Client integration health checks”By default, Aspire integrations enable health checks for all services. The Azure Queue Storage integration:
- Adds the health check when
DisableHealthChecksisfalse, which attempts to connect to the Azure Queue Storage. - Integrates with the
/healthHTTP endpoint, which specifies all registered health checks must pass for app to be considered ready to accept traffic.
Observability and telemetry
Section titled “Observability and telemetry”Logging
Section titled “Logging”The Azure Queue Storage integration uses the following log categories:
Azure.CoreAzure.Identity
Tracing
Section titled “Tracing”The Azure Queue Storage integration emits the following tracing activities using OpenTelemetry:
Azure.Storage.Queues.QueueClient
Metrics
Section titled “Metrics”The Azure Queue Storage integration currently doesn’t support metrics by default due to limitations with the Azure SDK.