4

I would like to be able to have my subscriber handling two different streams of messages. I am expecting there will be a MSMQ queue for each message type, but I don't see how to specify more than one InputQueue in the MsmqTransportConfig section in my .config file.

Here is the no-XML configuration for my subscriber:

        Configure.With(new[] { typeof(EventMessage), typeof(EventMessageHandler), typeof(NServiceBus.Unicast.Transport.CompletionMessage) })
            .CustomConfigurationSource(new UserConfigurationSource()
               .Register(() => new MsmqTransportConfig { InputQueue = "Subscriber1InputQueue", ErrorQueue = "error", NumberOfWorkerThreads = 1, MaxRetries = 5 }))
            .DefaultBuilder()
            .XmlSerializer()
            .MsmqTransport()
              .IsTransactional(true)
          .UnicastBus()
              .DoNotAutoSubscribe()
              .LoadMessageHandlers()
          .CreateBus()
          .Start();

EDIT: I seem to be getting different answers from different folks. Thanks everyone! I think I have the answer to my question and that is: A process using NServiceBus (whether publisher or subscriber) can only receive messages on a SINGLE queue. To me, this is an unnecessary limitation, and it's unfortunate that NServiceBus works this way. I don't want to have multiple processes for receiving messages, and I don't want to have them all going to the same queue. If there is a problem with a particular message handler, I would like to see only the error queue for that particular message type grow in size. I think it would allow for better visibility into what's going on in the system.

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  • +1 - this is an excellent question and is something I'm struggling with as well.
    – TrueWill
    Sep 13, 2011 at 15:36

3 Answers 3

3

haven't use a no-xml configuration yet, but with the config file it would look like:

<MsmqTransportConfig InputQueue="WorkerQueueForCurrentService" ErrorQueue="ErrorQueue" NumberOfWorkerThreads="1" MaxRetries="5"/>

<UnicastBusConfig>
    <MessageEndpointMappings>
        <add Messages="AssemblyName1" Endpoint="PublisherQueue1" />
        <add Messages="AssemblyName2.Message1, AssemblyName2" Endpoint="PublisherQueue2" />
        <add Messages="AssemblyName2.Message3, AssemblyName2" Endpoint="PublisherQueue2" />
    </MessageEndpointMappings>
</UnicastBusConfig>

so your worker queue for the current service is "WorkerQueueForCurrentService" and it subscribes to different messages that are published on the queues "PublisherQueue1" and "PublisherQueue2". i have included a sample for the subscription of a whole messageassembly (see add messages line 1) and for specific messages in a given messageassembly (see add messages line 2 and line 3).

Kristian kristensens answer is not correct. the input queue is relevant for every service that uses nservicebus. regardless of whether it's an publisher or an subscriber. a publisher receives subscription notices on the input queue and the subscriber sets the input queue as the destination queue for a subscription notice that is sent to the publisher.

if you want to programmatically subscribe to messages like mrnye says you would need a messageendpointmapping. so if you do bus.subscribe nservicebus looks into his messageendpointmappings and tries to extract the publisher queue name where this message gets published.

messageendpointmappings are used for both:
- the lookup of which messages gets published where
and
- the destination queue where messages are sent which you bus.send()

hope this clears some things up :-)

2
  • Thanks, hacktick. This does clear things up. There is one thing you said that I think I disagree with: "messageendpointmappings are used for ... the lookup of which messages gets published where". I think these are actually the endpoints/messagetypes for which the process wants to subscribe (whether auto or manual). I think this because I don't even have this defined for my publisher OR my subscriber service because I don't use the auto-subscribe mechanism, and I use my own ISubscriptionStorage implementation.
    – skb
    Dec 6, 2010 at 17:38
  • hi skb, "the lookup of which messages gets published where" refers to "if i want to subscribe to a message i do bus.subscribe(messagetype) and the nservicebus looks where this message is published. so that nservicebus knows where to send the subscription notice to". sorry for the unclear definition. Dec 7, 2010 at 15:24
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In NServiceBus, all messages come through a single queue. It is a 1:1 mapping between queues:processes. So with your DoNotAutoSubscribe(), you just manually subscribe to the messages you want, with the mappings in your app.config

e.g., to subscribe use the function after your config

_Bus.Subscribe<SomeMessage>();

I can't remember the syntax for the message mapping sorry

1

Have a look at Publish/Subscribe Configuration. The InputQueue is specified for the Publisher element and not for the subscriber. The latter adds the messages it's interested in the MessageEndpointMappings under UnicastBusConfig. If you're interested in two different streams just have to add elements under MessageEndpointMappings.

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  • I am really confused. :) I have been using MsmqTransportConfig to specify how my SUBSCRIBER gets messages... and it WORKS! I have update the question to reflect my configuration. Can you tell me why this works?
    – skb
    Dec 3, 2010 at 23:03
  • Now I have another question. Why is there no "ErrorQueue" value on the MessageEndPointMappings element? It seems like if there was an error on the subscriber when handling a message it wouldn't know where to put it. What I was hoping for was to have "MessageQueueA", "MessageQueueB", "MessageQueueC" and "ErrorQueueA", "ErrorQueueB", "ErrorQueueC" all corresponding to message types "TypeA", "TypeB", "TypeC" so that if a message failed to be processed 5 times (because of a bug on the subscriber), I could have another process to move the message from the "ErrorQueue*" to "MessageQueue*" later.
    – skb
    Dec 3, 2010 at 23:26
  • The MessageEndpointMappings specify where your publisher is located, so your subscriber knows where to send subscription messages to. When the subscription is set up, the Publisher will send the published message to the endpoint described in InputQueue (in your example "Subscriber1InputQueue"). If processing of this message fails that message will be moved to the Error Queue specified in your code above. Does that make sense? Dec 4, 2010 at 16:38
  • 1
    Skb - to achieve separate queues you will need a separate process for each message type.
    – Adam Fyles
    Dec 4, 2010 at 18:48

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