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I have an Azure Function with an input binding to an Event Hub.

public static async Task Run(TraceWriter log, string eventHubMessage)

When the function is triggered, how many messages does it receive per execution by default?

Is it 1 execution = 1 message?

I have read the documentation and understand you can set these properties in the function's host.json file:

"eventHub": {
  // The maximum event count received per receive loop. The default is 64.
  "maxBatchSize": 64,
  // The default PrefetchCount that will be used by the underlying EventProcessorHost.
  "prefetchCount": 256
}

Does maxBatchSize mean I will receive 64 messages in 1 execution?

2 Answers 2

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By default it's going to be 1 by 1 processing, but you can do batches too. Change the signature of your function to

public static async Task Run(TraceWriter log, string[] eventHubMessages)

(if you change the name like I did, rename the binding parameter too)

Reference github issue.

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@Mikhail is correct. I'd just like to add the following:

  1. If you use the default EventHub-Trigger C# template, the Function created will process 1 message per execution.

  1. If you need each execution to process in batches, change the following:

    a. In function.json, add the property "cardinality":"many" as shown here.

    b. In run.csx, modify Function signature and process messages in a loop, e.g.,

    public static async Task Run(TraceWriter log, string[] eventHubMessages) { foreach(string message in eventHubMessages) { // process messages } }

  2. The host.json configuration you specified in the question allows you to experiment with the correct batch size and prefetch buffer to meet the needs of your workflow.

Additional comments:

  1. Under the Consumption Plan, a Function is currently allowed a max default 5-minute execution time (configurable up to 10 mins --Added on 11/30/2017). You should experiment with the maxBatchSize and prefetchCount setting to ensure that a typical execution of the batch will complete within the timeframe.

  1. The prefetchCount should be 3-4 times the maxBatchSize.

  1. Each Function host instance is backed by a single EventProcessorHost (EPH). EPH uses a checkpointing mechanism to mark the last successfully processed message. A Function execution could terminate prematurely due to uncaught exceptions in the Function code host crashing, timeout or partition lease lost, resulting in an unsuccessful checkpoint. When the Function execution restarts again, the batch retrieved will have messages from the last known checkpoint. Setting a very high value for maxBatchSize will also mean that you must re-process a large batch. EventHub guarantees at-least-once delivery but not at-most-once delivery. Azure Functions will not attempt to change that behavior. If having only unique messages is a priority, you will need to handle de-duplication in your downstream workflows.
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  • Thanks a lot, Ling. Very helpful.
    – Chris
    May 18, 2017 at 9:02
  • Why did you strike-out the part about uncaught exceptions causing unsuccessful checkpoint? If there is an exception thrown - does this mean that the message batch is simply discarded? Nov 14, 2017 at 14:08
  • Kuba, yes. We recommend that customers handle the exception themselves.
    – Ling Toh
    Nov 14, 2017 at 15:19
  • So if an AF depends on some temporarily-down service (i.e. database) there is no straightforward way to redo the message? Nov 14, 2017 at 15:26
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    Encapsulate your Function processing code in a try-catch block and write the message that could not be processed to another message broker, e.g ServuceBus, EventHub, storage queue. Handle those messages out-of-band or if it's a known common use-case, create another Function to handle those messages.
    – Ling Toh
    Nov 14, 2017 at 15:52

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