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Are competing consumers of an Azure ServiceBus Queue / Subscription meant to round-robin?

I'm looping back to a question I asked a while back, and doing a little more testing.

There, I understood that a positive PrefetchCount was causing one client to have an affinity to all messages (unless load increases sufficiently for that client to be too busy to handle everything).

It actually looks like setting the SubscriptionClient's MaxConcurrentCalls to anything other than 1 results in only one client receiving all messages under low load.

Setting the MaxConcurrentCalls = 1 suddenly causes alternative messages to be sent to competing consumers. (Note that I'm not setting a PrefetchCount at all here)

Is this expected? We're scaling out, and I need a client to handle multiple messages concurrently, but 90% of the time, only one instance of a service is handling everything....the others are idle.

FWIW, Here's a sample project on Github based off the stock-standard MS documentation

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When setting MaxConcurrentCalls to a single message without a prefetch (PrefetchCount) you're asking a broker to provide just a single message to the requesting consumer. Assuming there are multiple messages on the broker, each consumer will get one message to process and receive another message once the previous message is completed, and so on. Depending on the latency and processing speed, messages will be distributed among the consumers as those request them. There will be no affinity or round-robin assignment. First come first served is what's happening.

Is this expected?

Yes.

We're scaling out, and I need a client to handle multiple messages concurrently, but 90% of the time, only one instance of a service is handling everything....the others are idle.

Setting up PrefetchCount and MaxConcurrentCalls that are not too greedy will give you some distribution, but if you're looking for an even distribution among instances of your consumer, that won't happen. That was already answered in the post you're referred to.

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  • It's a pity that I can't have even distribution(or really any distribution at all) at low load, whilst still setting MaxConcurrent to > 1 to cater for increased load during spikes (common in our environment). I'll leave it here, but the behavior with a MaxConcurrent == 1 definitely is truly round-robin when processing time < message frequency.. It behaves differently to a value of 2+ -- where one client (usually the first connected) gets all the messages.
    – Ive
    May 31, 2020 at 11:49

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