My scenario for an Azure function:
- HTTP trigger.
- Based on HTTP parameters I want to read messages from an appropriate storage queue and return data back.
Here is the code of the function (F#):
let Run(request: string, customerId: int, userName: string, binder: IBinder) =
let subscriberKey = sprintf "%i-%s" customerId userName
let attribute = new QueueAttribute(subscriberKey)
let queue = binder.Bind<CloudQueue>(attribute)
() //TODO: read messages from the queue
The compilation succeeds (with proper NuGet references and opening packages), but I get the runtime exception:
Microsoft.Azure.WebJobs.Host:
Can't bind Queue to type 'Microsoft.WindowsAzure.Storage.Queue.CloudQueue'.
My code is based on an example from this article.
What am I doing wrong?
Update: now I realize I haven't specified Connection Name anywhere. Do I need a binding for the IBinder
-based queue access?
Update 2: my function.json
file:
{
"bindings": [
{
"type": "httpTrigger",
"name": "request",
"route": "retrieve/{customerId}/{userName}",
"authLevel": "function",
"methods": [
"get"
],
"direction": "in"
}
],
"disabled": false
}
I suspect that you're having versioning issues because you're bringing in a conflicting version of the Storage SDK. Instead, use the built in one (w/o bringing in any nuget packages). This code works with no project.json:
#r "Microsoft.WindowsAzure.Storage"
open Microsoft.Azure.WebJobs;
open Microsoft.WindowsAzure.Storage.Queue;
let Run(request: string, customerId: int, userName: string, binder: IBinder) =
async {
let subscriberKey = sprintf "%i-%s" customerId userName
let attribute = new QueueAttribute(subscriberKey)
let! queue = binder.BindAsync<CloudQueue>(attribute) |> Async.AwaitTask
() //TODO: read messages from the queue
} |> Async.RunSynchronously
This will bind to the default storage account (the one we created for you when your Function App was created). If you want to point to a different storage account, you'll need to create an array of attributes, and include a StorageAccountAttribute
that points to your desired storage account (e.g. new StorageAccountAttribute("your_storage")
). You then pass this array of attributes (with the queue attribute first in the array) into the BindAsync
overload that takes an attribute array. See here for more details.
However, if you don't need to do any sophisticated parsing/formatting to form the queue name, I don't think you even need to use Binder for this. You can bind to the queue completely declaratively. Here's the function.json and code:
{
"bindings": [
{
"type": "httpTrigger",
"name": "request",
"route": "retrieve/{customerId}/{userName}",
"authLevel": "function",
"methods": [
"get"
],
"direction": "in"
},
{
"type": "queue",
"name": "queue",
"queueName": "{customerId}-{userName}",
"connection": "<your_storage>",
"direction": "in"
}
]
}
And the function code:
#r "Microsoft.WindowsAzure.Storage"
open Microsoft.Azure.WebJobs;
open Microsoft.WindowsAzure.Storage.Queue;
let Run(request: string, queue: CloudQueue) =
async {
() //TODO: read messages from the queue
} |> Async.RunSynchronously