Service Bus for Windows Server 1.1 Overview

 

Applies To: Service Bus for Windows Server 1.1

Service Bus for Windows Server is a set of installable components that provides the messaging capabilities of Microsoft Azure Service Bus on Windows Server. Service Bus for Windows Server enables you to build, test, and run loosely-coupled, message-driven applications in self-managed environments and on developer computers.

The purpose of Service Bus for Windows Server is to provide similar capabilities across Microsoft Azure and Windows Server, and to enable flexibility in developing and deploying applications. It is built on the same architecture as the Service Bus cloud service and provides scale and resiliency capabilities. The programming model, Visual Studio support, and APIs exposed for developing applications are symmetric to that for the cloud service making it easier to develop applications for either, and switch between the two. Going forward, the experience for managing entities on the Azure Management Portal will be consistent across the on-premises and cloud versions.

Scenarios for Service Bus for Windows Server

  • Develop on-premises, deploy in the cloud. This common scenario helps cloud application developers to develop and test applications on-premises in a development environment that can be installed on a desktop or laptop. To support cloud developers, the Service Bus for Windows Server can be installed on a client operating system (Windows 7 or 8, 64-bit) and use SQL Express editions (SQL Express 2008 R2 SP1 or higher). In addition, the Service Bus for Windows Server can be configured to use local accounts (rather than domain accounts) for development on a computer that is not domain joined, or is offline.

  • Flexible Deployment. Software vendors who offer their solutions to a wide range of customers want to be able to deploy their solution either as a cloud application, or distributed to their customers for deployment on-premises. Similarly, enterprises want the choice of where to deploy the application. To support this scenario, the Service Bus for Windows Server offers symmetry with the Microsoft Azure Service Bus (the Microsoft PaaS offering), as well as support for IaaS. Symmetry starts with the supported feature set (brokered messaging only for this release), the same SDK, and support for a configurable connection string that enables customers to change their deployment option without rebuilding the solution.

  • On-premises publish-subscribe. For enterprises developing services and applications, the Service Bus for Windows Server offers a Messaging Oriented Middleware (MOM) layer, with a rich publish-subscribe feature set. To support this scenario, the Service Bus for Windows Server offers features such as high availability, scalability, Windows token-based authentication (support for Active Directory), and more.

Messaging Features in Service Bus for Windows Server

Service Bus for Windows Server supports the same brokered messaging feature set as Microsoft Azure Service Bus. Service Bus queues offer reliable message storage and retrieval with a choice of protocols and APIs.

Service Bus Queues

Service Bus queues provide load leveling by allowing the message receiver to process messages at its own pace. In addition, Service Bus queues provide load balancing by having multiple competing receivers that accept messages from the same queue. For more information about Service Bus queues, see How to Use Service Bus Queues.

Service Bus Topics

In addition to queue features, Service Bus topics and subscriptions provide rich publish-subscribe capabilities that enable multiple, concurrent subscribers to independently retrieve filtered or unfiltered views of the published message stream. For more information about Service Bus topics, see How to Use Service Bus Topics/Subscriptions.

Deployment and Manageability Options in Service Bus for Windows Server

Service Bus for Windows Server supports two methods of deployment, supporting different scenarios.

  • Service Bus runtime only (standalone): In this deployment scenario, there is a single administrator who deploys and manages the Service Bus farm, and creates namespaces. All management operations are supported with PowerShell commands, and there is no user interface (with the exception of the Service Bus configuration wizard for initial configuration).

  • Service Bus integration with Windows Azure Pack: In this deployment scenario, the administrator manages Service Bus using the Windows Azure Pack portal, deploying and managing the actual farm (cloud). Service Bus tenants also use the portal to create namespaces and messaging entities. The portal experience is similar to the one in Azure.

Use the Service Bus standalone deployment (no portal) when there is a single tenant who manages Service Bus resources using PowerShell cmdlets and the Service Bus APIs.

Use the Service Bus integration with Windows Azure Pack in situations in which you want a management experience similar to the cloud, or when you want to expose some of the management experience to your tenants. Service Bus integration with the Windows Azure Pack also supports the management of multiple Service Bus farms (clouds) from a single portal. This is sometimes the case with large enterprises or hosters who want to offer resources (messaging) to multiple customers (different teams in an enterprise or for hosters, different companies).

Deciding whether to deploy Service Bus in a managed or unmanaged environment impacts the deployment steps. For more information, see the Getting Started with Service Bus for Windows Server 1.1 guide.

Note

Service Bus for Windows Server 1.0 offered only unmanaged Service Bus. Windows Azure Pack integration is a new addition to the Service Bus for Windows Server 1.1 release.

For more information about Windows Azure Pack, go here.

The following table captures the main differences between the two alternatives.

Area

Service Bus runtime only

Service Bus integration with Windows Azure Pack

Service Bus deployment

Setup using WebPI.

Configuration using the configuration wizard or PowerShell.

  • Setup using WebPI

  • Configuration using the configuration wizard or PowerShell.

  • When creating a farm, specify the credentials used by the management portal.

Create a Service Bus offering (a plan)

Not supported.

  • Using the Windows Azure Pack administrators portal, create a plan which offers Service Bus (next to other resources such as VM management).

Namespace creation

Farm administrator creates namespaces and assign owners.

  • Once an administrator creates a plan, tenants can sign in to the Windows Azure Pack tenant portal and create subscriptions using the plan.

  • Once a subscription is created, a tenant can create a Service Bus namespace using the Windows Azure Pack portal.

Service Bus entities management

Using the Service Bus SDK (.NET or REST based).

  • Once a namespace is created, tenants can use the Windows Azure Pack portal to create Service Bus entities (queues, topics, and subscriptions), similar to Azure.

  • Note: You can still use the Service Bus SDK as well.

Supporting multiple farms

Each farm is managed separately.

  • A single Windows Azure Pack portal can support multiple Service Bus for Windows Server farms.

  • Tenants can create multiple subscriptions using resources from multiple farms all within a single Windows Azure Pack tenant portal.

Platform Features in Service Bus for Windows Server

The Service Bus for Windows Server provides a messaging platform for enterprise applications with a multi-host farm topology that provides both scale and high availability. The platform is based on Windows Server and Microsoft SQL Server. Developers that want a lightweight development environment can install the Service Bus for Windows Server on Windows client operating systems (64-bits) and Microsoft SQL Express.

You can deploy the Service Bus for Windows Server in a hosted environment such as Azure Virtual Machines using a hosted Microsoft SQL Server database, or Microsoft Azure SQL Database (IaaS). For more information about supported platforms, see Supported Topologies1.

Comparing Service Bus for Windows Server with Microsoft Azure Service Bus

Although symmetry exists between Service Bus for Windows Server and Microsoft Azure Service Bus in APIs and messaging features, there are differences between the two Service Bus products.

  • With respect to manageability, in a hosted Platform As A Service (Microsoft Azure) environment, the PaaS vendor (Microsoft) provides the management. With Service Bus for Windows Server, the local administrator deploys, secures, scales, and monitors the Service Bus for Windows Server farm.

  • In both Microsoft Azure and Windows Server, Service Bus requires access tokens for authorizing access to its messaging entities. Both share the Shared Access Secrets (SAS) authentication scheme for Service Bus namespaces as well as entities (queues and topics). However, in Windows Azure, Service Bus also supports the Microsoft Azure Active Directory Access Control (also known as Access Control Service or ACS), which is not available on Windows Server. However, on Windows Server, Service Bus supports Windows integrated authentication (domain joined users and Active Directory user groups), which are not available in Azure.

  • While quotas and other runtime settings are fixed in the Microsoft Azure Service Bus, with the Service Bus for Windows Server an administrator can change those settings and customize the Service Bus for Windows Server farm.

  • The addressing schema is fixed in the Microsoft Azure Service Bus. In other words, all the endpoints have the Service Bus postfix added to the URL. With the Service Bus for Windows Server, you can use the fully qualified domain name (FQDN) of the hosts, or a mapped DNS entry representing your service.