MessageQueue.Receive Method
Definition
Important
Some information relates to prerelease product that may be substantially modified before it’s released. Microsoft makes no warranties, express or implied, with respect to the information provided here.
Receives the first message in the queue, removing it from the queue.
Overloads
Receive() |
Receives the first message available in the queue referenced by the MessageQueue. This call is synchronous, and blocks the current thread of execution until a message is available. |
Receive(MessageQueueTransaction) |
Receives the first message available in the transactional queue referenced by the MessageQueue. This call is synchronous, and blocks the current thread of execution until a message is available. |
Receive(MessageQueueTransactionType) |
Receives the first message available in the queue referenced by the MessageQueue. This call is synchronous, and blocks the current thread of execution until a message is available. |
Receive(TimeSpan) |
Receives the first message available in the queue referenced by the MessageQueue and waits until either a message is available in the queue, or the time-out expires. |
Receive(TimeSpan, Cursor) |
Receives the current message in the queue, using a specified cursor. If no message is available, this method waits until either a message is available, or the time-out expires. |
Receive(TimeSpan, MessageQueueTransaction) |
Receives the first message available in the transactional queue referenced by the MessageQueue and waits until either a message is available in the queue, or the time-out expires. |
Receive(TimeSpan, MessageQueueTransactionType) |
Receives the first message available in the queue referenced by the MessageQueue. This call is synchronous, and waits until either a message is available in the queue, or the time-out expires. |
Receive(TimeSpan, Cursor, MessageQueueTransaction) |
Receives the current message in the queue, using a specified cursor. If no message is available, this method waits until either a message is available, or the time-out expires. |
Receive(TimeSpan, Cursor, MessageQueueTransactionType) |
Receives the current message in the queue, using a specified cursor. If no message is available, this method waits until either a message is available, or the time-out expires. |
Receive()
Receives the first message available in the queue referenced by the MessageQueue. This call is synchronous, and blocks the current thread of execution until a message is available.
public:
System::Messaging::Message ^ Receive();
public System.Messaging.Message Receive ();
member this.Receive : unit -> System.Messaging.Message
Public Function Receive () As Message
Returns
A Message that references the first message available in the queue.
Exceptions
An error occurred when accessing a Message Queuing method.
Examples
The following code example receives a message from a queue and outputs information about that message to the screen.
#using <system.dll>
#using <system.messaging.dll>
using namespace System;
using namespace System::Messaging;
// This class represents an object the following example
// sends to a queue and receives from a queue.
ref class Order
{
public:
int orderId;
DateTime orderTime;
};
/// <summary>
/// Provides a container class for the example.
/// </summary>
ref class MyNewQueue
{
public:
//*************************************************
// Sends an Order to a queue.
//*************************************************
void SendMessage()
{
// Create a new order and set values.
Order^ sentOrder = gcnew Order;
sentOrder->orderId = 3;
sentOrder->orderTime = DateTime::Now;
// Connect to a queue on the local computer.
MessageQueue^ myQueue = gcnew MessageQueue( ".\\myQueue" );
// Send the Order to the queue.
myQueue->Send( sentOrder );
return;
}
//*************************************************
// Receives a message containing an Order.
//*************************************************
void ReceiveMessage()
{
// Connect to the a queue on the local computer.
MessageQueue^ myQueue = gcnew MessageQueue( ".\\myQueue" );
// Set the formatter to indicate body contains an Order.
array<Type^>^p = gcnew array<Type^>(1);
p[ 0 ] = Order::typeid;
myQueue->Formatter = gcnew XmlMessageFormatter( p );
try
{
// Receive and format the message.
Message^ myMessage = myQueue->Receive();
Order^ myOrder = static_cast<Order^>(myMessage->Body);
// Display message information.
Console::WriteLine( "Order ID: {0}", myOrder->orderId );
Console::WriteLine( "Sent: {0}", myOrder->orderTime );
}
catch ( MessageQueueException^ )
{
// Handle Message Queuing exceptions.
}
// Handle invalid serialization format.
catch ( InvalidOperationException^ e )
{
Console::WriteLine( e->Message );
}
// Catch other exceptions as necessary.
return;
}
};
//*************************************************
// Provides an entry point into the application.
//
// This example sends and receives a message from
// a queue.
//*************************************************
int main()
{
// Create a new instance of the class.
MyNewQueue^ myNewQueue = gcnew MyNewQueue;
// Send a message to a queue.
myNewQueue->SendMessage();
// Receive a message from a queue.
myNewQueue->ReceiveMessage();
return 0;
}
using System;
using System.Messaging;
namespace MyProject
{
// This class represents an object the following example
// sends to a queue and receives from a queue.
public class Order
{
public int orderId;
public DateTime orderTime;
};
/// <summary>
/// Provides a container class for the example.
/// </summary>
public class MyNewQueue
{
//**************************************************
// Provides an entry point into the application.
//
// This example sends and receives a message from
// a queue.
//**************************************************
public static void Main()
{
// Create a new instance of the class.
MyNewQueue myNewQueue = new MyNewQueue();
// Send a message to a queue.
myNewQueue.SendMessage();
// Receive a message from a queue.
myNewQueue.ReceiveMessage();
return;
}
//**************************************************
// Sends an Order to a queue.
//**************************************************
public void SendMessage()
{
// Create a new order and set values.
Order sentOrder = new Order();
sentOrder.orderId = 3;
sentOrder.orderTime = DateTime.Now;
// Connect to a queue on the local computer.
MessageQueue myQueue = new MessageQueue(".\\myQueue");
// Send the Order to the queue.
myQueue.Send(sentOrder);
return;
}
//**************************************************
// Receives a message containing an Order.
//**************************************************
public void ReceiveMessage()
{
// Connect to the a queue on the local computer.
MessageQueue myQueue = new MessageQueue(".\\myQueue");
// Set the formatter to indicate body contains an Order.
myQueue.Formatter = new XmlMessageFormatter(new Type[]
{typeof(MyProject.Order)});
try
{
// Receive and format the message.
Message myMessage = myQueue.Receive();
Order myOrder = (Order)myMessage.Body;
// Display message information.
Console.WriteLine("Order ID: " +
myOrder.orderId.ToString());
Console.WriteLine("Sent: " +
myOrder.orderTime.ToString());
}
catch (MessageQueueException)
{
// Handle Message Queuing exceptions.
}
// Handle invalid serialization format.
catch (InvalidOperationException e)
{
Console.WriteLine(e.Message);
}
// Catch other exceptions as necessary.
return;
}
}
}
Imports System.Messaging
' This class represents an object the following example
' sends to a queue and receives from a queue.
Public Class Order
Public orderId As Integer
Public orderTime As DateTime
End Class
Public Class MyNewQueue
'
' Provides an entry point into the application.
'
' This example sends and receives a message from
' a qeue.
'
Public Shared Sub Main()
' Create a new instance of the class.
Dim myNewQueue As New MyNewQueue()
' Send a message to a queue.
myNewQueue.SendMessage()
' Receive a message from a queue.
myNewQueue.ReceiveMessage()
Return
End Sub
'
' Sends an Order to a queue.
'
Public Sub SendMessage()
' Create a new order and set values.
Dim sentOrder As New Order()
sentOrder.orderId = 3
sentOrder.orderTime = DateTime.Now
' Connect to a queue on the local computer.
Dim myQueue As New MessageQueue(".\myQueue")
' Send the Order to the queue.
myQueue.Send(sentOrder)
Return
End Sub
'
' Receives a message containing an Order.
'
Public Sub ReceiveMessage()
' Connect to the a queue on the local computer.
Dim myQueue As New MessageQueue(".\myQueue")
' Set the formatter to indicate the body contains an Order.
myQueue.Formatter = New XmlMessageFormatter(New Type() _
{GetType(Order)})
Try
' Receive and format the message.
Dim myMessage As Message = myQueue.Receive()
Dim myOrder As Order = CType(myMessage.Body, Order)
' Display message information.
Console.WriteLine(("Order ID: " + _
myOrder.orderId.ToString()))
Console.WriteLine(("Sent: " + _
myOrder.orderTime.ToString()))
Catch m As MessageQueueException
' Handle Message Queuing exceptions.
Catch e As InvalidOperationException
' Handle invalid serialization format.
Console.WriteLine(e.Message)
' Catch other exceptions as necessary.
End Try
Return
End Sub
End Class
Remarks
Use this overload to receive a message from a queue, or wait until there are messages in the queue.
The Receive method allows for the synchronous reading of a message, thereby removing it from the queue. Subsequent calls to Receive will return the messages that follow in the queue, or new, higher priority messages.
To read the first message in a queue without removing it from the queue, use the Peek method. The Peek method always returns the first message in the queue, so subsequent calls to the method return the same message unless a higher priority message arrives in the queue.
Use a call to Receive when it is acceptable for the current thread to be blocked while it waits for a message to arrive in the queue. Because this overload of the Receive method specifies an infinite time-out, the application might wait indefinitely. If the application processing should continue without waiting for the message, consider using the asynchronous method, BeginReceive.
The following table shows whether this method is available in various Workgroup modes.
Workgroup mode | Available |
---|---|
Local computer | Yes |
Local computer and direct format name | Yes |
Remote computer | No |
Remote computer and direct format name | Yes |
See also
Applies to
Receive(MessageQueueTransaction)
Receives the first message available in the transactional queue referenced by the MessageQueue. This call is synchronous, and blocks the current thread of execution until a message is available.
public:
System::Messaging::Message ^ Receive(System::Messaging::MessageQueueTransaction ^ transaction);
public System.Messaging.Message Receive (System.Messaging.MessageQueueTransaction transaction);
member this.Receive : System.Messaging.MessageQueueTransaction -> System.Messaging.Message
Public Function Receive (transaction As MessageQueueTransaction) As Message
Parameters
- transaction
- MessageQueueTransaction
The MessageQueueTransaction object.
Returns
A Message that references the first message available in the queue.
Exceptions
An error occurred when accessing a Message Queuing method.
-or-
The queue is non-transactional.
Examples
The following code example connects to a transactional queue on the local computer and sends a message to the queue. It then receives the message that contains an order. If it encounters a non-transactional queue, it will throw and exception and rollback the transaction.
#using <system.dll>
#using <system.messaging.dll>
using namespace System;
using namespace System::Messaging;
/// <summary>
/// Provides a container class for the example.
/// </summary>
ref class MyNewQueue
{
public:
//*************************************************
// Sends a message to a queue.
//*************************************************
void SendMessageTransactional()
{
// Connect to a queue on the local computer.
MessageQueue^ myQueue = gcnew MessageQueue( ".\\myTransactionalQueue" );
// Send a message to the queue.
if ( myQueue->Transactional == true )
{
// Create a transaction.
MessageQueueTransaction^ myTransaction = gcnew MessageQueueTransaction;
// Begin the transaction.
myTransaction->Begin();
// Send the message.
myQueue->Send( "My Message Data.", myTransaction );
// Commit the transaction.
myTransaction->Commit();
}
return;
}
//*************************************************
// Receives a message containing an Order.
//*************************************************
void ReceiveMessageTransactional()
{
// Connect to a transactional queue on the local computer.
MessageQueue^ myQueue = gcnew MessageQueue( ".\\myTransactionalQueue" );
// Set the formatter.
array<Type^>^p = gcnew array<Type^>(1);
p[ 0 ] = String::typeid;
myQueue->Formatter = gcnew XmlMessageFormatter( p );
// Create a transaction.
MessageQueueTransaction^ myTransaction = gcnew MessageQueueTransaction;
try
{
// Begin the transaction.
myTransaction->Begin();
// Receive the message.
Message^ myMessage = myQueue->Receive( myTransaction );
String^ myOrder = static_cast<String^>(myMessage->Body);
// Display message information.
Console::WriteLine( myOrder );
// Commit the transaction.
myTransaction->Commit();
}
catch ( MessageQueueException^ e )
{
// Handle nontransactional queues.
if ( e->MessageQueueErrorCode == MessageQueueErrorCode::TransactionUsage )
{
Console::WriteLine( "Queue is not transactional." );
}
// Else catch other sources of a MessageQueueException.
// Roll back the transaction.
myTransaction->Abort();
}
// Catch other exceptions as necessary, such as
// InvalidOperationException, thrown when the formatter
// cannot deserialize the message.
return;
}
};
//*************************************************
// Provides an entry point into the application.
//
// This example sends and receives a message from
// a transactional queue.
//*************************************************
int main()
{
// Create a new instance of the class.
MyNewQueue^ myNewQueue = gcnew MyNewQueue;
// Send a message to a queue.
myNewQueue->SendMessageTransactional();
// Receive a message from a queue.
myNewQueue->ReceiveMessageTransactional();
return 0;
}
using System;
using System.Messaging;
namespace MyProject
{
/// <summary>
/// Provides a container class for the example.
/// </summary>
public class MyNewQueue
{
//**************************************************
// Provides an entry point into the application.
//
// This example sends and receives a message from
// a transactional queue.
//**************************************************
public static void Main()
{
// Create a new instance of the class.
MyNewQueue myNewQueue = new MyNewQueue();
// Send a message to a queue.
myNewQueue.SendMessageTransactional();
// Receive a message from a queue.
myNewQueue.ReceiveMessageTransactional();
return;
}
//**************************************************
// Sends a message to a queue.
//**************************************************
public void SendMessageTransactional()
{
// Connect to a queue on the local computer.
MessageQueue myQueue = new
MessageQueue(".\\myTransactionalQueue");
// Send a message to the queue.
if (myQueue.Transactional == true)
{
// Create a transaction.
MessageQueueTransaction myTransaction = new
MessageQueueTransaction();
// Begin the transaction.
myTransaction.Begin();
// Send the message.
myQueue.Send("My Message Data.", myTransaction);
// Commit the transaction.
myTransaction.Commit();
}
return;
}
//**************************************************
// Receives a message containing an Order.
//**************************************************
public void ReceiveMessageTransactional()
{
// Connect to a transactional queue on the local computer.
MessageQueue myQueue = new
MessageQueue(".\\myTransactionalQueue");
// Set the formatter.
myQueue.Formatter = new XmlMessageFormatter(new Type[]
{typeof(String)});
// Create a transaction.
MessageQueueTransaction myTransaction = new
MessageQueueTransaction();
try
{
// Begin the transaction.
myTransaction.Begin();
// Receive the message.
Message myMessage = myQueue.Receive(myTransaction);
String myOrder = (String)myMessage.Body;
// Display message information.
Console.WriteLine(myOrder);
// Commit the transaction.
myTransaction.Commit();
}
catch (MessageQueueException e)
{
// Handle nontransactional queues.
if (e.MessageQueueErrorCode ==
MessageQueueErrorCode.TransactionUsage)
{
Console.WriteLine("Queue is not transactional.");
}
// Else catch other sources of a MessageQueueException.
// Roll back the transaction.
myTransaction.Abort();
}
// Catch other exceptions as necessary, such as
// InvalidOperationException, thrown when the formatter
// cannot deserialize the message.
return;
}
}
}
Imports System.Messaging
Public Class MyNewQueue
'
' Provides an entry point into the application.
'
' This example sends and receives a message from
' a transactional queue.
'
Public Shared Sub Main()
' Create a new instance of the class.
Dim myNewQueue As New MyNewQueue
' Send a message to a queue.
myNewQueue.SendMessageTransactional()
' Receive a message from a queue.
myNewQueue.ReceiveMessageTransactional()
Return
End Sub
'
' Sends a message to a queue.
'
Public Sub SendMessageTransactional()
' Connect to a queue on the local computer.
Dim myQueue As New MessageQueue(".\myTransactionalQueue")
' Send a message to the queue.
If myQueue.Transactional = True Then
' Create a transaction.
Dim myTransaction As New MessageQueueTransaction
' Begin the transaction.
myTransaction.Begin()
' Send the message.
myQueue.Send("My Message Data.", myTransaction)
' Commit the transaction.
myTransaction.Commit()
End If
Return
End Sub
'
' Receives a message containing an Order.
'
Public Sub ReceiveMessageTransactional()
' Connect to a transactional queue on the local computer.
Dim myQueue As New MessageQueue(".\myTransactionalQueue")
' Set the formatter.
myQueue.Formatter = New XmlMessageFormatter(New Type() _
{GetType([String])})
' Create a transaction.
Dim myTransaction As New MessageQueueTransaction
Try
' Begin the transaction.
myTransaction.Begin()
' Receive the message.
Dim myMessage As Message = _
myQueue.Receive(myTransaction)
Dim myOrder As [String] = CType(myMessage.Body, _
[String])
' Display message information.
Console.WriteLine(myOrder)
' Commit the transaction.
myTransaction.Commit()
Catch e As MessageQueueException
' Handle nontransactional queues.
If e.MessageQueueErrorCode = _
MessageQueueErrorCode.TransactionUsage Then
Console.WriteLine("Queue is not transactional.")
End If
' Else catch other sources of a MessageQueueException.
' Roll back the transaction.
myTransaction.Abort()
' Catch other exceptions as necessary, such as
' InvalidOperationException, thrown when the formatter
' cannot deserialize the message.
End Try
Return
End Sub
End Class
Remarks
Use this overload to receive a message from a transactional queue using the internal transaction context defined by the transaction
parameter, or wait until there are messages in the queue.
The Receive method allows for the synchronous reading of a message, thereby removing it from the queue. Subsequent calls to Receive will return the messages that follow in the queue.
Because this method is called on a transactional queue, the message that is received would be returned to the queue if the transaction is aborted. The message is not permanently removed from the queue until the transaction is committed.
To read the first message in a queue without removing it from the queue, use the Peek method. The Peek method always returns the first message in the queue, so subsequent calls to the method return the same message unless a higher priority message arrives in the queue. There is no transaction context associated with a message returned by a call to Peek. Because Peek does not remove any messages in the queue, there would be nothing to roll back by a call to Abort.
Use a call to Receive when it is acceptable for the current thread to be blocked while it waits for a message to arrive in the queue. Because this overload of the Receive method specifies an infinite time-out, the application might wait indefinitely. If the application processing should continue without waiting for the message, consider using the asynchronous method, BeginReceive.
The following table shows whether this method is available in various Workgroup modes.
Workgroup mode | Available |
---|---|
Local computer | Yes |
Local computer and direct format name | Yes |
Remote computer | No |
Remote computer and direct format name | Yes |
See also
Applies to
Receive(MessageQueueTransactionType)
Receives the first message available in the queue referenced by the MessageQueue. This call is synchronous, and blocks the current thread of execution until a message is available.
public:
System::Messaging::Message ^ Receive(System::Messaging::MessageQueueTransactionType transactionType);
public System.Messaging.Message Receive (System.Messaging.MessageQueueTransactionType transactionType);
member this.Receive : System.Messaging.MessageQueueTransactionType -> System.Messaging.Message
Public Function Receive (transactionType As MessageQueueTransactionType) As Message
Parameters
- transactionType
- MessageQueueTransactionType
One of the MessageQueueTransactionType values, describing the type of transaction context to associate with the message.
Returns
A Message that references the first message available in the queue.
Exceptions
An error occurred when accessing a Message Queuing method.
The transactionType
parameter is not one of the MessageQueueTransactionType members.
Examples
The following code example demonstrates the use of Receive(MessageQueueTransactionType).
// Connect to a transactional queue on the local computer.
MessageQueue^ queue = gcnew MessageQueue(".\\exampleTransQueue");
// Create a new message.
Message^ msg = gcnew Message("Example Message Body");
// Send the message.
queue->Send(msg, MessageQueueTransactionType::Single);
// Simulate doing other work so the message has time to arrive.
System::Threading::Thread::Sleep(TimeSpan::FromSeconds(10.0));
// Set the formatter to indicate the message body contains a String.
queue->Formatter = gcnew XmlMessageFormatter(
gcnew array<Type^>{String::typeid});
// Receive the message from the queue. Because the Id of the message
// , it might not be the message just sent.
msg = queue->Receive(MessageQueueTransactionType::Single);
queue->Close();
// Connect to a transactional queue on the local computer.
MessageQueue queue = new MessageQueue(".\\exampleTransQueue");
// Create a new message.
Message msg = new Message("Example Message Body");
// Send the message.
queue.Send(msg, MessageQueueTransactionType.Single);
// Simulate doing other work so the message has time to arrive.
System.Threading.Thread.Sleep(TimeSpan.FromSeconds(10.0));
// Set the formatter to indicate the message body contains a String.
queue.Formatter = new XmlMessageFormatter(new Type[]
{typeof(String)});
// Receive the message from the queue. Because the Id of the message
// , it might not be the message just sent.
msg = queue.Receive(MessageQueueTransactionType.Single);
Remarks
Use this overload to receive a message from a queue using a transaction context defined by the transactionType
parameter, or wait until there are messages in the queue.
Specify Automatic
for the transactionType
parameter if there is already an external transaction context attached to the thread that you want to use to receive the message. Specify Single
if you want to receive the message as a single internal transaction. You can specify None
if you want to receive a message from a transactional queue outside of a transaction context.
The Receive method allows for the synchronous reading of a message, thereby removing it from the queue. Subsequent calls to Receive will return the messages that follow in the queue.
If this method is called to receive a message from a transactional queue, the message that is received would be returned to the queue if the transaction is aborted. The message is not permanently removed from the queue until the transaction is committed.
To read the first message in a queue without removing it from the queue, use the Peek method. The Peek method always returns the first message in the queue, so subsequent calls to the method return the same message unless a higher priority message arrives in the queue. There is no transaction context associated with a message returned by a call to Peek. Because Peek does not remove any messages in the queue, there would be nothing to roll back by a call to Abort.
Use a call to Receive when it is acceptable for the current thread to be blocked while it waits for a message to arrive in the queue. Because this overload of the Receive method specifies an infinite time-out, the application might wait indefinitely. If the application processing should continue without waiting for the message, consider using the asynchronous method, BeginReceive.
The following table shows whether this method is available in various Workgroup modes.
Workgroup mode | Available |
---|---|
Local computer | Yes |
Local computer and direct format name | Yes |
Remote computer | No |
Remote computer and direct format name | Yes |
See also
Applies to
Receive(TimeSpan)
Receives the first message available in the queue referenced by the MessageQueue and waits until either a message is available in the queue, or the time-out expires.
public:
System::Messaging::Message ^ Receive(TimeSpan timeout);
public System.Messaging.Message Receive (TimeSpan timeout);
member this.Receive : TimeSpan -> System.Messaging.Message
Public Function Receive (timeout As TimeSpan) As Message
Parameters
- timeout
- TimeSpan
A TimeSpan that indicates the time to wait until a new message is available for inspection.
Returns
A Message that references the first message available in the queue.
Exceptions
The value specified for the timeout
parameter is not valid, possibly timeout
is less than Zero or greater than InfiniteTimeout.
A message did not arrive in the queue before the time-out expired.
-or-
An error occurred when accessing a Message Queuing method
Examples
The following code example receives a message from a queue and outputs information about that message to the screen. The example pauses execution for up to five seconds while waiting for a message to arrive in the queue.
#using <system.dll>
#using <system.messaging.dll>
using namespace System;
using namespace System::Messaging;
// This class represents an object the following example
// receives from a queue.
ref class Order
{
public:
int orderId;
DateTime orderTime;
};
/// <summary>
/// Provides a container class for the example.
/// </summary>
ref class MyNewQueue
{
public:
//*************************************************
// Receives a message containing an Order.
//*************************************************
void ReceiveMessage()
{
// Connect to the a queue on the local computer.
MessageQueue^ myQueue = gcnew MessageQueue( ".\\myQueue" );
// Set the formatter to indicate body contains an Order.
array<Type^>^p = gcnew array<Type^>(1);
p[ 0 ] = Order::typeid;
myQueue->Formatter = gcnew XmlMessageFormatter( p );
try
{
// Receive and format the message.
// Wait 5 seconds for a message to arrive.
Message^ myMessage = myQueue->Receive( TimeSpan(0,0,5) );
Order^ myOrder = static_cast<Order^>(myMessage->Body);
// Display message information.
Console::WriteLine( "Order ID: {0}", myOrder->orderId );
Console::WriteLine( "Sent: {0}", myOrder->orderTime );
}
catch ( MessageQueueException^ e )
{
// Handle no message arriving in the queue.
if ( e->MessageQueueErrorCode == MessageQueueErrorCode::IOTimeout )
{
Console::WriteLine( "No message arrived in queue." );
}
// Handle other sources of a MessageQueueException.
}
// Handle invalid serialization format.
catch ( InvalidOperationException^ e )
{
Console::WriteLine( e->Message );
}
// Catch other exceptions as necessary.
return;
}
};
//*************************************************
// Provides an entry point into the application.
//
// This example receives a message from a queue.
//*************************************************
int main()
{
// Create a new instance of the class.
MyNewQueue^ myNewQueue = gcnew MyNewQueue;
// Receive a message from a queue.
myNewQueue->ReceiveMessage();
return 0;
}
using System;
using System.Messaging;
namespace MyProject
{
// This class represents an object the following example
// receives from a queue.
public class Order
{
public int orderId;
public DateTime orderTime;
};
/// <summary>
/// Provides a container class for the example.
/// </summary>
public class MyNewQueue
{
//**************************************************
// Provides an entry point into the application.
//
// This example receives a message from a queue.
//**************************************************
public static void Main()
{
// Create a new instance of the class.
MyNewQueue myNewQueue = new MyNewQueue();
// Receive a message from a queue.
myNewQueue.ReceiveMessage();
return;
}
//**************************************************
// Receives a message containing an Order.
//**************************************************
public void ReceiveMessage()
{
// Connect to the a queue on the local computer.
MessageQueue myQueue = new MessageQueue(".\\myQueue");
// Set the formatter to indicate body contains an Order.
myQueue.Formatter = new XmlMessageFormatter(new Type[]
{typeof(MyProject.Order)});
try
{
// Receive and format the message.
// Wait 5 seconds for a message to arrive.
Message myMessage = myQueue.Receive(new
TimeSpan(0,0,5));
Order myOrder = (Order)myMessage.Body;
// Display message information.
Console.WriteLine("Order ID: " +
myOrder.orderId.ToString());
Console.WriteLine("Sent: " +
myOrder.orderTime.ToString());
}
catch (MessageQueueException e)
{
// Handle no message arriving in the queue.
if (e.MessageQueueErrorCode ==
MessageQueueErrorCode.IOTimeout)
{
Console.WriteLine("No message arrived in queue.");
}
// Handle other sources of a MessageQueueException.
}
// Handle invalid serialization format.
catch (InvalidOperationException e)
{
Console.WriteLine(e.Message);
}
// Catch other exceptions as necessary.
return;
}
}
}
Imports System.Messaging
' This class represents an object the following example
' receives from a queue.
Public Class Order
Public orderId As Integer
Public orderTime As DateTime
End Class
Public Class MyNewQueue
'
' Provides an entry point into the application.
'
' This example receives a message from a queue.
'
Public Shared Sub Main()
' Create a new instance of the class.
Dim myNewQueue As New MyNewQueue()
' Receive a message from a queue.
myNewQueue.ReceiveMessage()
Return
End Sub
'
' Receives a message containing an Order.
'
Public Sub ReceiveMessage()
' Connect to the a queue on the local computer.
Dim myQueue As New MessageQueue(".\myQueue")
' Set the formatter to indicate body contains an Order.
myQueue.Formatter = New XmlMessageFormatter(New Type() _
{GetType(Order)})
Try
' Receive and format the message.
' Wait 5 seconds for a message to arrive.
Dim myMessage As Message = myQueue.Receive(New _
TimeSpan(0, 0, 5))
Dim myOrder As Order = CType(myMessage.Body, Order)
' Display message information.
Console.WriteLine(("Order ID: " + _
myOrder.orderId.ToString()))
Console.WriteLine(("Sent: " + _
myOrder.orderTime.ToString()))
Catch e As MessageQueueException
' Handle no message arriving in the queue.
If e.MessageQueueErrorCode = _
MessageQueueErrorCode.IOTimeout Then
Console.WriteLine("No message arrived in queue.")
End If
' Handle other sources of a MessageQueueException.
Catch e As InvalidOperationException
' Handle invalid serialization format.
Console.WriteLine(e.Message)
' Catch other exceptions as necessary.
End Try
Return
End Sub
End Class
Remarks
Use this overload to receive a message and return in a specified period of time if there are no messages in the queue.
The Receive method allows for the synchronous reading of a message, removing it from the queue. Subsequent calls to Receive will return the messages that follow in the queue, or new, higher priority messages.
To read the first message in a queue without removing it from the queue, use the Peek method. The Peek method always returns the first message in the queue, so subsequent calls to the method return the same message unless a higher priority message arrives in the queue.
Use a call to Receive when it is acceptable for the current thread to be blocked while it waits for a message to arrive in the queue. The thread will be blocked for the given period of time, or indefinitely if you specified the value InfiniteTimeout for the timeout
parameter. If the application processing should continue without waiting for a message, consider using the asynchronous method, BeginReceive.
The following table shows whether this method is available in various Workgroup modes.
Workgroup mode | Available |
---|---|
Local computer | Yes |
Local computer and direct format name | Yes |
Remote computer | No |
Remote computer and direct format name | Yes |
See also
Applies to
Receive(TimeSpan, Cursor)
Receives the current message in the queue, using a specified cursor. If no message is available, this method waits until either a message is available, or the time-out expires.
public:
System::Messaging::Message ^ Receive(TimeSpan timeout, System::Messaging::Cursor ^ cursor);
public System.Messaging.Message Receive (TimeSpan timeout, System.Messaging.Cursor cursor);
member this.Receive : TimeSpan * System.Messaging.Cursor -> System.Messaging.Message
Public Function Receive (timeout As TimeSpan, cursor As Cursor) As Message
Parameters
- timeout
- TimeSpan
A TimeSpan that indicates the time to wait until a new message is available for inspection.
Returns
A Message that references the first message available in the queue.
Exceptions
The value specified for the timeout
parameter is not valid, possibly timeout
is less than Zero or greater than InfiniteTimeout.
A message did not arrive in the queue before the time-out expired.
-or-
An error occurred when accessing a Message Queuing method
Use this overload to receive a message and return in a specified period of time if there are no messages in the queue.
Applies to
Receive(TimeSpan, MessageQueueTransaction)
Receives the first message available in the transactional queue referenced by the MessageQueue and waits until either a message is available in the queue, or the time-out expires.
public:
System::Messaging::Message ^ Receive(TimeSpan timeout, System::Messaging::MessageQueueTransaction ^ transaction);
public System.Messaging.Message Receive (TimeSpan timeout, System.Messaging.MessageQueueTransaction transaction);
member this.Receive : TimeSpan * System.Messaging.MessageQueueTransaction -> System.Messaging.Message
Public Function Receive (timeout As TimeSpan, transaction As MessageQueueTransaction) As Message
Parameters
- timeout
- TimeSpan
A TimeSpan that indicates the time to wait until a new message is available for inspection.
- transaction
- MessageQueueTransaction
The MessageQueueTransaction object.
Returns
A Message that references the first message available in the queue.
Exceptions
The value specified for the timeout
parameter is not valid, possibly timeout
is less than Zero or greater than InfiniteTimeout.
A message did not arrive in the queue before the time-out expired.
-or-
The queue is non-transactional.
-or-
An error occurred when accessing a Message Queuing method.
Examples
The following code example demonstrates the use of this method.
#using <system.dll>
#using <system.messaging.dll>
using namespace System;
using namespace System::Messaging;
/// <summary>
/// Provides a container class for the example.
/// </summary>
ref class MyNewQueue
{
public:
//*************************************************
// Sends a message to a transactional queue.
//*************************************************
void SendMessageTransactional()
{
// Connect to a queue on the local computer.
MessageQueue^ myQueue = gcnew MessageQueue( ".\\myTransactionalQueue" );
// Send a message to the queue.
if ( myQueue->Transactional == true )
{
// Create a transaction.
MessageQueueTransaction^ myTransaction = gcnew MessageQueueTransaction;
// Begin the transaction.
myTransaction->Begin();
// Send the message.
myQueue->Send( "My Message Data.", myTransaction );
// Commit the transaction.
myTransaction->Commit();
}
return;
}
//*************************************************
// Receives a message from the transactional queue.
//*************************************************
void ReceiveMessageTransactional()
{
// Connect to a transactional queue on the local computer.
MessageQueue^ myQueue = gcnew MessageQueue( ".\\myTransactionalQueue" );
// Set the formatter.
array<Type^>^p = gcnew array<Type^>(1);
p[ 0 ] = String::typeid;
myQueue->Formatter = gcnew XmlMessageFormatter( p );
// Create a transaction.
MessageQueueTransaction^ myTransaction = gcnew MessageQueueTransaction;
try
{
// Begin the transaction.
myTransaction->Begin();
// Receive the message.
// Wait five seconds for a message to arrive.
Message^ myMessage = myQueue->Receive( TimeSpan(0,0,5), myTransaction );
String^ myOrder = static_cast<String^>(myMessage->Body);
// Display message information.
Console::WriteLine( myOrder );
// Commit the transaction.
myTransaction->Commit();
}
catch ( MessageQueueException^ e )
{
// Handle nontransactional queues.
if ( e->MessageQueueErrorCode == MessageQueueErrorCode::TransactionUsage )
{
Console::WriteLine( "Queue is not transactional." );
}
// Handle no message arriving in the queue.
else
// Handle no message arriving in the queue.
if ( e->MessageQueueErrorCode == MessageQueueErrorCode::IOTimeout )
{
Console::WriteLine( "No message in queue." );
}
// Else catch other sources of MessageQueueException.
// Roll back the transaction.
myTransaction->Abort();
}
// Catch other exceptions as necessary, such as
// InvalidOperationException, thrown when the formatter
// cannot deserialize the message.
return;
}
};
//*************************************************
// Provides an entry point into the application.
//
// This example sends and receives a message from
// a transactional queue.
//*************************************************
int main()
{
// Create a new instance of the class.
MyNewQueue^ myNewQueue = gcnew MyNewQueue;
// Send a message to a queue.
myNewQueue->SendMessageTransactional();
// Receive a message from a queue.
myNewQueue->ReceiveMessageTransactional();
return 0;
}
using System;
using System.Messaging;
namespace MyProject
{
/// <summary>
/// Provides a container class for the example.
/// </summary>
public class MyNewQueue
{
//**************************************************
// Provides an entry point into the application.
//
// This example sends and receives a message from
// a transactional queue.
//**************************************************
public static void Main()
{
// Create a new instance of the class.
MyNewQueue myNewQueue = new MyNewQueue();
// Send a message to a queue.
myNewQueue.SendMessageTransactional();
// Receive a message from a queue.
myNewQueue.ReceiveMessageTransactional();
return;
}
//**************************************************
// Sends a message to a transactional queue.
//**************************************************
public void SendMessageTransactional()
{
// Connect to a queue on the local computer.
MessageQueue myQueue = new
MessageQueue(".\\myTransactionalQueue");
// Send a message to the queue.
if (myQueue.Transactional == true)
{
// Create a transaction.
MessageQueueTransaction myTransaction = new
MessageQueueTransaction();
// Begin the transaction.
myTransaction.Begin();
// Send the message.
myQueue.Send("My Message Data.", myTransaction);
// Commit the transaction.
myTransaction.Commit();
}
return;
}
//**************************************************
// Receives a message from the transactional queue.
//**************************************************
public void ReceiveMessageTransactional()
{
// Connect to a transactional queue on the local computer.
MessageQueue myQueue = new
MessageQueue(".\\myTransactionalQueue");
// Set the formatter.
myQueue.Formatter = new XmlMessageFormatter(new Type[]
{typeof(String)});
// Create a transaction.
MessageQueueTransaction myTransaction = new
MessageQueueTransaction();
try
{
// Begin the transaction.
myTransaction.Begin();
// Receive the message.
// Wait five seconds for a message to arrive.
Message myMessage = myQueue.Receive(new
TimeSpan(0,0,5), myTransaction);
String myOrder = (String)myMessage.Body;
// Display message information.
Console.WriteLine(myOrder);
// Commit the transaction.
myTransaction.Commit();
}
catch (MessageQueueException e)
{
// Handle nontransactional queues.
if (e.MessageQueueErrorCode ==
MessageQueueErrorCode.TransactionUsage)
{
Console.WriteLine("Queue is not transactional.");
}
// Handle no message arriving in the queue.
else if (e.MessageQueueErrorCode ==
MessageQueueErrorCode.IOTimeout)
{
Console.WriteLine("No message in queue.");
}
// Else catch other sources of MessageQueueException.
// Roll back the transaction.
myTransaction.Abort();
}
// Catch other exceptions as necessary, such as
// InvalidOperationException, thrown when the formatter
// cannot deserialize the message.
return;
}
}
}
Imports System.Messaging
Namespace MyProj
Public Class MyNewQueue
'**************************************************
' Provides an entry point into the application.
'
' This example sends and receives a message from
' a transactional queue.
'**************************************************
Public Shared Sub Main()
' Create a new instance of the class.
Dim myNewQueue As New MyNewQueue
' Send a message to a queue.
myNewQueue.SendMessageTransactional()
' Receive a message from a queue.
myNewQueue.ReceiveMessageTransactional()
Return
End Sub
'**************************************************
' Sends a message to a transactional queue.
'**************************************************
Public Sub SendMessageTransactional()
' Connect to a queue on the local computer.
Dim myQueue As New MessageQueue(".\myTransactionalQueue")
' Send a message to the queue.
If myQueue.Transactional = True Then
' Create a transaction.
Dim myTransaction As New MessageQueueTransaction
' Begin the transaction.
myTransaction.Begin()
' Send the message.
myQueue.Send("My Message Data.", myTransaction)
' Commit the transaction.
myTransaction.Commit()
End If
Return
End Sub
'**************************************************
' Receives a message from the transactional queue.
'**************************************************
Public Sub ReceiveMessageTransactional()
' Connect to a transactional queue on the local computer.
Dim myQueue As New MessageQueue(".\myTransactionalQueue")
' Set the formatter.
myQueue.Formatter = New XmlMessageFormatter(New Type() _
{GetType([String])})
' Create a transaction.
Dim myTransaction As New MessageQueueTransaction
Try
' Begin the transaction.
myTransaction.Begin()
' Receive the message.
' Wait five seconds for a message to arrive.
Dim myMessage As Message = myQueue.Receive(New _
TimeSpan(0, 0, 5), myTransaction)
Dim myOrder As [String] = CType(myMessage.Body, _
[String])
' Display message information.
Console.WriteLine(myOrder)
' Commit the transaction.
myTransaction.Commit()
Catch e As MessageQueueException
' Handle nontransactional queues.
If e.MessageQueueErrorCode = _
MessageQueueErrorCode.TransactionUsage Then
Console.WriteLine("Queue is not transactional.")
Else
' Handle no message arriving in the queue.
If e.MessageQueueErrorCode = _
MessageQueueErrorCode.IOTimeout Then
Console.WriteLine("No message in queue.")
End If
End If
' Else catch other sources of a MessageQueueException.
' Roll back the transaction.
myTransaction.Abort()
' Catch other exceptions as necessary, such as InvalidOperationException,
' thrown when the formatter cannot deserialize the message.
End Try
Return
End Sub
End Class
End Namespace 'MyProj
Remarks
Use this overload to receive a message from a transactional queue using the internal transaction context defined by the transaction
parameter, and return within a specified period of time if there are no messages in the queue.
The Receive method allows for the synchronous reading of a message, thereby removing it from the queue. Subsequent calls to Receive will return the messages that follow in the queue.
Because this method is called on a transactional queue, the message that is received would be returned to the queue if the transaction is aborted. The message is not permanently removed from the queue until the transaction is committed.
To read the first message in a queue without removing it from the queue, use the Peek method. The Peek method always returns the first message in the queue, so subsequent calls to the method return the same message unless a higher priority message arrives in the queue. There is no transaction context associated with a message returned by a call to Peek. Because Peek does not remove any messages in the queue, there would be nothing to roll back by a call to Abort.
Use a call to Receive when it is acceptable for the current thread to be blocked while it waits for a message to arrive in the queue. The thread will be blocked for the given period of time, or indefinitely if you specified the value InfiniteTimeout for the timeout
parameter. If the application processing should continue without waiting for a message, consider using the asynchronous method, BeginReceive.
The following table shows whether this method is available in various Workgroup modes.
Workgroup mode | Available |
---|---|
Local computer | Yes |
Local computer and direct format name | Yes |
Remote computer | No |
Remote computer and direct format name | Yes |
See also
Applies to
Receive(TimeSpan, MessageQueueTransactionType)
Receives the first message available in the queue referenced by the MessageQueue. This call is synchronous, and waits until either a message is available in the queue, or the time-out expires.
public:
System::Messaging::Message ^ Receive(TimeSpan timeout, System::Messaging::MessageQueueTransactionType transactionType);
public System.Messaging.Message Receive (TimeSpan timeout, System.Messaging.MessageQueueTransactionType transactionType);
member this.Receive : TimeSpan * System.Messaging.MessageQueueTransactionType -> System.Messaging.Message
Public Function Receive (timeout As TimeSpan, transactionType As MessageQueueTransactionType) As Message
Parameters
- timeout
- TimeSpan
A TimeSpan that indicates the time to wait until a new message is available for inspection.
- transactionType
- MessageQueueTransactionType
One of the MessageQueueTransactionType values, describing the type of transaction context to associate with the message.
Returns
A Message that references the first message available in the queue.
Exceptions
The value specified for the timeout
parameter is not valid, possibly timeout
is less than Zero or greater than InfiniteTimeout.
The transactionType
parameter is not one of the MessageQueueTransactionType members.
A message did not arrive in the queue before the time-out expired.
-or-
An error occurred when accessing a Message Queuing method.
Examples
The following code example demonstrates the use of this method.
// Connect to a transactional queue on the local computer.
MessageQueue^ queue = gcnew MessageQueue(".\\exampleTransQueue");
// Create a new message.
Message^ msg = gcnew Message("Example Message Body");
// Send the message.
queue->Send(msg, MessageQueueTransactionType::Single);
// Set the formatter to indicate the message body contains a String.
queue->Formatter = gcnew XmlMessageFormatter(
gcnew array<Type^>{String::typeid});
// Receive the message from the queue. Because the Id of the message
// is not specified, it might not be the message just sent.
msg = queue->Receive(TimeSpan::FromSeconds(10.0),
MessageQueueTransactionType::Single);
queue->Close();
// Connect to a transactional queue on the local computer.
MessageQueue queue = new MessageQueue(".\\exampleTransQueue");
// Create a new message.
Message msg = new Message("Example Message Body");
// Send the message.
queue.Send(msg, MessageQueueTransactionType.Single);
// Set the formatter to indicate the message body contains a String.
queue.Formatter = new XmlMessageFormatter(new Type[]
{typeof(String)});
// Receive the message from the queue. Because the Id of the message
// is not specified, it might not be the message just sent.
msg = queue.Receive(TimeSpan.FromSeconds(10.0),
MessageQueueTransactionType.Single);
Remarks
Use this overload to receive a message from a queue using a transaction context defined by the transactionType
parameter, and return in a specified period of time if there are no messages in the queue.
Specify Automatic
for the transactionType
parameter if there is already an external transaction context attached to the thread that you want to use to receive the message. Specify Single
if you want to receive the message as a single internal transaction. You can specify None
if you want to receive a message from a transactional queue outside of a transaction context.
The Receive method allows for the synchronous reading of a message, thereby removing it from the queue. Subsequent calls to Receive will return the messages that follow in the queue.
If this method is called to receive a message from a transactional queue, the message that is received would be returned to the queue if the transaction is aborted. The message is not permanently removed from the queue until the transaction is committed.
To read the first message in a queue without removing it from the queue, use the Peek method. The Peek method always returns the first message in the queue, so subsequent calls to the method return the same message unless a higher priority message arrives in the queue. There is no transaction context associated with a message returned by a call to Peek. Because Peek does not remove any messages in the queue, there would be nothing to roll back by a call to Abort.
Use a call to Receive when it is acceptable for the current thread to be blocked while it waits for a message to arrive in the queue. The thread will be blocked for the given period of time, or indefinitely if you specified the value InfiniteTimeout for the timeout
parameter. If the application processing should continue without waiting for a message, consider using the asynchronous method, BeginReceive.
The following table shows whether this method is available in various Workgroup modes.
Workgroup mode | Available |
---|---|
Local computer | Yes |
Local computer and direct format name | Yes |
Remote computer | No |
Remote computer and direct format name | Yes |
See also
Applies to
Receive(TimeSpan, Cursor, MessageQueueTransaction)
Receives the current message in the queue, using a specified cursor. If no message is available, this method waits until either a message is available, or the time-out expires.
public:
System::Messaging::Message ^ Receive(TimeSpan timeout, System::Messaging::Cursor ^ cursor, System::Messaging::MessageQueueTransaction ^ transaction);
public System.Messaging.Message Receive (TimeSpan timeout, System.Messaging.Cursor cursor, System.Messaging.MessageQueueTransaction transaction);
member this.Receive : TimeSpan * System.Messaging.Cursor * System.Messaging.MessageQueueTransaction -> System.Messaging.Message
Public Function Receive (timeout As TimeSpan, cursor As Cursor, transaction As MessageQueueTransaction) As Message
Parameters
- timeout
- TimeSpan
A TimeSpan that indicates the time to wait until a new message is available for inspection.
- transaction
- MessageQueueTransaction
The MessageQueueTransaction object.
Returns
A Message that references a message in the queue.
Exceptions
The value specified for the timeout
parameter is not valid. Possibly timeout
is less than Zero or greater than InfiniteTimeout.
A message did not arrive in the queue before the time-out expired.
-or-
The queue is non-transactional.
-or-
An error occurred when accessing a Message Queuing method.
Remarks
Use this overload to receive a message from a transactional queue using the internal transaction context defined by the transaction
parameter, and return within a specified period of time if there are no messages in the queue.
The Receive method allows for the synchronous reading of a message, thereby removing it from the queue. Subsequent calls to Receive return the messages that follow in the queue.
Because this method is called on a transactional queue, the message that is received is returned to the queue if the transaction is aborted. The message is not permanently removed from the queue until the transaction is committed.
To read a message in a queue without removing it from the queue, use the Peek method. There is no transaction context associated with a message returned by a call to Peek. Because Peek does not remove any messages in the queue, there is nothing to roll back by a call to Abort.
Use a call to Receive when it is acceptable for the current thread to be blocked while it waits for a message to arrive in the queue. The thread is blocked for the given period of time, or indefinitely if you specified the value InfiniteTimeout for the timeout
parameter. If the application processing should continue without waiting for a message, consider using the asynchronous method, BeginReceive.
The following table shows whether this method is available in various Workgroup modes.
Workgroup mode | Available |
---|---|
Local computer | Yes |
Local computer and direct format name | Yes |
Remote computer | No |
Remote computer and direct format name | Yes |
See also
Applies to
Receive(TimeSpan, Cursor, MessageQueueTransactionType)
Receives the current message in the queue, using a specified cursor. If no message is available, this method waits until either a message is available, or the time-out expires.
public:
System::Messaging::Message ^ Receive(TimeSpan timeout, System::Messaging::Cursor ^ cursor, System::Messaging::MessageQueueTransactionType transactionType);
public System.Messaging.Message Receive (TimeSpan timeout, System.Messaging.Cursor cursor, System.Messaging.MessageQueueTransactionType transactionType);
member this.Receive : TimeSpan * System.Messaging.Cursor * System.Messaging.MessageQueueTransactionType -> System.Messaging.Message
Public Function Receive (timeout As TimeSpan, cursor As Cursor, transactionType As MessageQueueTransactionType) As Message
Parameters
- timeout
- TimeSpan
A TimeSpan that indicates the time to wait until a new message is available for inspection.
- transactionType
- MessageQueueTransactionType
One of the MessageQueueTransactionType values that describes the type of transaction context to associate with the message.
Returns
A Message that references a message in the queue.
Exceptions
The cursor
parameter is null
.
The value specified for the timeout
parameter is not valid. Possibly timeout
is less than Zero or greater than InfiniteTimeout.
The transactionType
parameter is not one of the MessageQueueTransactionType members.
A message did not arrive in the queue before the time-out expired.
-or-
An error occurred when accessing a Message Queuing method.
Remarks
Use this overload to receive a message from a queue using a transaction context defined by the transactionType
parameter, and return in a specified period of time if there are no messages in the queue.
Specify Automatic
for the transactionType
parameter if there is already an external transaction context attached to the thread that you want to use to receive the message. Specify Single
if you want to receive the message as a single internal transaction. You can specify None
if you want to receive a message from a transactional queue outside of a transaction context.
The Receive method allows for the synchronous reading of a message, thereby removing it from the queue. Subsequent calls to Receive return the messages that follow in the queue.
If this method is called to receive a message from a transactional queue, the message that is received is returned to the queue if the transaction is aborted. The message is not permanently removed from the queue until the transaction is committed.
To read a message in a queue without removing it from the queue, use the Peek method. There is no transaction context associated with a message returned by a call to Peek. Because Peek does not remove any messages in the queue, there is nothing to roll back by a call to Abort.
Use a call to Receive when it is acceptable for the current thread to be blocked while it waits for a message to arrive in the queue. The thread is blocked for the given period of time, or indefinitely if you specified the value InfiniteTimeout for the timeout
parameter. If the application processing should continue without waiting for a message, consider using the asynchronous method, BeginReceive.
The following table shows whether this method is available in various Workgroup modes.
Workgroup mode | Available |
---|---|
Local computer | Yes |
Local computer and direct format name | Yes |
Remote computer | No |
Remote computer and direct format name | Yes |
See also
Applies to
Thread Safety
The method is not thread safe.