.github/plugins/azure-sdk-python/skills/azure-servicebus-py/SKILL.md
Azure Service Bus SDK for Python messaging. Use for queues, topics, subscriptions, and enterprise messaging patterns. Triggers: "service bus", "ServiceBusClient", "queue", "topic", "subscription", "message broker".
npx skillsauth add microsoft/skills azure-servicebus-pyInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
3 of 9 scanners reported clean
Some scanners were skipped, did not run, or reported a non-clean status. Review each row below.
Enterprise messaging for reliable cloud communication with queues and pub/sub topics.
pip install azure-servicebus azure-identity
SERVICEBUS_FULLY_QUALIFIED_NAMESPACE=<namespace>.servicebus.windows.net
SERVICEBUS_QUEUE_NAME=myqueue
SERVICEBUS_TOPIC_NAME=mytopic
SERVICEBUS_SUBSCRIPTION_NAME=mysubscription
from azure.identity import DefaultAzureCredential
from azure.servicebus import ServiceBusClient
credential = DefaultAzureCredential()
namespace = "<namespace>.servicebus.windows.net"
client = ServiceBusClient(
fully_qualified_namespace=namespace,
credential=credential
)
| Client | Purpose | Get From |
|--------|---------|----------|
| ServiceBusClient | Connection management | Direct instantiation |
| ServiceBusSender | Send messages | client.get_queue_sender() / get_topic_sender() |
| ServiceBusReceiver | Receive messages | client.get_queue_receiver() / get_subscription_receiver() |
import asyncio
from azure.servicebus.aio import ServiceBusClient
from azure.servicebus import ServiceBusMessage
from azure.identity.aio import DefaultAzureCredential
async def send_messages():
credential = DefaultAzureCredential()
async with ServiceBusClient(
fully_qualified_namespace="<namespace>.servicebus.windows.net",
credential=credential
) as client:
sender = client.get_queue_sender(queue_name="myqueue")
async with sender:
# Single message
message = ServiceBusMessage("Hello, Service Bus!")
await sender.send_messages(message)
# Batch of messages
messages = [ServiceBusMessage(f"Message {i}") for i in range(10)]
await sender.send_messages(messages)
# Message batch (for size control)
batch = await sender.create_message_batch()
for i in range(100):
try:
batch.add_message(ServiceBusMessage(f"Batch message {i}"))
except ValueError: # Batch full
await sender.send_messages(batch)
batch = await sender.create_message_batch()
batch.add_message(ServiceBusMessage(f"Batch message {i}"))
await sender.send_messages(batch)
asyncio.run(send_messages())
async def receive_messages():
credential = DefaultAzureCredential()
async with ServiceBusClient(
fully_qualified_namespace="<namespace>.servicebus.windows.net",
credential=credential
) as client:
receiver = client.get_queue_receiver(queue_name="myqueue")
async with receiver:
# Receive batch
messages = await receiver.receive_messages(
max_message_count=10,
max_wait_time=5 # seconds
)
for msg in messages:
print(f"Received: {str(msg)}")
await receiver.complete_message(msg) # Remove from queue
asyncio.run(receive_messages())
| Mode | Behavior | Use Case |
|------|----------|----------|
| PEEK_LOCK (default) | Message locked, must complete/abandon | Reliable processing |
| RECEIVE_AND_DELETE | Removed immediately on receive | At-most-once delivery |
from azure.servicebus import ServiceBusReceiveMode
receiver = client.get_queue_receiver(
queue_name="myqueue",
receive_mode=ServiceBusReceiveMode.RECEIVE_AND_DELETE
)
async with receiver:
messages = await receiver.receive_messages(max_message_count=1)
for msg in messages:
try:
# Process message...
await receiver.complete_message(msg) # Success - remove from queue
except ProcessingError:
await receiver.abandon_message(msg) # Retry later
except PermanentError:
await receiver.dead_letter_message(
msg,
reason="ProcessingFailed",
error_description="Could not process"
)
| Action | Effect |
|--------|--------|
| complete_message() | Remove from queue (success) |
| abandon_message() | Release lock, retry immediately |
| dead_letter_message() | Move to dead-letter queue |
| defer_message() | Set aside, receive by sequence number |
# Send to topic
sender = client.get_topic_sender(topic_name="mytopic")
async with sender:
await sender.send_messages(ServiceBusMessage("Topic message"))
# Receive from subscription
receiver = client.get_subscription_receiver(
topic_name="mytopic",
subscription_name="mysubscription"
)
async with receiver:
messages = await receiver.receive_messages(max_message_count=10)
# Send with session
message = ServiceBusMessage("Session message")
message.session_id = "order-123"
await sender.send_messages(message)
# Receive from specific session
receiver = client.get_queue_receiver(
queue_name="session-queue",
session_id="order-123"
)
# Receive from next available session
from azure.servicebus import NEXT_AVAILABLE_SESSION
receiver = client.get_queue_receiver(
queue_name="session-queue",
session_id=NEXT_AVAILABLE_SESSION
)
from datetime import datetime, timedelta, timezone
message = ServiceBusMessage("Scheduled message")
scheduled_time = datetime.now(timezone.utc) + timedelta(minutes=10)
# Schedule message
sequence_number = await sender.schedule_messages(message, scheduled_time)
# Cancel scheduled message
await sender.cancel_scheduled_messages(sequence_number)
from azure.servicebus import ServiceBusSubQueue
# Receive from dead-letter queue
dlq_receiver = client.get_queue_receiver(
queue_name="myqueue",
sub_queue=ServiceBusSubQueue.DEAD_LETTER
)
async with dlq_receiver:
messages = await dlq_receiver.receive_messages(max_message_count=10)
for msg in messages:
print(f"Dead-lettered: {msg.dead_letter_reason}")
await dlq_receiver.complete_message(msg)
from azure.servicebus import ServiceBusClient, ServiceBusMessage
from azure.identity import DefaultAzureCredential
with ServiceBusClient(
fully_qualified_namespace="<namespace>.servicebus.windows.net",
credential=DefaultAzureCredential()
) as client:
with client.get_queue_sender("myqueue") as sender:
sender.send_messages(ServiceBusMessage("Sync message"))
with client.get_queue_receiver("myqueue") as receiver:
for msg in receiver:
print(str(msg))
receiver.complete_message(msg)
async with) for proper cleanupmax_wait_time to avoid infinite blocking| File | Contents | |------|----------| | references/patterns.md | Competing consumers, sessions, retry patterns, request-response, transactions | | references/dead-letter.md | DLQ handling, poison messages, reprocessing strategies | | scripts/setup_servicebus.py | CLI for queue/topic/subscription management and DLQ monitoring |
tools
KQL language expertise for writing correct, efficient Kusto Query Language queries. Covers syntax gotchas, join patterns, dynamic types, datetime pitfalls, regex patterns, serialization, memory management, result-size discipline, and advanced functions (geo, vector, graph). USE THIS SKILL whenever writing, debugging, or reviewing KQL queries — even simple ones — because the gotchas section prevents the most common errors that waste tool calls and cause expensive retry cascades. Trigger on: KQL, Kusto, ADX, Azure Data Explorer, Fabric Real-Time Intelligence, EventHouse, Log Analytics, log analysis, data exploration, time series, anomaly detection, summarize, where clause, join, extend, project, let statement, parse operator, extract function, any mention of pipe-forward query syntax.
development
Deploy, evaluate, and manage Foundry agents end-to-end: Docker build, ACR push, hosted/prompt agent create, container start, batch eval, prompt optimization, prompt optimizer workflows, agent.yaml, dataset curation from traces. USE FOR: deploy agent to Foundry, hosted agent, create agent, invoke agent, evaluate agent, run batch eval, optimize prompt, improve prompt, prompt optimization, prompt optimizer, improve agent instructions, optimize agent instructions, optimize system prompt, deploy model, Foundry project, RBAC, role assignment, permissions, quota, capacity, region, troubleshoot agent, deployment failure, create dataset from traces, dataset versioning, eval trending, create AI Services, Cognitive Services, create Foundry resource, provision resource, knowledge index, agent monitoring, customize deployment, onboard, availability. DO NOT USE FOR: Azure Functions, App Service, general Azure deploy (use azure-deploy), general Azure prep (use azure-prepare).
testing
Pre-deployment validation for Azure readiness. Run deep checks on configuration, infrastructure (Bicep or Terraform), RBAC role assignments, managed identity permissions, and prerequisites before deploying. WHEN: validate my app, check deployment readiness, run preflight checks, verify configuration, check if ready to deploy, validate azure.yaml, validate Bicep, test before deploying, troubleshoot deployment errors, validate Azure Functions, validate function app, validate serverless deployment, verify RBAC roles, check role assignments, review managed identity permissions, what-if analysis, validate Container Apps deployment.
testing
Check/manage Azure quotas and usage across providers. For deployment planning, capacity validation, region selection. WHEN: "check quotas", "service limits", "current usage", "request quota increase", "quota exceeded", "validate capacity", "regional availability", "provisioning limits", "vCPU limit", "how many vCPUs available in my subscription".