Freigeben über


Service Bus and the New Azure Portal

Some of you may be surprised to hear that Service Bus messaging, Azure Event Hubs, and Azure Relay are all worked on by the same team. While there are certainly many similarities between these services, there are also just as many different use cases for each. As we plan to offer these services in the new Azure Portal, there is also an upcoming change regarding namespaces. In the past, Service Bus Messaging, Event Hubs, and Service Bus Relay all shared a common namespace.

What sort of changes can I expect?

  • Beginning in August 2016, Service Bus Messaging and Azure Event Hubs will be available in the new Azure Portal
  • When Messaging and Event Hubs become available, newly created namespaces will be unique to the corresponding service. For example, Event Hubs will have an Event Hubs only namespace, and not support messaging or Relay. If you want to use each service, you will need to create a namespace for each.
  • For Event Hubs customers that also used messaging, you will not be able to see your Event Hubs listed under your namespaces.
  • In late October 2016, Relay will be available on the new Azure Portal
  • All of these services (Messaging, Relay, and Event Hubs) will be in preview within the new Azure Portal until at least late October 2016

One key point to make, is that none of these changes will have any runtime impact on current namespaces. Our current portal will still support the mixed namespace types but not for long. The support lasts to help customers to successfully migrate to new namespace types under the specific services. Moving forward we want our customers to create queues and topics under the Messaging namespace type, event hub under the Event Hub namespace type and relay under Relay namespace type.

Why are we doing this?

We are using the new Azure Portal as an opportunity to take care of some technical debt. While Service Bus messaging, Azure Event Hubs, and Azure Relay are all similar, they are also very different. Breaking these services out into their own namespaces will allow us to optimize our infrastructure, and therefore improve performance. In addition, we would like to make things simpler for our customers in the future, as we have received a lot of feedback about the confusion surrounding how these services are related. The separation will allow us to simplify documentation, provide better reporting on service health, and provide an overall improvement to customer experience and support.

Stay tuned for additional blogs as we get closer to August.

We would love to hear your questions and feedback! We are following you on Service Bus Forum. Also, feel free to comment directly on this blog post.

Comments

  • Anonymous
    July 26, 2016
    Now all we need is a new version of Service Bus Explorer. Cross your fingers...
  • Anonymous
    August 11, 2016
    Currently I get an error when trying to create a new Event Hub under the new Internet of Things -> Event Hubs menu options. We can also no longer access our existing Event Hub in the Portal. Pretty average when we are trying to run a production system on Azure