Asynchronous service architecture
Applies To: Dynamics 365 (online), Dynamics 365 (on-premises), Dynamics CRM 2016, Dynamics CRM Online
The Microsoft Dynamics 365 system architecture can be divided into three major components: the core system, which features the event execution pipeline, the database component, which hosts the asynchronous queue, and the asynchronous service. One benefit of the scalable architecture of Microsoft Dynamics 365 is that the asynchronous service can be hosted on servers other than the Microsoft Dynamics 365 server, resulting in improved performance. For more information, see the architecture diagram in Event execution pipeline.
Register plug-ins for asynchronous events when they have to perform lots of processing or for functions that are not time critical. Registering a plug-in that performs lots of processing for a synchronous event can adversely affect the performance of Microsoft Dynamics 365.
You should stop the asynchronous service before you unregister a plug-in that was registered to execute asynchronously. Stopping the service prevents a situation where an asynchronous registered plug-in has been queued for execution but for which there is no plug-in assembly currently registered. For example, consider the situation in which a plug-in has been registered to execute asynchronously and the related event has fired. After the asynchronous operation has been queued by the queue manager, you then unregister (delete) the plug-in assembly from the Microsoft Dynamics 365 database. In this case, an error occurs when the asynchronous service tries to execute the queued asynchronous operation but the plug-in assembly no longer exists.
Queue manager
The queue manager creates and manages asynchronous operations that are sent to the asynchronous service either from the event execution pipeline or directly by a Web service call. When an event is raised in the event execution pipeline, and if one or more plug-ins are registered for that event, the queue manager creates a new asynchronous operation in the queue. Throughout the lifetime of the asynchronous operation, its status may change multiple times from creation until it is completed. The queue manager runs as part of the asynchronous service and manages the state changes of the asynchronous operations. A part of the queue manager, known as the asynchronous queue agent, is located on the Microsoft Dynamics 365 server.
See Also
Register and Deploy Plug-Ins
Stop and start the asynchronous service
Asynchronous service in Microsoft Dynamics 365
AsyncOperation (system job) entity
Microsoft Dynamics 365
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