ReceiveMessageInput

Struct ReceiveMessageInput 

Source
#[non_exhaustive]
pub struct ReceiveMessageInput { pub queue_url: Option<String>, pub attribute_names: Option<Vec<QueueAttributeName>>, pub message_system_attribute_names: Option<Vec<MessageSystemAttributeName>>, pub message_attribute_names: Option<Vec<String>>, pub max_number_of_messages: Option<i32>, pub visibility_timeout: Option<i32>, pub wait_time_seconds: Option<i32>, pub receive_request_attempt_id: Option<String>, }
Expand description

Retrieves one or more messages from a specified queue.

Fields (Non-exhaustive)§

This struct is marked as non-exhaustive
Non-exhaustive structs could have additional fields added in future. Therefore, non-exhaustive structs cannot be constructed in external crates using the traditional Struct { .. } syntax; cannot be matched against without a wildcard ..; and struct update syntax will not work.
§queue_url: Option<String>

The URL of the Amazon SQS queue from which messages are received.

Queue URLs and names are case-sensitive.

§attribute_names: Option<Vec<QueueAttributeName>>
👎Deprecated: AttributeNames has been replaced by MessageSystemAttributeNames

This parameter has been discontinued but will be supported for backward compatibility. To provide attribute names, you are encouraged to use MessageSystemAttributeNames.

A list of attributes that need to be returned along with each message. These attributes include:

  • All – Returns all values.

  • ApproximateFirstReceiveTimestamp – Returns the time the message was first received from the queue (epoch time in milliseconds).

  • ApproximateReceiveCount – Returns the number of times a message has been received across all queues but not deleted.

  • AWSTraceHeader – Returns the X-Ray trace header string.

  • SenderId

    • For a user, returns the user ID, for example ABCDEFGHI1JKLMNOPQ23R.

    • For an IAM role, returns the IAM role ID, for example ABCDE1F2GH3I4JK5LMNOP:i-a123b456.

  • SentTimestamp – Returns the time the message was sent to the queue (epoch time in milliseconds).

  • SqsManagedSseEnabled – Enables server-side queue encryption using SQS owned encryption keys. Only one server-side encryption option is supported per queue (for example, SSE-KMS or SSE-SQS).

  • MessageDeduplicationId – Returns the value provided by the producer that calls the SendMessage action.

  • MessageGroupId – Returns the value provided by the producer that calls the SendMessage action.

  • SequenceNumber – Returns the value provided by Amazon SQS.

§message_system_attribute_names: Option<Vec<MessageSystemAttributeName>>

A list of attributes that need to be returned along with each message. These attributes include:

  • All – Returns all values.

  • ApproximateFirstReceiveTimestamp – Returns the time the message was first received from the queue (epoch time in milliseconds).

  • ApproximateReceiveCount – Returns the number of times a message has been received across all queues but not deleted.

  • AWSTraceHeader – Returns the X-Ray trace header string.

  • SenderId

    • For a user, returns the user ID, for example ABCDEFGHI1JKLMNOPQ23R.

    • For an IAM role, returns the IAM role ID, for example ABCDE1F2GH3I4JK5LMNOP:i-a123b456.

  • SentTimestamp – Returns the time the message was sent to the queue (epoch time in milliseconds).

  • SqsManagedSseEnabled – Enables server-side queue encryption using SQS owned encryption keys. Only one server-side encryption option is supported per queue (for example, SSE-KMS or SSE-SQS).

  • MessageDeduplicationId – Returns the value provided by the producer that calls the SendMessage action.

  • MessageGroupId – Returns the value provided by the producer that calls the SendMessage action.

  • SequenceNumber – Returns the value provided by Amazon SQS.

§message_attribute_names: Option<Vec<String>>

The name of the message attribute, where N is the index.

  • The name can contain alphanumeric characters and the underscore (_), hyphen (-), and period (.).

  • The name is case-sensitive and must be unique among all attribute names for the message.

  • The name must not start with AWS-reserved prefixes such as AWS. or Amazon. (or any casing variants).

  • The name must not start or end with a period (.), and it should not have periods in succession (..).

  • The name can be up to 256 characters long.

When using ReceiveMessage, you can send a list of attribute names to receive, or you can return all of the attributes by specifying All or .* in your request. You can also use all message attributes starting with a prefix, for example bar.*.

§max_number_of_messages: Option<i32>

The maximum number of messages to return. Amazon SQS never returns more messages than this value (however, fewer messages might be returned). Valid values: 1 to 10. Default: 1.

§visibility_timeout: Option<i32>

The duration (in seconds) that the received messages are hidden from subsequent retrieve requests after being retrieved by a ReceiveMessage request. If not specified, the default visibility timeout for the queue is used, which is 30 seconds.

Understanding VisibilityTimeout:

  • When a message is received from a queue, it becomes temporarily invisible to other consumers for the duration of the visibility timeout. This prevents multiple consumers from processing the same message simultaneously. If the message is not deleted or its visibility timeout is not extended before the timeout expires, it becomes visible again and can be retrieved by other consumers.

  • Setting an appropriate visibility timeout is crucial. If it's too short, the message might become visible again before processing is complete, leading to duplicate processing. If it's too long, it delays the reprocessing of messages if the initial processing fails.

  • You can adjust the visibility timeout using the --visibility-timeout parameter in the receive-message command to match the processing time required by your application.

  • A message that isn't deleted or a message whose visibility isn't extended before the visibility timeout expires counts as a failed receive. Depending on the configuration of the queue, the message might be sent to the dead-letter queue.

For more information, see Visibility Timeout in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.

§wait_time_seconds: Option<i32>

The duration (in seconds) for which the call waits for a message to arrive in the queue before returning. If a message is available, the call returns sooner than WaitTimeSeconds. If no messages are available and the wait time expires, the call does not return a message list. If you are using the Java SDK, it returns a ReceiveMessageResponse object, which has a empty list instead of a Null object.

To avoid HTTP errors, ensure that the HTTP response timeout for ReceiveMessage requests is longer than the WaitTimeSeconds parameter. For example, with the Java SDK, you can set HTTP transport settings using the NettyNioAsyncHttpClient for asynchronous clients, or the ApacheHttpClient for synchronous clients.

§receive_request_attempt_id: Option<String>

This parameter applies only to FIFO (first-in-first-out) queues.

The token used for deduplication of ReceiveMessage calls. If a networking issue occurs after a ReceiveMessage action, and instead of a response you receive a generic error, it is possible to retry the same action with an identical ReceiveRequestAttemptId to retrieve the same set of messages, even if their visibility timeout has not yet expired.

  • You can use ReceiveRequestAttemptId only for 5 minutes after a ReceiveMessage action.

  • When you set FifoQueue, a caller of the ReceiveMessage action can provide a ReceiveRequestAttemptId explicitly.

  • It is possible to retry the ReceiveMessage action with the same ReceiveRequestAttemptId if none of the messages have been modified (deleted or had their visibility changes).

  • During a visibility timeout, subsequent calls with the same ReceiveRequestAttemptId return the same messages and receipt handles. If a retry occurs within the deduplication interval, it resets the visibility timeout. For more information, see Visibility Timeout in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.

    If a caller of the ReceiveMessage action still processes messages when the visibility timeout expires and messages become visible, another worker consuming from the same queue can receive the same messages and therefore process duplicates. Also, if a consumer whose message processing time is longer than the visibility timeout tries to delete the processed messages, the action fails with an error.

    To mitigate this effect, ensure that your application observes a safe threshold before the visibility timeout expires and extend the visibility timeout as necessary.

  • While messages with a particular MessageGroupId are invisible, no more messages belonging to the same MessageGroupId are returned until the visibility timeout expires. You can still receive messages with another MessageGroupId from your FIFO queue as long as they are visible.

  • If a caller of ReceiveMessage can't track the ReceiveRequestAttemptId, no retries work until the original visibility timeout expires. As a result, delays might occur but the messages in the queue remain in a strict order.

The maximum length of ReceiveRequestAttemptId is 128 characters. ReceiveRequestAttemptId can contain alphanumeric characters (a-z, A-Z, 0-9) and punctuation (!"#$%&'()*+,-./:;<=>?@\[\\]^_`{|}~).

For best practices of using ReceiveRequestAttemptId, see Using the ReceiveRequestAttemptId Request Parameter in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.

Implementations§

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impl ReceiveMessageInput

Source

pub fn queue_url(&self) -> Option<&str>

The URL of the Amazon SQS queue from which messages are received.

Queue URLs and names are case-sensitive.

Source

pub fn attribute_names(&self) -> &[QueueAttributeName]

👎Deprecated: AttributeNames has been replaced by MessageSystemAttributeNames

This parameter has been discontinued but will be supported for backward compatibility. To provide attribute names, you are encouraged to use MessageSystemAttributeNames.

A list of attributes that need to be returned along with each message. These attributes include:

  • All – Returns all values.

  • ApproximateFirstReceiveTimestamp – Returns the time the message was first received from the queue (epoch time in milliseconds).

  • ApproximateReceiveCount – Returns the number of times a message has been received across all queues but not deleted.

  • AWSTraceHeader – Returns the X-Ray trace header string.

  • SenderId

    • For a user, returns the user ID, for example ABCDEFGHI1JKLMNOPQ23R.

    • For an IAM role, returns the IAM role ID, for example ABCDE1F2GH3I4JK5LMNOP:i-a123b456.

  • SentTimestamp – Returns the time the message was sent to the queue (epoch time in milliseconds).

  • SqsManagedSseEnabled – Enables server-side queue encryption using SQS owned encryption keys. Only one server-side encryption option is supported per queue (for example, SSE-KMS or SSE-SQS).

  • MessageDeduplicationId – Returns the value provided by the producer that calls the SendMessage action.

  • MessageGroupId – Returns the value provided by the producer that calls the SendMessage action.

  • SequenceNumber – Returns the value provided by Amazon SQS.

If no value was sent for this field, a default will be set. If you want to determine if no value was sent, use .attribute_names.is_none().

Source

pub fn message_system_attribute_names(&self) -> &[MessageSystemAttributeName]

A list of attributes that need to be returned along with each message. These attributes include:

  • All – Returns all values.

  • ApproximateFirstReceiveTimestamp – Returns the time the message was first received from the queue (epoch time in milliseconds).

  • ApproximateReceiveCount – Returns the number of times a message has been received across all queues but not deleted.

  • AWSTraceHeader – Returns the X-Ray trace header string.

  • SenderId

    • For a user, returns the user ID, for example ABCDEFGHI1JKLMNOPQ23R.

    • For an IAM role, returns the IAM role ID, for example ABCDE1F2GH3I4JK5LMNOP:i-a123b456.

  • SentTimestamp – Returns the time the message was sent to the queue (epoch time in milliseconds).

  • SqsManagedSseEnabled – Enables server-side queue encryption using SQS owned encryption keys. Only one server-side encryption option is supported per queue (for example, SSE-KMS or SSE-SQS).

  • MessageDeduplicationId – Returns the value provided by the producer that calls the SendMessage action.

  • MessageGroupId – Returns the value provided by the producer that calls the SendMessage action.

  • SequenceNumber – Returns the value provided by Amazon SQS.

If no value was sent for this field, a default will be set. If you want to determine if no value was sent, use .message_system_attribute_names.is_none().

Source

pub fn message_attribute_names(&self) -> &[String]

The name of the message attribute, where N is the index.

  • The name can contain alphanumeric characters and the underscore (_), hyphen (-), and period (.).

  • The name is case-sensitive and must be unique among all attribute names for the message.

  • The name must not start with AWS-reserved prefixes such as AWS. or Amazon. (or any casing variants).

  • The name must not start or end with a period (.), and it should not have periods in succession (..).

  • The name can be up to 256 characters long.

When using ReceiveMessage, you can send a list of attribute names to receive, or you can return all of the attributes by specifying All or .* in your request. You can also use all message attributes starting with a prefix, for example bar.*.

If no value was sent for this field, a default will be set. If you want to determine if no value was sent, use .message_attribute_names.is_none().

Source

pub fn max_number_of_messages(&self) -> Option<i32>

The maximum number of messages to return. Amazon SQS never returns more messages than this value (however, fewer messages might be returned). Valid values: 1 to 10. Default: 1.

Source

pub fn visibility_timeout(&self) -> Option<i32>

The duration (in seconds) that the received messages are hidden from subsequent retrieve requests after being retrieved by a ReceiveMessage request. If not specified, the default visibility timeout for the queue is used, which is 30 seconds.

Understanding VisibilityTimeout:

  • When a message is received from a queue, it becomes temporarily invisible to other consumers for the duration of the visibility timeout. This prevents multiple consumers from processing the same message simultaneously. If the message is not deleted or its visibility timeout is not extended before the timeout expires, it becomes visible again and can be retrieved by other consumers.

  • Setting an appropriate visibility timeout is crucial. If it's too short, the message might become visible again before processing is complete, leading to duplicate processing. If it's too long, it delays the reprocessing of messages if the initial processing fails.

  • You can adjust the visibility timeout using the --visibility-timeout parameter in the receive-message command to match the processing time required by your application.

  • A message that isn't deleted or a message whose visibility isn't extended before the visibility timeout expires counts as a failed receive. Depending on the configuration of the queue, the message might be sent to the dead-letter queue.

For more information, see Visibility Timeout in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.

Source

pub fn wait_time_seconds(&self) -> Option<i32>

The duration (in seconds) for which the call waits for a message to arrive in the queue before returning. If a message is available, the call returns sooner than WaitTimeSeconds. If no messages are available and the wait time expires, the call does not return a message list. If you are using the Java SDK, it returns a ReceiveMessageResponse object, which has a empty list instead of a Null object.

To avoid HTTP errors, ensure that the HTTP response timeout for ReceiveMessage requests is longer than the WaitTimeSeconds parameter. For example, with the Java SDK, you can set HTTP transport settings using the NettyNioAsyncHttpClient for asynchronous clients, or the ApacheHttpClient for synchronous clients.

Source

pub fn receive_request_attempt_id(&self) -> Option<&str>

This parameter applies only to FIFO (first-in-first-out) queues.

The token used for deduplication of ReceiveMessage calls. If a networking issue occurs after a ReceiveMessage action, and instead of a response you receive a generic error, it is possible to retry the same action with an identical ReceiveRequestAttemptId to retrieve the same set of messages, even if their visibility timeout has not yet expired.

  • You can use ReceiveRequestAttemptId only for 5 minutes after a ReceiveMessage action.

  • When you set FifoQueue, a caller of the ReceiveMessage action can provide a ReceiveRequestAttemptId explicitly.

  • It is possible to retry the ReceiveMessage action with the same ReceiveRequestAttemptId if none of the messages have been modified (deleted or had their visibility changes).

  • During a visibility timeout, subsequent calls with the same ReceiveRequestAttemptId return the same messages and receipt handles. If a retry occurs within the deduplication interval, it resets the visibility timeout. For more information, see Visibility Timeout in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.

    If a caller of the ReceiveMessage action still processes messages when the visibility timeout expires and messages become visible, another worker consuming from the same queue can receive the same messages and therefore process duplicates. Also, if a consumer whose message processing time is longer than the visibility timeout tries to delete the processed messages, the action fails with an error.

    To mitigate this effect, ensure that your application observes a safe threshold before the visibility timeout expires and extend the visibility timeout as necessary.

  • While messages with a particular MessageGroupId are invisible, no more messages belonging to the same MessageGroupId are returned until the visibility timeout expires. You can still receive messages with another MessageGroupId from your FIFO queue as long as they are visible.

  • If a caller of ReceiveMessage can't track the ReceiveRequestAttemptId, no retries work until the original visibility timeout expires. As a result, delays might occur but the messages in the queue remain in a strict order.

The maximum length of ReceiveRequestAttemptId is 128 characters. ReceiveRequestAttemptId can contain alphanumeric characters (a-z, A-Z, 0-9) and punctuation (!"#$%&'()*+,-./:;<=>?@\[\\]^_`{|}~).

For best practices of using ReceiveRequestAttemptId, see Using the ReceiveRequestAttemptId Request Parameter in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.

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impl ReceiveMessageInput

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pub fn builder() -> ReceiveMessageInputBuilder

Creates a new builder-style object to manufacture ReceiveMessageInput.

Trait Implementations§

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impl Clone for ReceiveMessageInput

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fn clone(&self) -> ReceiveMessageInput

Returns a duplicate of the value. Read more
1.0.0 · Source§

fn clone_from(&mut self, source: &Self)

Performs copy-assignment from source. Read more
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impl Debug for ReceiveMessageInput

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fn fmt(&self, f: &mut Formatter<'_>) -> Result

Formats the value using the given formatter. Read more
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impl PartialEq for ReceiveMessageInput

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fn eq(&self, other: &ReceiveMessageInput) -> bool

Tests for self and other values to be equal, and is used by ==.
1.0.0 · Source§

fn ne(&self, other: &Rhs) -> bool

Tests for !=. The default implementation is almost always sufficient, and should not be overridden without very good reason.
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impl StructuralPartialEq for ReceiveMessageInput

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👎Deprecated since 1.0.1: renamed to resetting() due to conflicts with Vec::clear(). The clear() method will be removed in a future release.

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