Receive Message
sqs_receive_message |
R Documentation |
Retrieves one or more messages (up to 10), from the specified queue
Description
Retrieves one or more messages (up to 10), from the specified queue.
Using the WaitTimeSeconds
parameter enables long-poll support. For
more information, see Amazon SQS Long
Polling
in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
Short poll is the default behavior where a weighted random set of
machines is sampled on a receive_message
call. Therefore, only the
messages on the sampled machines are returned. If the number of messages
in the queue is small (fewer than 1,000), you most likely get fewer
messages than you requested per receive_message
call. If the number of
messages in the queue is extremely small, you might not receive any
messages in a particular receive_message
response. If this happens,
repeat the request.
For each message returned, the response includes the following:
-
The message body.
-
An MD5 digest of the message body. For information about MD5, see
RFC1321.
-
The MessageId
you received when you sent the message to the queue.
-
The receipt handle.
-
The message attributes.
-
An MD5 digest of the message attributes.
The receipt handle is the identifier you must provide when deleting the
message. For more information, see Queue and Message
Identifiers
in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
You can provide the VisibilityTimeout
parameter in your request. The
parameter is applied to the messages that Amazon SQS returns in the
response. If you don't include the parameter, the overall visibility
timeout for the queue is used for the returned messages. The default
visibility timeout for a queue is 30 seconds.
In the future, new attributes might be added. If you write code that
calls this action, we recommend that you structure your code so that it
can handle new attributes gracefully.
Usage
sqs_receive_message(QueueUrl, AttributeNames,
MessageSystemAttributeNames, MessageAttributeNames, MaxNumberOfMessages,
VisibilityTimeout, WaitTimeSeconds, ReceiveRequestAttemptId)
Arguments
QueueUrl |
[required] The URL of the Amazon SQS queue from which messages
are received.
Queue URLs and names are case-sensitive. |
AttributeNames |
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 send_message
action.
MessageGroupId – Returns the value provided by the
producer that calls the send_message action. Messages with
the same MessageGroupId are returned in sequence.
SequenceNumber – Returns the value provided by
Amazon SQS.
|
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 send_message
action.
MessageGroupId – Returns the value provided by the
producer that calls the send_message action. Messages with
the same MessageGroupId are returned in sequence.
SequenceNumber – Returns the value provided by
Amazon SQS.
|
MessageAttributeNames |
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 receive_message , 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.* . |
MaxNumberOfMessages |
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. |
VisibilityTimeout |
The duration (in seconds) that the received messages are hidden
from subsequent retrieve requests after being retrieved by a
receive_message 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. |
WaitTimeSeconds |
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
receive_message 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. |
ReceiveRequestAttemptId |
This parameter applies only to FIFO (first-in-first-out)
queues.
The token used for deduplication of receive_message
calls. If a networking issue occurs after a receive_message
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 receive_message action.
When you set FifoQueue , a caller of the
receive_message action can provide a
ReceiveRequestAttemptId explicitly.
It is possible to retry the receive_message 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 receive_message 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 as long as it is also visible.
If a caller of receive_message 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.
[]: R:%5C [Using the ReceiveRequestAttemptId Request Parameter]:
R:Using%20the%0AReceiveRequestAttemptId%20Request%0AParameter |
Value
A list with the following syntax:
list(
Messages = list(
list(
MessageId = "string",
ReceiptHandle = "string",
MD5OfBody = "string",
Body = "string",
Attributes = list(
"string"
),
MD5OfMessageAttributes = "string",
MessageAttributes = list(
list(
StringValue = "string",
BinaryValue = raw,
StringListValues = list(
"string"
),
BinaryListValues = list(
raw
),
DataType = "string"
)
)
)
)
)
Request syntax
svc$receive_message(
QueueUrl = "string",
AttributeNames = list(
"All"|"Policy"|"VisibilityTimeout"|"MaximumMessageSize"|"MessageRetentionPeriod"|"ApproximateNumberOfMessages"|"ApproximateNumberOfMessagesNotVisible"|"CreatedTimestamp"|"LastModifiedTimestamp"|"QueueArn"|"ApproximateNumberOfMessagesDelayed"|"DelaySeconds"|"ReceiveMessageWaitTimeSeconds"|"RedrivePolicy"|"FifoQueue"|"ContentBasedDeduplication"|"KmsMasterKeyId"|"KmsDataKeyReusePeriodSeconds"|"DeduplicationScope"|"FifoThroughputLimit"|"RedriveAllowPolicy"|"SqsManagedSseEnabled"
),
MessageSystemAttributeNames = list(
"All"|"SenderId"|"SentTimestamp"|"ApproximateReceiveCount"|"ApproximateFirstReceiveTimestamp"|"SequenceNumber"|"MessageDeduplicationId"|"MessageGroupId"|"AWSTraceHeader"|"DeadLetterQueueSourceArn"
),
MessageAttributeNames = list(
"string"
),
MaxNumberOfMessages = 123,
VisibilityTimeout = 123,
WaitTimeSeconds = 123,
ReceiveRequestAttemptId = "string"
)