Azure Queue Storage library for Rust
When to Use
Use this skill when you need azure Queue Storage library for Rust. Send, receive, and manage queue messages. Triggers: "queue storage rust", "QueueClient rust", "send message rust", "receive messages rust", "QueueServiceClient rust", "queue rust".
Client library for Azure Queue Storage — send, receive, and manage queue messages.
Use this skill when:
- An app needs to send or receive messages from Azure Queue Storage in Rust
- You need to create or manage queues
- You need to peek, receive, or delete queue messages
- You need RBAC-based auth for queue operations
IMPORTANT: Only use the official
azure_storage_queuecrate published by the azure-sdk crates.io user. Do NOT use unofficial or community crates. Official crates use underscores in names and none have version 0.21.0.
Installation
cargo add azure_storage_queue azure_identity azure_core tokio
If your code uses
azure_coretypes directly, addazure_coretoCargo.toml. If you only useazure_storage_queuere-exports, directazure_coredependency is optional.
Environment Variables
AZURE_STORAGE_QUEUE_ENDPOINT=https://<account>.queue.core.windows.net/ # Required for all operations
Authentication
use azure_core::http::Url;
use azure_identity::DeveloperToolsCredential;
use azure_storage_queue::QueueServiceClient;
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> {
// Local dev: DeveloperToolsCredential. Production: use ManagedIdentityCredential.
let credential = DeveloperToolsCredential::new(None)?;
let service_url = Url::parse("https://<storage_account_name>.queue.core.windows.net/")?;
let service_client = QueueServiceClient::new(service_url, Some(credential), None)?;
// Derive a queue client by name.
let queue_client = service_client.queue_client("<queue_name>")?;
Ok(())
}
Client Types
| Client | Purpose | Access |
|---|---|---|
QueueServiceClient | Account-level operations, list queues | QueueServiceClient::new() |
QueueClient | Queue operations, send/receive/delete | service_client.queue_client("<name>")? |
Core Workflow
Send a Message
use azure_core::http::Url;
use azure_identity::DeveloperToolsCredential;
use azure_storage_queue::{models::QueueMessage, QueueServiceClient};
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> {
let credential = DeveloperToolsCredential::new(None)?;
let service_url = Url::parse("https://<storage_account_name>.queue.core.windows.net/")?;
let service_client = QueueServiceClient::new(service_url, Some(credential), None)?;
let queue_client = service_client.queue_client("<queue_name>")?;
let message = QueueMessage {
message_text: Some("hello world".to_string()),
};
queue_client.send_message(message.try_into()?, None).await?;
Ok(())
}
Receive Messages
use azure_core::http::Url;
use azure_identity::DeveloperToolsCredential;
use azure_storage_queue::QueueServiceClient;
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> {
let credential = DeveloperToolsCredential::new(None)?;
let service_url = Url::parse("https://<storage_account_name>.queue.core.windows.net/")?;
let service_client = QueueServiceClient::new(service_url, Some(credential), None)?;
let queue_client = service_client.queue_client("<queue_name>")?;
let response = queue_client.receive_messages(None).await?;
let messages = response.into_model()?;
for msg in messages.items.unwrap_or_default() {
println!("{}", msg.message_text.as_deref().unwrap_or("<empty>"));
}
Ok(())
}
Delete a Message
After receiving a message, delete it using the message ID and pop receipt:
let response = queue_client.receive_messages(None).await?;
let messages = response.into_model()?;
for msg in messages.items.unwrap_or_default() {
if let (Some(id), Some(pop_receipt)) = (&msg.message_id, &msg.pop_receipt) {
queue_client.delete_message(id, pop_receipt, None).await?;
}
}
Peek Messages
Peek at messages without removing them from the queue:
let response = queue_client.peek_messages(None).await?;
let messages = response.into_model()?;
for msg in messages.items.unwrap_or_default() {
println!("Peeked: {}", msg.message_text.as_deref().unwrap_or("<empty>"));
}
RBAC Roles
For Entra ID auth, assign one of these roles to the identity:
| Role | Access |
|---|---|
Storage Queue Data Reader | Read and peek messages |
Storage Queue Data Contributor | Read/write messages |
Storage Queue Data Message Sender | Send messages only |
Storage Queue Data Message Processor | Receive and delete |
Best Practices
- Use
cargo addto manage dependencies, never editCargo.tomldirectly. Add and remove Rust SDK dependencies with cargo commands instead of manual manifest edits. - Add
azure_coreonly when importingazure_coretypes directly. If your code importsazure_core::http::Url,azure_core::http::RequestContent, orazure_core::error::ErrorKind, includeazure_core; otherwise a direct dependency is optional. - Use
DeveloperToolsCredentialfor local dev,ManagedIdentityCredentialfor production — Rust does not provide a singleDefaultAzureCredentialtype - Never hardcode credentials — use environment variables or managed identity
- Assign RBAC roles — ensure appropriate queue data roles for the identity
- Use
QueueServiceClientas the entry point and deriveQueueClientfrom it viaqueue_client() - Delete messages after processing — use the message ID and pop receipt from
receive_messages - Reuse clients — clients are thread-safe; create once, share across tasks
Reference Links
| Resource | Link |
|---|---|
| API Reference | https://docs.rs/crate/azure_storage_queue/latest |
| crates.io | https://crates.io/crates/azure_storage_queue |
| Source Code | https://github.com/Azure/azure-sdk-for-rust/tree/main/sdk/storage/azure_storage_queue |
Limitations
- Use this skill only when the task clearly matches its upstream source and local project context.
- Verify commands, generated code, dependencies, credentials, and external service behavior before applying changes.
- Do not treat examples as a substitute for environment-specific tests, security review, or user approval for destructive or costly actions.