Package Name | Target Framework | NuGet |
---|---|---|
Microsoft.Azure.WebJobs.Extensions.SignalRService | .NET Core App 2.1 .NET Core App 3.1 |
These bindings allow Azure Functions to integrate with Azure SignalR Service.
- Allow clients to serverlessly connect to a SignalR Service hub without requiring an ASP.NET Core backend
- Use Azure Functions (any language supported by V2) to broadcast messages to all clients connected to a SignalR Service hub.
- Use Azure Functions (any language supported by V2) to send messages to a single user, or all the users in a group.
- Use Azure Functions (any language supported by V2) to manage group users like add/remove a single user in a group.
- Example scenarios include: broadcast messages to a SignalR Service hub on HTTP requests and events from Cosmos DB change feed, Event Hub, Event Grid, etc
- Use multiple Azure SignalR Service instances for resiliency and disaster recovery in Azure Functions. See details in Multiple SignalR service endpoint support.
SignalRConnectionInfo
input binding makes it easy to generate the token required for clients to initiate a connection to Azure SignalR Service.
SignalR
output binding allows messages to be broadcast to an Azure SignalR Service hub.
- Azure Functions Core Tools (V2 or V3)
- Create Azure SignalR Service instances in the Azure Portal. Note the connection strings, you'll need them later.
- In a new folder, create a new Azure Functions app.
func init
- Install this Functions extension.
func extensions install -p Microsoft.Azure.WebJobs.Extensions.SignalRService -v 1.0.0
- Create an app setting called
AzureSignalRConnectionString
with the SignalR connection string.- On localhost, use
local.settings.json
- In Azure, use App Settings
- On localhost, use
In order for a client to connect to SignalR, it needs to obtain the SignalR Service client hub URL and an access token.
- Create a new function named
negotiate
and use theSignalRConnectionInfo
input binding to obtain the connection information and return it. Take a look at this sample. - Client connects to the
negotiate
function as it's a normal SignalR hub. See this file for a sample usage.
Binding schema:
{
"type": "signalRConnectionInfo",
"name": "connectionInfo",
"hubName": "<hub_name>",
"connectionStringSetting": "<setting_name>", // Defaults to AzureSignalRConnectionString
"direction": "in"
}
The SignalR
output binding can be used to broadcast messages to all clients connected a hub. Take a look at this sample:
- HttpTrigger function to send messages
- Simple chat app
- Calls negotiate endpoint to fetch connection information
- Connects to SignalR Service
- Sends messages to HttpTrigger function, which then broadcasts the messages to all clients
Binding schema:
{
"type": "signalR",
"name": "signalRMessages", // name of the output binding
"hubName": "<hub_name>",
"connectionStringSetting": "<setting_name>", // Defaults to AzureSignalRConnectionString
"direction": "out"
}
To send one or more messages, set the output binding to an array of objects:
module.exports = function (context, req) {
context.bindings.signalRMessages = [{
"target": "newMessage", // name of the client method to invoke
"arguments": [
req.body // arguments to pass to client method
]
}];
context.done();
};
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