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Queues
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Publish to a Queue via HTTP

Publish to a Queue directly via HTTP and Workers.

The following example shows you how to publsh messages to a queue from any HTTP client, using a shared secret to securely authenticate the client.

This allows you to write to a Queue from any service or programming language that support HTTP, including Go, Rust, Python or even a Bash script.

​​ Prerequisites

Configure your wrangler.toml file as follows:

wrangler.toml
name = "my-worker"
[[queues.producers]]
queue = "my-queue"
binding = "YOUR_QUEUE"

​​ 1. Create a shared secret

Before you deploy the Worker, you need to create a secret that you can use as a shared secret. A shared secret is a secret that both the client uses to authenticate and the server (your Worker) matches against for authentication.

To generate a cryptographically secure secret, you can use the openssl command-line tool and wrangler secret to create a hex-encoded string that can be used as the shared secret:

$ openssl rand -hex 32
# This will output a 65 character long hex string

Copy this string and paste it into the prompt for wrangler secret:

$ npx wrangler secret put QUEUE_AUTH_SECRET
# Outputs:
✨ Success! Uploaded secret QUEUE_AUTH_SECRET

This secret will also need to be used by the client application writing to the queue: ensure you store it securely.

​​ 2. Create the Worker

The following Worker script:

  1. Authenticates the client using a shared secret.
  2. Validates that the payload uses JSON.
  3. Publishes the payload to the queue.
src/index.ts
interface Env {
YOUR_QUEUE: Queue;
QUEUE_AUTH_SECRET: string;
}
export default {
async fetch(req: Request, env: Env): Promise<Response> {
// Authenticate that the client has the correct auth key
if (env.QUEUE_AUTH_SECRET == "") {
return Response.json({ err: "application not configured" }, { status: 500 });
}
// Return a HTTP 403 (Forbidden) if the auth key is invalid/incorrect/misconfigured
let authToken = req.headers.get("Authorization") || "";
let encoder = new TextEncoder();
// Securely compare our secret with the auth token provided by the client
try {
if (!crypto.subtle.timingSafeEqual(encoder.encode(env.QUEUE_AUTH_SECRET), encoder.encode(authToken))) {
return Response.json({ err: "invalid auth token provided" }, { status: 403 });
}
} catch (e) {
return Response.json({ err: "invalid auth token provided" }, { status: 403 });
}
// Optional: Validate the payload is JSON
// In a production application, we may more robustly validate the payload
// against a schema using a library like 'zod'
let messages;
try {
messages = await req.json();
} catch (e) {
// Return a HTTP 400 (Bad Request) if the payload isn't JSON
return Response.json({ err: "payload not valid JSON" }, { status: 500 });
}
// Publish to the Queue
try {
await env.YOUR_QUEUE.send(messages);
} catch (e: any) {
console.log(`failed to send to the queue: ${e}`);
// Return a HTTP 500 (Internal Error) if our publish operation fails
return Response.json({ error: e.message }, { status: 500 });
}
// Return a HTTP 200 if the send succeeded!
return Response.json({ success: true });
},
};

To deploy this Worker:

$ npx wrangler deploy

​​ 3. Send a test message

To make sure you successfully authenticate and write a message to your queue, use curl on the command line:

# Make sure to replace the placeholder with your shared secret
$ curl -H "Authorization: pasteyourkeyhere" "https://YOUR_WORKER.YOUR_ACCOUNT.workers.dev" --data '{"messages": [{"msg":"hello world"}]}'
# Outputs:
{"success":true}

This will issue a HTTP POST request, and if successful, return a HTTP 200 with a success: true response body.

  • If you receive a HTTP 403, this is because the Authorization header is invalid, or you did not configure a secret.
  • If you receive a HTTP 500, this is either because you did not correctly create a shared secret to your Worker, or you attempted to send an invalid message to your queue.

You can use wrangler tail to debug the output of console.log.