title | description | ms.topic | ms.date | ms.devlang | ms.custom | zone_pivot_groups |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Azure Tables output bindings for Azure Functions | Understand how to use Azure Tables output bindings in Azure Functions. | reference | 11/11/2022 | csharp | devx-track-csharp, devx-track-python, devx-track-extended-java, devx-track-js, devx-track-ts | programming-languages-set-functions |
Use an Azure Tables output binding to write entities to a table in Azure Cosmos DB for Table or Azure Table Storage.
For information on setup and configuration details, see the overview
Note
This output binding only supports creating new entities in a table. If you need to update an existing entity from your function code, instead use an Azure Tables SDK directly.
::: zone pivot="programming-language-javascript,programming-language-typescript" [!INCLUDE functions-nodejs-model-tabs-description] ::: zone-end
::: zone pivot="programming-language-csharp"
[!INCLUDE functions-bindings-csharp-intro]
[!INCLUDE functions-in-process-model-retirement-note]
The following MyTableData
class represents a row of data in the table:
publicclassMyTableData:Azure.Data.Tables.ITableEntity{publicstringText{get;set;}publicstringPartitionKey{get;set;}publicstringRowKey{get;set;}publicDateTimeOffset?Timestamp{get;set;}publicETagETag{get;set;}}
The following function, which is started by a Queue Storage trigger, writes a new MyDataTable
entity to a table named OutputTable.
[Function("TableFunction")][TableOutput("OutputTable",Connection="AzureWebJobsStorage")]publicstaticMyTableDataRun([QueueTrigger("table-items")]stringinput,[TableInput("MyTable","<PartitionKey>","{queueTrigger}")]MyTableDatatableInput,FunctionContextcontext){varlogger=context.GetLogger("TableFunction");logger.LogInformation($"PK={tableInput.PartitionKey}, RK={tableInput.RowKey}, Text={tableInput.Text}");returnnewMyTableData(){PartitionKey="queue",RowKey=Guid.NewGuid().ToString(),Text=$"Output record with rowkey {input} created at {DateTime.Now}"};}
The following example shows a C# function that uses an HTTP trigger to write a single table row.
publicclassTableStorage{publicclassMyPoco{publicstringPartitionKey{get;set;}publicstringRowKey{get;set;}publicstringText{get;set;}}[FunctionName("TableOutput")][return:Table("MyTable")]publicstaticMyPocoTableOutput([HttpTrigger]dynamicinput,ILoggerlog){log.LogInformation($"C# http trigger function processed: {input.Text}");returnnewMyPoco{PartitionKey="Http",RowKey=Guid.NewGuid().ToString(),Text=input.Text};}}
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The following example shows a Java function that uses an HTTP trigger to write a single table row.
publicclassPerson { privateStringPartitionKey; privateStringRowKey; privateStringName; publicStringgetPartitionKey() {returnthis.PartitionKey;} publicvoidsetPartitionKey(Stringkey) {this.PartitionKey = key; } publicStringgetRowKey() {returnthis.RowKey;} publicvoidsetRowKey(Stringkey) {this.RowKey = key; } publicStringgetName() {returnthis.Name;} publicvoidsetName(Stringname) {this.Name = name; } } publicclassAddPerson { @FunctionName("addPerson") publicHttpResponseMessageget( @HttpTrigger(name = "postPerson", methods = {HttpMethod.POST}, authLevel = AuthorizationLevel.FUNCTION, route="persons/{partitionKey}/{rowKey}") HttpRequestMessage<Optional<Person>> request, @BindingName("partitionKey") StringpartitionKey, @BindingName("rowKey") StringrowKey, @TableOutput(name="person", partitionKey="{partitionKey}", rowKey = "{rowKey}", tableName="%MyTableName%", connection="MyConnectionString") OutputBinding<Person> person, finalExecutionContextcontext) { PersonoutPerson = newPerson(); outPerson.setPartitionKey(partitionKey); outPerson.setRowKey(rowKey); outPerson.setName(request.getBody().get().getName()); person.setValue(outPerson); returnrequest.createResponseBuilder(HttpStatus.OK) .header("Content-Type", "application/json") .body(outPerson) .build(); } }
The following example shows a Java function that uses an HTTP trigger to write multiple table rows.
publicclassPerson { privateStringPartitionKey; privateStringRowKey; privateStringName; publicStringgetPartitionKey() {returnthis.PartitionKey;} publicvoidsetPartitionKey(Stringkey) {this.PartitionKey = key; } publicStringgetRowKey() {returnthis.RowKey;} publicvoidsetRowKey(Stringkey) {this.RowKey = key; } publicStringgetName() {returnthis.Name;} publicvoidsetName(Stringname) {this.Name = name; } } publicclassAddPersons { @FunctionName("addPersons") publicHttpResponseMessageget( @HttpTrigger(name = "postPersons", methods = {HttpMethod.POST}, authLevel = AuthorizationLevel.FUNCTION, route="persons/") HttpRequestMessage<Optional<Person[]>> request, @TableOutput(name="person", tableName="%MyTableName%", connection="MyConnectionString") OutputBinding<Person[]> persons, finalExecutionContextcontext) { persons.setValue(request.getBody().get()); returnrequest.createResponseBuilder(HttpStatus.OK) .header("Content-Type", "application/json") .body(request.getBody().get()) .build(); } }
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::: zone pivot="programming-language-javascript,programming-language-typescript"
The following example shows a table output binding that writes multiple table entities.
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:::code language="typescript" source="~/azure-functions-nodejs-v4/ts/src/functions/tableOutput1.ts" :::
TypeScript samples are not documented for model v3.
::: zone-end ::: zone pivot="programming-language-javascript"
:::code language="javascript" source="~/azure-functions-nodejs-v4/js/src/functions/tableOutput1.js" :::
Here's the function.json file:
{ "bindings": [ { "name": "input", "type": "manualTrigger", "direction": "in" }, { "tableName": "Person", "connection": "MyStorageConnectionAppSetting", "name": "tableBinding", "type": "table", "direction": "out" } ], "disabled": false }
The configuration section explains these properties.
Here's the JavaScript code:
module.exports=asyncfunction(context){context.bindings.tableBinding=[];for(vari=1;i<10;i++){context.bindings.tableBinding.push({PartitionKey: "Test",RowKey: i.toString(),Name: "Name "+i});}};
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::: zone pivot="programming-language-powershell"
The following example demonstrates how to write multiple entities to a table from a function.
Binding configuration in function.json:
{ "bindings": [ { "name": "InputData", "type": "manualTrigger", "direction": "in" }, { "tableName": "Person", "connection": "MyStorageConnectionAppSetting", "name": "TableBinding", "type": "table", "direction": "out" } ], "disabled": false }
PowerShell code in run.ps1:
param($InputData,$TriggerMetadata) foreach ($iin1..10) { Push-OutputBinding-Name TableBinding -Value @{ PartitionKey='Test'RowKey="$i"Name="Name $i" } }
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::: zone pivot="programming-language-python"
The following example demonstrates how to use the Table storage output binding. Configure the table
binding in the function.json by assigning values to name
, tableName
, partitionKey
, and connection
:
{ "scriptFile": "__init__.py", "bindings": [ { "name": "message", "type": "table", "tableName": "messages", "partitionKey": "message", "connection": "AzureWebJobsStorage", "direction": "out" }, { "authLevel": "function", "type": "httpTrigger", "direction": "in", "name": "req", "methods": [ "get", "post" ] }, { "type": "http", "direction": "out", "name": "$return" } ] }
The following function generates a unique UUI for the rowKey
value and persists the message into Table storage.
importloggingimportuuidimportjsonimportazure.functionsasfuncdefmain(req: func.HttpRequest, message: func.Out[str]) ->func.HttpResponse: rowKey=str(uuid.uuid4()) data= { "Name": "Output binding message", "PartitionKey": "message", "RowKey": rowKey } message.set(json.dumps(data)) returnfunc.HttpResponse(f"Message created with the rowKey: {rowKey}")
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Both in-process and isolated worker process C# libraries use attributes to define the function. C# script instead uses a function.json configuration file as described in the C# scripting guide.
In C# class libraries, the TableInputAttribute
supports the following properties:
Attribute property | Description |
---|---|
TableName | The name of the table to which to write. |
PartitionKey | The partition key of the table entity to write. |
RowKey | The row key of the table entity to write. |
Connection | The name of an app setting or setting collection that specifies how to connect to the table service. See Connections. |
In C# class libraries, the TableAttribute
supports the following properties:
Attribute property | Description |
---|---|
TableName | The name of the table to which to write. |
PartitionKey | The partition key of the table entity to write. |
RowKey | The row key of the table entity to write. |
Connection | The name of an app setting or setting collection that specifies how to connect to the table service. See Connections. |
The attribute's constructor takes the table name. Use the attribute on an out
parameter or on the return value of the function, as shown in the following example:
[FunctionName("TableOutput")][return:Table("MyTable")]publicstaticMyPocoTableOutput([HttpTrigger]dynamicinput,ILoggerlog){ ...}
You can set the Connection
property to specify a connection to the table service, as shown in the following example:
[FunctionName("TableOutput")][return:Table("MyTable",Connection="StorageConnectionAppSetting")]publicstaticMyPocoTableOutput([HttpTrigger]dynamicinput,ILoggerlog){ ...}
[!INCLUDE functions-bindings-storage-attribute]
::: zone-end
::: zone pivot="programming-language-java"
In the Java functions runtime library, use the TableOutput annotation on parameters to write values into your tables. The attribute supports the following elements:
Element | Description |
---|---|
name | The variable name used in function code that represents the table or entity. |
dataType | Defines how Functions runtime should treat the parameter value. To learn more, see dataType. |
tableName | The name of the table to which to write. |
partitionKey | The partition key of the table entity to write. |
rowKey | The row key of the table entity to write. |
connection | The name of an app setting or setting collection that specifies how to connect to the table service. See Connections. |
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::: zone pivot="programming-language-javascript,programming-language-typescript"
The following table explains the properties that you can set on the options
object passed to the output.table()
method.
Property | Description |
---|---|
tableName | The name of the table to which to write. |
partitionKey | The partition key of the table entity to write. |
rowKey | The row key of the table entity to write. |
connection | The name of an app setting or setting collection that specifies how to connect to the table service. See Connections. |
The following table explains the binding configuration properties that you set in the function.json file.
Property | Description |
---|---|
type | Must be set to table . This property is set automatically when you create the binding in the Azure portal. |
direction | Must be set to out . This property is set automatically when you create the binding in the Azure portal. |
name | The variable name used in function code that represents the table or entity. Set to $return to reference the function return value. |
tableName | The name of the table to which to write. |
partitionKey | The partition key of the table entity to write. |
rowKey | The row key of the table entity to write. |
connection | The name of an app setting or setting collection that specifies how to connect to the table service. See Connections. |
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The following table explains the binding configuration properties that you set in the function.json file.
function.json property | Description |
---|---|
type | Must be set to table . This property is set automatically when you create the binding in the Azure portal. |
direction | Must be set to out . This property is set automatically when you create the binding in the Azure portal. |
name | The variable name used in function code that represents the table or entity. Set to $return to reference the function return value. |
tableName | The name of the table to which to write. |
partitionKey | The partition key of the table entity to write. |
rowKey | The row key of the table entity to write. |
connection | The name of an app setting or setting collection that specifies how to connect to the table service. See Connections. |
[!INCLUDE app settings to local.settings.json] ::: zone-end
[!INCLUDE functions-table-connections]
::: zone pivot="programming-language-csharp"
The usage of the binding depends on the extension package version, and the C# modality used in your function app, which can be one of the following:
An isolated worker process class library compiled C# function runs in a process isolated from the runtime.
An in-process class library is a compiled C# function runs in the same process as the Functions runtime.
Choose a version to see usage details for the mode and version.
The following types are supported for out
parameters and return types:
- A plain-old CLR object (POCO) that includes the
PartitionKey
andRowKey
properties. You can accompany these properties by implementingITableEntity
. ICollector<T>
orIAsyncCollector<T>
whereT
includes thePartitionKey
andRowKey
properties. You can accompany these properties by implementingITableEntity
.
You can also bind to TableClient
from the Azure SDK. You can then use that object to write to the table.
The following types are supported for out
parameters and return types:
- A plain-old CLR object (POCO) that includes the
PartitionKey
andRowKey
properties. You can accompany these properties by implementingITableEntity
or inheritingTableEntity
. ICollector<T>
orIAsyncCollector<T>
whereT
includes thePartitionKey
andRowKey
properties. You can accompany these properties by implementingITableEntity
or inheritingTableEntity
.
You can also bind to CloudTable
from the Storage SDK as a method parameter. You can then use that object to write to the table.
The following types are supported for out
parameters and return types:
- A plain-old CLR object (POCO) that includes the
PartitionKey
andRowKey
properties. You can accompany these properties by implementingITableEntity
or inheritingTableEntity
. ICollector<T>
orIAsyncCollector<T>
whereT
includes thePartitionKey
andRowKey
properties. You can accompany these properties by implementingITableEntity
or inheritingTableEntity
.
You can also bind to CloudTable
from the Storage SDK as a method parameter. You can then use that object to write to the table.
[!INCLUDE functions-bindings-table-output-dotnet-isolated-types]
Return a plain-old CLR object (POCO) with properties that can be mapped to the table entity.
Functions version 1.x doesn't support isolated worker process.
::: zone-end
::: zone pivot="programming-language-java" There are two options for outputting a Table storage row from a function by using the TableStorageOutput annotation:
Options | Description |
---|---|
Return value | By applying the annotation to the function itself, the return value of the function persists as a Table storage row. |
Imperative | To explicitly set the table row, apply the annotation to a specific parameter of the type OutputBinding<T> , where T includes the PartitionKey and RowKey properties. You can accompany these properties by implementing ITableEntity or inheriting TableEntity . |
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::: zone pivot="programming-language-javascript,programming-language-typescript"
Set the output row data by returning the value or using context.extraOutputs.set()
.
Set the output row data by using context.bindings.<name>
where <name>
is the value specified in the name
property of function.json.
::: zone-end ::: zone pivot="programming-language-powershell"
To write to table data, use the Push-OutputBinding
cmdlet, set the -Name TableBinding
parameter and -Value
parameter equal to the row data. See the PowerShell example for more detail.
::: zone-end
::: zone pivot="programming-language-python"
There are two options for outputting a Table storage row message from a function:
Options | Description |
---|---|
Return value | Set the name property in function.json to $return . With this configuration, the function's return value persists as a Table storage row. |
Imperative | Pass a value to the set method of the parameter declared as an Out type. The value passed to set is persisted as table row. |
::: zone-end |
For specific usage details, see Example.
Binding | Reference |
---|---|
Table | Table Error Codes |
Blob, Table, Queue | Storage Error Codes |
Blob, Table, Queue | Troubleshooting |
[!div class="nextstepaction"] Learn more about Azure functions triggers and bindings