Enqueue a Message
Enqueue a message
Request
The name of the queue that message will be enqueued on. If doesn’t exist, it will be created automatically.
Destination can either be a topic name or id that you configured in the
Upstash console, a valid url where the message gets sent to, or a valid
QStash API name like api/llm
. If the destination is a URL, make sure
the URL is prefixed with a valid protocol (http://
or https://
)
The raw request message passed to the endpoints as is
ContentType is the MIME type of the message.
We highly recommend sending a Content-Type
header along, as this will help
your destination API to understand the content of the message.
Set this to whatever data you are sending through QStash, if your message is json, then use application/json
.
Some frameworks like Next.js will not parse your body correctly if the content type is not correct.
For example application/json
, application/xml
, application/octet-stream
,
text/plain
The HTTP method to use when sending a webhook to your API.
Timeout value to set how long your endpoint is going to take.
This parameter can be used to shorten the default allowed timeout value on your plan. Examples: 1 second = "1s", 5 minutes = "5m", 2 hours = "2h"
See Max HTTP Connection Timeout
on the pricing page for default values.
How often should this message be retried in case the destination API is not available.
The total number of deliveries is therefore capped at 1 + retries
Leave this empty to use the default value, (free tier: 3, paid tier: 5)
The backoff duration in seconds is calculated as follows: n
is the number of
times the task has been retried.
min(86400, e ** (2 * n))
You can send custom headers along with your message.
To send a custom header, prefix the header name with Upstash-Forward-
. We will
strip efix and them to the destination API.
example: "Upstash-Forward-My-Header: my-value" -> "My-Header: my-value"
You can define a callback url that will be called after each attempt. See the content of what will be delivered to a callback here
- The callback url must be prefixed with a valid protocol (
http://
orhttps://
) - Callbacks are charged as a regular message.
- Callbacks will use the retry setting from the original request.
For the api/llm
destination, specifying a callback is required.
Using the Upstash-Callback-
prefix; you can set the timeout duration, number of retries, delay to apply or more for the callback request.
See the Configuring Callbacks section to learn more.
If you are using the Upstash-Callback
header to define a callback url,
you can specify the headers sent along with the callback request using
the Upstash-Callback-Forward-*
header.
To include a header in the callback request, prefix the header name with
Upstash-Callback-Forward-
. We will strip this prefix and forward the header to the callback destination..
example: "Upstash-Callback-Forward-My-Header: my-value" -> "My-Header: my-value"
You can define a failure callback url that will be called when a delivery is failed. That is when all the defined retries are exhausted. See the content of what will be delivered to a failure callback here
- The failure callback url must be prefixed with a valid protocol (
http://
orhttps://
) - Callbacks are charged as a regular message.
- Callbacks will use the retry setting from the original request.
Using the Upstash-Failure-Callback-
prefix; you can set the timeout duration, number of retries, delay to apply or more for the failure callback request.
See the Configuring Callbacks section to learn more.
If are you using the Upstash-Failure-Callback
header to define a callback url
when the delivery fails, you can specify the headers sent along with the failure
callback request using the Upstash-Failure-Callback-Forward-*
header.
To include a header in the callback request, add Upstash-Failure-Callback-Forward-
prefix to the header name.
We will strip this prefix and forward the header to the callback destination.
example: "Upstash-Failure-Callback-Forward-My-Header: my-value" -> "My-Header: my-value"
Id to use while deduplicating messages, so that only one message with the given deduplication id is published.
When set to true, automatically deduplicates messages based on their content, so that only one message with the same content is published.
Content based deduplication creates unique deduplication ids based on the following message fields:
- Destination
- Body
- Headers
Response
Either a single object or an array of objects is returned, depending on whether you have sent the message to a url, URL group, or an API.
Single Object Response
This is returned when the destination is a url or an api.
The unique id of this message.
Whether this message is a duplicate and was not sent to the destination.
Array of Objects Response
This is returned when the destination is a topic, and array contains one element for each url in the topic.
The unique id of this message.
The url where the message was sent to.
Whether this message is a duplicate and was not sent to the destination.
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