General
What is the resource structure of Notification Hubs?
Azure Notification Hubs has two resource levels: hubs and namespaces. A hub is a single push resource that can hold the cross-platform push information of one app. A namespace is a collection of hubs in one region. Recommended mapping matches one namespace with one app. Within a namespace, you can have a production hub that works with your production app, a testing hub that works with your testing app, and so on.
What is the price model for Notification Hubs?
The latest pricing details can be found on the Notification Hubs Pricing page. Notification Hubs is billed at the namespace level. (For the definition of a namespace, see "What is the resource structure of Notification Hubs?") Notification Hubs offers three tiers:
- Free: This tier is a good starting point for exploring push capabilities. It's not recommended for production apps. You get 500 devices and 1 million pushes included per subscription per month, with no service level agreement (SLA) guarantee.
- Basic: This tier (or the Standard tier) is recommended for smaller production apps. You get 200,000 devices and 10 million pushes included per subscription per month as a baseline.
- Standard: This tier is recommended for medium to large production apps. You get 10 million devices and 10 million pushes included per subscription per month as a baseline. Includes rich telemetry (additional data about push status provided).
Standard tier features:
- Rich telemetry: You can use Notification Hubs Per Message Telemetry to track any push requests and Platform Notification System Feedback for debugging.
- Multi-tenancy: You can work with Platform Notification System credentials on a namespace level. This option allows you to easily split tenants into hubs within the same namespace.
- Scheduled push: You can schedule notifications to be sent out anytime.
- Bulk operations: Enables registrations Export/Import functionality as described in the Registrations Export/Import document.
What is the Notification Hubs SLA?
For Basic and Standard Notification Hubs tiers, properly configured applications can send push notifications or perform registration management operations at least 99.9 percent of the time. To learn more about the SLA, go to the Notification Hubs SLA page.
Note
Because push notifications depend on third-party Platform Notification Systems such as Apple's Push Notification Service (APNs) and Google's Firebase Cloud Messaging (FCM), there is no SLA guarantee for the delivery of these messages. After Notification Hubs sends the batches to Platform Notification Systems (SLA guaranteed), it is the responsibility of the Platform Notification Systems to deliver the pushes (no SLA guaranteed).
How do I upgrade or downgrade my hub or namespace to a different tier?
Go to the Azure portal > Notification Hubs Namespaces or Notification Hubs. Select the resource you want to update, and go to Pricing Tier. Note the following requirements:
- The updated pricing tier applies to all hubs in the namespace you're working with.
- If your device count exceeds the limit of the tier you're downgrading to, you need to delete devices before you downgrade.
Design and development
Which server-side platforms do you support?
Server SDKs are available for .NET, Java, Node.js, PHP, and Python. Notification Hubs APIs are based on REST interfaces, so you can work directly with REST APIs if you're using different platforms or do not want extra dependency. For more information, go to the Notification Hubs REST APIs page.
Which client platforms do you support?
Push notifications are supported for iOS, Android, Windows Universal, Windows Phone, Android China (via Baidu), Xamarin iOS and Android, and Safari. For more information, see the Notification Hubs Getting Started tutorials page.
Do you support text message, email, or web notifications?
Notification Hubs sends notifications to devices running mobile apps. It does not provide email or text message capabilities. Notification Hubs also does not provide an in-browser push notification delivery service out of the box. Customers can implement this feature using SignalR on top of the supported server-side platforms.
How many devices can I support if I send push notifications via Notification Hubs?
Refer to the Notification Hubs Pricing page for details on the number of supported devices.
If you need support for more than 10 million registered devices, you must partition your devices across multiple namespaces.
How many push notifications can I send out?
Depending on the selected tier, Azure Notification Hubs automatically scales up based on the number of notifications flowing through the system.
Note
The overall usage cost can increase based on the number of push notifications sent. Make sure that you're aware of the tier limits outlined on the Notification Hubs Pricing page.
Our customers use Notification Hubs to send millions of push notifications daily. You do not have to do anything special to scale the reach of your push notifications as long as you're using Azure Notification Hubs.
How long does it take for sent push notifications to reach my device?
In a normal-use scenario, where the incoming load is consistent and even, Azure Notification Hubs can process at least 1 million push notification sends a minute. This rate might vary depending on the number of tags, the nature of the incoming sends, and other external factors.
During the estimated delivery time, the service calculates the targets per platform and routes messages to the Push Notification Service (PNS) based on the registered tags or tag expressions. It is the responsibility of the PNS to send notifications to the device.
The PNS does not guarantee any SLA for delivering notifications. However, most push notifications are delivered to target devices within a few minutes (typically within 10 minutes) from the time they are sent to Notification Hubs. A few notifications might take more time.
Note
Azure Notification Hubs has a policy in place to drop any push notifications that aren't delivered to the PNS within 30 minutes. This delay can happen for a number of reasons, but most commonly because the PNS is throttling your application.
Is there any latency guarantee?
Because of the nature of push notifications (they are delivered by an external, platform-specific PNS), there is no latency guarantee. Typically, the majority of push notifications are delivered within a few minutes.
Where does Azure Notification Hubs store data?
Azure Notification Hubs stores customer registration data in the region selected by the customer. Notification Hubs provides metadata disaster recovery coverage (the Notification Hubs name, the connection string, and other critical information). For all regions except Brazil South and Southeast Asia, the metadata backup is hosted in a different region (usually the Azure paired region). For the Brazil South and Southeast Asia regions, backups are stored in the same region to accommodate data-residency requirements for these regions.
What do I need to consider when designing a solution with namespaces and notification hubs?
Mobile app/environment
- Use one notification hub per mobile app, per environment.
- In a multi-tenant scenario, each tenant should have a separate hub.
- Never share the same notification hub for production and test environments. This practice might cause problems when sending notifications. (Apple offers Sandbox and Production Push endpoints, each with separate credentials.)
- By default, you can send test notifications to your registered devices through the Azure portal or the Azure integrated component in Visual Studio. The threshold is set to 10 devices that are selected at random from the registration pool.
Note
If your hub was originally configured with an Apple sandbox certificate and then was reconfigured to use an Apple production certificate, the original device tokens are invalid. Invalid tokens cause pushes to fail. Separate your production and test environments, and use different hubs for different environments.
PNS credentials
When a mobile app is registered with a platform's developer portal (for example, Apple or Google), an app identifier and security tokens are sent. The app backend provides these tokens to the platform's PNS so that push notifications can be sent to devices. Security tokens can be in the form of certificates (for example, Apple iOS or Windows Phone) or security keys (for example, Google Android or Windows). They must be configured in notification hubs. Configuration is typically done at the notification-hub level, but it can also be done at the namespace level in a multi-tenant scenario.
Namespaces
Namespaces can be used for deployment grouping. They can also be used to represent all notification hubs for all tenants of the same app in a multi-tenant scenario.
Geo-distribution
Geo-distribution is not always critical in push notification scenarios. Various PNSes (for example, APNs or FCM) that deliver push notifications to devices aren't evenly distributed.
If you have an application that is used globally, you can create hubs in different namespaces by using the Notification Hubs service in different Azure regions around the world.
Note
We don't recommend this arrangement because it increases your management cost, particularly for registrations. It should be done only if there is an explicit need.
Should I do registrations from the app backend or directly through client devices?
Registrations from the app backend are useful when you have to authenticate clients before creating the registration. They're also useful when you have tags that must be created or modified by the app backend based on app logic. For more information, go to the Backend Registration guidance and Backend Registration guidance 2 pages.
What is the push notification delivery security model?
Azure Notification Hubs uses a shared access signature-based security model. You can use the shared access signature tokens at the root namespace level or at the granular notification hub level. Shared access signature tokens can be set to follow different authorization rules, for example, to send message permissions or to listen for notification permissions. For more information, see the Notification Hubs security model document.
How should I handle sensitive payload in push notifications?
All notifications are delivered to target devices by the platform's PNS. When a notification is sent to Azure Notification Hubs, it is processed and passed to the respective PNS.
All connections, from the sender to the Azure Notification Hubs to the PNS, use HTTPS.
Note
Azure Notification Hubs does not log the payload of messages.
To send sensitive payloads, we recommend using a Secure Push pattern. The sender delivers a ping notification with a message identifier to the device without the sensitive payload. When the app on the device receives the payload, the app calls a secure API directly to fetch the message details. For a guide on how to implement this pattern, go to the Notification Hubs Secure Push tutorial page.
Operations
What support is provided for disaster recovery?
Is all of my data stored in encrypted form?
Azure Notification Hubs encrypts all customer data at rest with the exception of registration tags. For this reason, you should not store personal or confidential data using tags.
Is there audit log capability?
Yes. All Notification Hubs management operations update the Azure Activity Log to which is exposed in the Azure portal. The Azure Activity Log offers insights into the operations performed on resources in your subscriptions. Using the Activity Log, you can determine the what, who, and when for any write operations (PUT, POST, DELETE) made for the resources in your subscription. You can also understand the status of the operations and other relevant properties. However. the Activity Log does not include read (GET) operation.
Does Notification Hubs detect uninstallation?
If you stored the device as a Registration
, the first time you send to that registration and the PNS responds with an error status code that indicates the device is not valid, the device is deleted from your notification hub.
If you stored your devices using the Installation
APIs, they are not deleted in the scenario above. This decision was made to preserve tags and other metadata about a particular user that might be relevant if the user reinstalls.
For both registrations and installations, you can set an expiration so that the device is automatically cleaned up at a given time. A common pattern is to have your client application update that expiration date once a day to move it back as long as the user is using your application.
Monitoring and troubleshooting
What troubleshooting capabilities are available?
Azure Notification Hubs provides several features for troubleshooting, particularly for the most common scenario of dropped notifications. For details, see the Notification Hubs troubleshooting white paper.
What telemetry features are available?
Azure Notification Hubs enables viewing telemetry data in the Azure portal. Details of the metrics are available on the Notification Hubs Metrics page.
You can also programmatically access metrics. For more information, see the following articles:
- Retrieve Azure Monitor metrics with .NET. This sample uses the user name and password. To use a certificate, overload the FromServicePrincipal method to provide a certificate as shown in this example.
- Getting metrics and activity logs for a resource
- Azure Monitoring REST API walkthrough
Note
Successful notifications mean simply that push notifications have been delivered to the external PNS (for example, APNs for iOS and macOS or FCM for Android devices). It is the responsibility of the PNS to deliver the notifications to target devices. Typically, the PNS does not expose delivery metrics to third parties.