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Home/ Questions/Q 978147
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T04:00:54+00:00 2026-05-16T04:00:54+00:00

Is it possible for server A to access a private queue from server B?

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Is it possible for server A to access a private queue from server B?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T04:00:55+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 4:00 am

    There is little functional difference between a public and private queue, except that MSMQ publishes information about public queues in Active Directory (AD).

    I’ve never done this myself, but it appears that if you know the full path to the private queue, you can access it from another server:

    Private queues

    Private queues are queues that are not
    published in Active Directory and are
    displayed only on the local computer
    that contains them. Private queues
    have the following features:

    Message Queuing registers private
    queues locally by storing a
    description of the queue in the LQS
    (local queue storage) directory on the
    local computer. In MSMQ 2.0, and
    Message Queuing 3.0, the default
    location is
    %windir%\system32\msmq\storage\lqs.
    Note that a description of each public
    queue created on the local computer is
    also stored locally in a separate file
    in the LQS folder.

    Private queues are registered on the
    local computer, not in the directory
    service, and typically cannot be
    located by other Message Queuing
    applications.

    Private queues are accessible only
    by Message Queuing applications that
    know the full path name, the direct
    format name, or the private format
    name of the queue, as follows:

    Path
    name:ComputerName\private$\QueueName.

    Path name on local computer:
    \private$\QueueName.

    Direct format name::
    DIRECT=ComputerAddress\PRIVATE$\PrivateQueueName.

    Private format name:
    PRIVATE=ComputerGUID\QueueNumber.

    For more information on path names and
    format names, see Queue names.

    Private queues have the advantage of
    no directory service overhead, making
    them quicker to create, no latency in
    accessing them, and no replication
    overhead.

    Private queues are not dependent on
    the directory service, and thus can be
    created and deleted when the directory
    service is not working. This is useful
    for offline operation.

    One way that private queues can be
    exposed to other applications is by
    setting a message property. To
    distribute the location of a private
    queue, an application can send a
    format name of the private queue as
    the response queue property of a
    message.

    Ref.

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