Using the JMS Message Store¶
See the examples given below.
Example 1: Store and forward JMS messages¶
In this example, the client sends requests to a proxy service, which stores the messages in a JMS message store. The message forwarding processor then picks the stored messages from the JMS message store and invokes the back-end service.
Synapse configurations¶
Following are the artifact configurations that we can use to implement this scenario. See the instructions on how to build and run this example.
<messageStore xmlns="http://ws.apache.org/ns/synapse" class="org.apache.synapse.message.store.impl.jms.JmsStore" name="JMSMS">
<parameter name="java.naming.factory.initial">org.apache.activemq.jndi.ActiveMQInitialContextFactory</parameter>
<parameter name="java.naming.provider.url">tcp://localhost:61616</parameter>
</messageStore>
<endpoint xmlns="http://ws.apache.org/ns/synapse" name="SimpleStockQuoteService">
<address uri="http://127.0.0.1:9000/services/SimpleStockQuoteService"/>
</endpoint>
<proxy xmlns="http://ws.apache.org/ns/synapse" name="Proxy1" transports="https http" startOnLoad="true" trace="disable">
<target>
<inSequence>
<property name="FORCE_SC_ACCEPTED" value="true" scope="axis2"/>
<property name="OUT_ONLY" value="true"/>
<log level="full"/>
<store messageStore="JMSMS"/>
</inSequence>
</target>
</proxy>
<messageProcessor xmlns="http://ws.apache.org/ns/synapse" class="org.apache.synapse.message.processor.impl.forwarder.ScheduledMessageForwardingProcessor" name="Processor1" targetEndpoint="SimpleStockQuoteService" messageStore="JMSMS">
<parameter name="max.delivery.attempts">4</parameter>
<parameter name="interval">4000</parameter>
<parameter name="is.active">true</parameter>
</messageProcessor>
See the descriptions of the above configurations:
Artifact | Description |
---|---|
Message Store |
Set the value of the the java.naming.provider.url property to point to the jndi.properties file. In this case, store.jms.destination> is a mandatory parameter. If you are using the WSO2 Message Broker, you need to create a q ueue named 'JMSMS' using the Message Broker (i.e., the value you specify for the store.jms.destination .
|
Endpoint | Define an endpoint which is used to send the message to the back-end service. |
Proxy Service | Create a proxy service which stores messages to the created Message Store. Note that you can use the FORCE_SC_ACCEPTED property in the message flow to send an Http 202 status to the client after the Micro Integrator accepts a message. If this property is not specified, the client that sends the request to the proxy service will timeout since it isbnot getting any response back from the proxy. |
Message Processor | Create a message forwarding processor using the below configuration. Message forwarding processor consumes the messages stored in the message store. |
Build and run (Example 1)¶
Create the artifacts:
- Set up WSO2 Integration Studio.
- Create an ESB Solution project.
- Create the proxy service, endpoint, and message processor with the configurations given above.
- Deploy the artifacts in your Micro Integrator.
Set up the back-end service:
- Download the stockquote_service.jar.
-
Open a terminal, navigate to the location of the downloaded service, and run it using the following command:
java -jar stockquote_service.jar
Configure the ActiveMQ broker and set up the JMS Sender.
Invoke the service:
POST http://localhost:9090/services/Proxy1 HTTP/1.1
Accept-Encoding: gzip,deflate
Content-Type: text/xml;charset=UTF-8
SOAPAction: "urn:getQuote"
Content-Length: 492
Host: localhost:9090
Connection: Keep-Alive
User-Agent: Apache-HttpClient/4.1.1 (java 1.5)
<soapenv:Envelope xmlns:soapenv="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/" xmlns:ser="http://services.samples" xmlns:xsd="http://services.samples/xsd">
<soapenv:Header/>
<soapenv:Body>
<ser:getQuote xmlns:ser="http://services.samples" xmlns:xsd="http://services.samples/xsd">
<ser:request>
<xsd:symbol>IBM</xsd:symbol>
</ser:request>
</ser:getQuote>
</soapenv:Body>
</soapenv:Envelope>
Note a message similar to the following example:
SimpleStockQuoteService :: Accepted order for : 7482 stocks of IBM at $ 169.27205579038733
Example 2: Using a reply sequence to process response¶
In the sample, when the message forwarding processor receives a response from the back-end service, it forwards it to a replySequence to process the response message.
Synapse configurations¶
Following are the artifact configurations that we can used to implement this scenario. See the instructions on how to build and run this example.
<proxy name="Proxy2" xmlns="http://ws.apache.org/ns/synapse" transports="https,http" statistics="disable" trace="disable" startOnLoad="true">
<target>
<inSequence>
<property name="FORCE_SC_ACCEPTED" value="true" scope="axis2" />
<log level="full" />
<store messageStore="JMSMS" />
</inSequence>
</target>
</proxy>
<messageStore xmlns="http://ws.apache.org/ns/synapse" class="org.apache.synapse.message.store.impl.jms.JmsStore" name="JMSMS">
<parameter name="java.naming.factory.initial">org.apache.activemq.jndi.ActiveMQInitialContextFactory</parameter>
<parameter name="java.naming.provider.url">tcp://localhost:61616</parameter>
</messageStore>
<messageProcessor name="Processor2" class="org.apache.synapse.message.processor.impl.forwarder.ScheduledMessageForwardingProcessor" targetEndpoint="SimpleStockQuoteService" messageStore="JMSMS" xmlns="http://ws.apache.org/ns/synapse">
<parameter name="interval">1000</parameter>
<parameter name="client.retry.interval">1000</parameter>
<parameter name="max.delivery.attempts">4</parameter>
<parameter name="message.processor.reply.sequence">replySequence</parameter>
<parameter name="is.active">true</parameter>
<parameter name="max.delivery.drop">Disabled</parameter>
<parameter name="member.count">1</parameter>
</messageProcessor>
<sequence xmlns="http://ws.apache.org/ns/synapse" name="replySequence">
<log level="full">
<property name="REPLY" value="MESSAGE" />
</log>
<drop/>
</sequence>
<endpoint xmlns="http://ws.apache.org/ns/synapse" name="SimpleStockQuoteService">
<address uri="http://127.0.0.1:9000/services/SimpleStockQuoteService"/>
</endpoint>
See the descriptions of the above configurations:
Artifact | Description |
---|---|
Message Store |
Set the value of the the java.naming.provider.url property to point to the jndi.properties file. In this case, store.jms.destination> is a mandatory parameter. If you are using the WSO2 Message Broker, you need to create a q ueue named 'JMSMS' using the Message Broker (i.e., the value you specify for the store.jms.destination .
|
Endpoint | Define an endpoint which is used to send the message to the back-end service. |
Proxy Service | Create a proxy service which stores messages to the created Message Store. |
Sequence | Create a sequence to handle the response received from the back-end service. |
Message Processor | Create a message forwarding processor using the below configuration. Message forwarding processor consumes the messages stored in the message store. Compared to [Example 1](#example-1), this has an additional parameter **message.processor.reply.sequence** to point to a sequence to handle the response message. |
Build and run (Example 2)¶
Create the artifacts:
- Set up WSO2 Integration Studio.
- Create an ESB Solution project.
- Create the proxy service, mediation sequences, endpoint, message store and message processor with the configurations given above.
- Deploy the artifacts in your Micro Integrator.
Set up the back-end service:
- Download the stockquote_service.jar.
-
Open a terminal, navigate to the location of the downloaded service, and run it using the following command:
java -jar stockquote_service.jar
Configure the ActiveMQ broker.
Invoke the service. Note a message similar to the following example printed in the backend service.
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