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Published byGarry Paul Modified over 9 years ago
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Java Message Service Sangeetha Chavala
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What is Messaging? Method of Communication between software components/applications peer-to-peer facility Not another Mail API!!!
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Messaging System Concepts Allows loosely coupled applications to communicate - contrast with RPC Asynchronous Reliable
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Messaging Systems Advantages Platform &Network Location Independence Flexibility Scalability Anonymity Robustness Asynchronous
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What is the JMS API? A common Java TM platform API for creating, sending, receiving and reading messages Design Goals -Provides most of the functionality of common messaging systems -makes client applications portable across messaging products - Leverages Java Technology
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Common Models of Messaging Point-to-Point Publish/Subscribe
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Point-to-Point Messaging Only one consumer of Queue Message No timing dependencies between Sender and Receiver
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Publish/Subscribe Messaging Broadcast Message to all Subscribers
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JMS Application JMS Provider JMS Clients Messages Administered Objects Non-JMS Clients
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Messages Message Components Header Properties Body
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Message Header Used for Message Identification and Routing Destination Field -includes Subject or Topic (for Pub/Sub) -queue(for point-to-point) Also include other data -delivery mode -message ID -timestamp -priority -ReplyTo
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Message Properties Application-specific properties Messaging system provider-specific properties Optional fields Properties are Name/Value pairs Values can be int, string, byte etc
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Message Body Holds content of message Five Types supported Each type defined by a message interface -StreamMessage -MapMessage -BytesMessage -TextMessage -ObjectMessage
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Message Body Interfaces StreamMessage -contains Java primitive values -Read sequentially MapMessage -Holds name/value pairs -Read sequentially or by name BytesMessage -uninterpreted bytes -used to match an existing message format
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Message Body Interfaces TextMessage -contains java.util.StringBuffer -useful for XML messages ObjectMessage -contains arbitrary java object -must be serializable
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Example: Creating a Text Message To create a simple TextMessage: TextMessage message = session. createTextMessage( ); message. setText ( “greetings”);
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Building a JMS Client Steps 1) Create a Connection to the provider 2) Create Sessions to send/receive messages 3) Create MessageProducers 4) Create MessageConsumers
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1. Creating a Connection Connection provides access to messaging system Performs resource allocation and management ConnectionFactory used to create Connection ConnectionFactory is located through JNDI
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Get the Connection Factory Context messaging = new InitialContext ( ) ; TopicConnectionFactory factory = (TopicConnectionFactory) messaging. lookup ( “TopicConnectionFactory” ) ; JNDI is used to get a ConnectionFactory 2 Types ConnectionFactory - QueueConnectionFactory for P-to-P - TopicConnectionFactory for Pub/Sub
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Create the Connection TopicConnection topicConnection = factory. createTopicConnection ( ) ; QueueConnection or TopicConnection
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2. Create Sessions TopicSession session = topicConnection. createTopicSession (false, CLIENT_ACKNOWLEDGE); First parameter controls transactions Second parameter specifies message acknowledgement
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Locate a Topic Topic weatherTopic = messaging. Lookup ( “WeatherData” ) ; JNDI is used to locate the topic Queue or Topic
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Start the Connection topicConnection. start ( ) ; During initialization, message flow is inhibited; Connection must now be started before messages will be transmitted
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3. Create Message Producer TopicPublisher publisher = session. createPublisher (weatherTopic) ; Publisher will publish messages to weathetData topic
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Publish a Message TextMessage message = session. createMessage ( ) ; message. setText ( “text : 35 degrees” ) ; publisher. Publish (message) ;
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Specifying Quality of Service Publish (Message message, int deliveryMode, int priority, long timeToLive) ; Delivery Modes - NON-PERSISTENT - PERSISTENT Priority Time-to-Live
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4. Message Consumer Subscribing to topics - Durable Subscriptions - Non-durable Subsriptions Receiving Messages - Asynchronous - Synchronous
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Asynchronous Message Receipt Uses Listening Mechanism setMessageListener (MessageListener listener) Listener object must implement onMessage ( ) of MessageListener interface
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Synchronous Message Receipt Message receive ( ) ; Message receive (long timeout) ; Message receiveNoWait ( ) ;
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Point-to-Point Programming Queue Browsing - session. createBrowser (Queue queue); - session. createBrowser (QueueSession session, Queue queue, String messageSelector) ;
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JMS Programming Techniques and Issues 1. Transactions - commit( ) ; - rollback( ) ; with respect to producer with respect to consumer 2. Programmatic Message Acknowledgement acknowledge ( );
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JMS Programming Techniques and Issues 3. Message Routing - Routing via Hierarchical Topics bid_request bid_request.vehicles bid_request.vehicles.bicycle - Routing via Message Selection Property_MerchType = ‘Mountain Bike’ AND Property_ReqOvernight is NULL Selecting a Routing Approach
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Using JMS to Transport XML StringBuffer body = new StringBuffer ( ) ; body.append (“?xml version=\”1.0\ “?>\n”) ; body.append (“ \n”); body.append (“ ”+username+“ \n”) ; body.append (“ ”+s+ “ \n”) ; body.append (“ \n”) ; msg.setText (body.toString( )) ; publisher. Publish (msg) ;
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Consuming XML Messages Work with XML payload as a text stream Work with the XML payload through the DOM Use SAX to process the XML in an event-based manner
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Performing XML-based Routing - Use Message Properties Request-Reply Programming - Replies are sent as full JMS message typically following some processing in the called ‘client’
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JMS Implementations Standalone messaging servers JMS services embedded within other environments such as an application server
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JMS and XML as an Integration Platform Integration Types - Data Integration - Procedural or Process Integration Messaging simplifies Application Integration - can’t use Objects - XML proves to be an optimal format
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Topics discussed Messaging System Concepts JMS Features JMS Programming Techniques JMS and XML as an Integration platform
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