Chapter 22. CXF Bean Component
CXF Bean Component (2.0 or later)
The cxfbean: component allows other Camel endpoints to send exchange and invoke Web service bean objects. (Currently, it only supports JAXRS, JAXWS(new to camel2.1) annotated service bean.)
Important
CxfBeanEndpoint
is a ProcessorEndpoint
so it has no consumers. It works similarly to a Bean component.
URI format
cxfbean:serviceBeanRef
Where serviceBeanRef is a registry key to look up the service bean object. If
serviceBeanRef
references a List
object, elements of the List
are the service bean objects accepted by the endpoint.
Options
Name | Description | Example | Required? | Default Value |
---|---|---|---|---|
bus
|
CXF bus reference specified by the \# notation. The referenced object must be an instance of org.apache.cxf.Bus .
|
bus=#busName
|
No | Default bus created by CXF Bus Factory |
cxfBeanBinding
|
CXF bean binding specified by the \# notation. The referenced object must be an instance of org.apache.camel.component.cxf.cxfbean.CxfBeanBinding .
|
cxfBinding=#bindingName
|
No |
DefaultCxfBeanBinding
|
headerFilterStrategy
|
Header filter strategy specified by the \# notation. The referenced object must be an instance of org.apache.camel.spi.HeaderFilterStrategy .
|
headerFilterStrategy=#strategyName
|
No |
CxfHeaderFilterStrategy
|
populateFromClass
|
Since 2.3, the wsdlLocation annotated in the POJO is ignored (by default) unless this option is set to false. Prior to 2.3, the wsdlLocation annotated in the POJO is always honored and it is not possible to ignore.
|
true , false
|
No |
true
|
providers
|
Since 2.5, setting the providers for the CXFRS endpoint. |
providers=#providerRef1,#providerRef2
|
No |
null
|
setDefaultBus
|
Will set the default bus when CXF endpoint create a bus by itself. |
true , false
|
No |
false
|
Headers
Name | Description | Type | Required? | Default Value | In/Out | Examples |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
CamelHttpCharacterEncoding (before 2.0-m2: CamelCxfBeanCharacterEncoding )
|
Character encoding |
String
|
No | None | In | ISO-8859-1 |
CamelContentType (before 2.0-m2: CamelCxfBeanContentType )
|
Content type |
String
|
No | \**/*\* | In |
text/xml
|
CamelHttpBaseUri (2.0-m3 and before:
CamelCxfBeanRequestBasePath )
|
The value of this header will be set in the CXF message as the Message.BASE_PATH property. It is needed by CXF JAX-RS processing. Basically, it is the scheme, host and port portion of the request URI.
|
String
|
Yes | The Endpoint URI of the source endpoint in the Camel exchange | In | http://localhost:9000 |
CamelHttpPath (before 2.0-m2: CamelCxfBeanRequestPat{} h)
|
Request URI's path |
String
|
Yes | None | In |
consumer/123
|
CamelHttpMethod (before 2.0-m2: CamelCxfBeanVerb )
|
RESTful request verb |
String
|
Yes | None | In |
GET , PUT , POST , DELETE
|
CamelHttpResponseCode
|
HTTP response code |
Integer
|
No | None | Out | 200 |
Note
Currently, CXF Bean component has (only) been tested with Jetty HTTP component it can understand headers from Jetty HTTP component without requiring conversion.
A Working Sample
This sample shows how to create a route that starts a Jetty HTTP server. The route sends requests to a CXF Bean and invokes a JAXRS annotated service.
First, create a route as follows. The
from
endpoint is a Jetty HTTP endpoint that is listening on port 9000. Notice that the matchOnUriPrefix
option must be set to true
because RESTful request URI will not match the endpoint's URI http://localhost:9000 exactly.
<route> <from uri="jetty:http://localhost:9000?matchOnUriPrefix=true" /> <to uri="cxfbean:customerServiceBean" /> <to uri="mock:endpointA" /> </route>
The
to
endpoint is a CXF Bean with bean name customerServiceBean
. The name will be looked up from the registry. Next, we make sure our service bean is available in Spring registry. We create a bean definition in the Spring configuration. In this example, we create a List of service beans (of one element). We could have created just a single bean without a List.
<util:list id="customerServiceBean"> <bean class="org.apache.camel.component.cxf.jaxrs.testbean.CustomerService" /> </util:list> <bean class="org.apache.camel.wsdl_first.PersonImpl" id="jaxwsBean" />
That's it. Once the route is started, the web service is ready for business. A HTTP client can make a request and receive response.
url = new URL("http://localhost:9000/customerservice/orders/223/products/323"); in = url.openStream(); assertEquals("{\"Product\":{\"description\":\"product 323\",\"id\":323}}", CxfUtils.getStringFromInputStream(in));