47.2. How to Implement a Component


Overview

This section gives a brief overview of the steps required to implement a custom Apache Camel component.

Which interfaces do you need to implement?

When implementing a component, it is usually necessary to implement the following Java interfaces:
  • org.apache.camel.Component
  • org.apache.camel.Endpoint
  • org.apache.camel.Consumer
  • org.apache.camel.Producer
In addition, it can also be necessary to implement the following Java interfaces:
  • org.apache.camel.Exchange
  • org.apache.camel.Message

Implementation steps

You typically implement a custom component as follows:
  1. Implement the Component interface—A component object acts as an endpoint factory. You extend the DefaultComponent class and implement the createEndpoint() method.
  2. Implement the Endpoint interface—An endpoint represents a resource identified by a specific URI. The approach taken when implementing an endpoint depends on whether the consumers follow an event-driven pattern, a scheduled poll pattern, or a polling pattern.
    For an event-driven pattern, implement the endpoint by extending the DefaultEndpoint class and implementing the following methods:
    • createProducer()
    • createConsumer()
    For a scheduled poll pattern, implement the endpoint by extending the ScheduledPollEndpoint class and implementing the following methods:
    • createProducer()
    • createConsumer()
    For a polling pattern, implement the endpoint by extending the DefaultPollingEndpoint class and implementing the following methods:
    • createProducer()
    • createPollConsumer()
  3. Implement the Consumer interface—There are several different approaches you can take to implementing a consumer, depending on which pattern you need to implement (event-driven, scheduled poll, or polling). The consumer implementation is also crucially important for determining the threading model used for processing a message exchange.
  4. Implement the Producer interface—To implement a producer, you extend the DefaultProducer class and implement the process() method.
  5. Optionally implement the Exchange or the Message interface—The default implementations of Exchange and Message can be used directly, but occasionally, you might find it necessary to customize these types.

Installing and configuring the component

You can install a custom component in one of the following ways:
  • Add the component directly to the CamelContext—The CamelContext.addComponent() method adds a component programatically.
  • Add the component using Spring configuration—The standard Spring bean element creates a component instance. The bean's id attribute implicitly defines the component prefix. For details, see Section 47.3.2, “Configuring a Component”.
  • Configure Apache Camel to auto-discover the component—Auto-discovery, ensures that Apache Camel automatically loads the component on demand. For details, see Section 47.3.1, “Setting Up Auto-Discovery”.
Red Hat logoGithubRedditYoutubeTwitter

Learn

Try, buy, & sell

Communities

About Red Hat Documentation

We help Red Hat users innovate and achieve their goals with our products and services with content they can trust.

Making open source more inclusive

Red Hat is committed to replacing problematic language in our code, documentation, and web properties. For more details, see the Red Hat Blog.

About Red Hat

We deliver hardened solutions that make it easier for enterprises to work across platforms and environments, from the core datacenter to the network edge.

© 2024 Red Hat, Inc.