Chapter 6. Running Apache Camel application in Spring Boot
The Apache Camel Spring Boot component automatically configures Camel context for Spring Boot. Auto-configuration of the Camel context automatically detects the Camel routes available in the Spring context and registers the key Camel utilities such as producer template, consumer template, and the type converter as beans. The Apache Camel component includes a Spring Boot starter module that allows you to develop Spring Boot applications by using starters.
6.1. Introduction to the Camel Spring Boot component
Every Camel Spring Boot application must use the dependencyManagement
element in the project’s pom.xml
to specify the productized versions of the dependencies. These dependencies are defined in the Red Hat Fuse BOM and are supported for the specific version of Red Hat Fuse. You can omit the version number attribute for the additional starters so as not to override the versions from BOM. See quickstart pom for more information.
Example
<dependencyManagement> <dependencies> <dependency> <groupId>org.jboss.redhat-fuse</groupId> <artifactId>fuse-springboot-bom</artifactId> <version>${fuse.version}</version> <type>pom</type> <scope>import</scope> </dependency> </dependencies> </dependencyManagement>
The camel-spring-boot
jar contains with the spring.factories
file which allows you to add that dependency to your classpath so Spring Boot will automatically configure Camel context.
6.2. Introduction to the Camel Spring Boot starter module
Starters are the Apache Camel modules that are intended to be used in Spring Boot applications. There is a camel-xxx-starter
module for each Camel component (with a few exceptions listed in the Section 6.3, “List of the Camel components that do not have starter modules” section).
Starters meet the following requirements:
- Allow auto-configuration of the component by using the native Spring Boot configuration system which is compatible with IDE tooling.
- Allow auto-configuration of data formats and languages.
- Manage transitive logging dependencies to integrate with the Spring Boot logging system.
- Include additional dependencies and align transitive dependencies to minimize the effort of creating a working Spring Boot application.
Each starter has its own integration test in tests/camel-itest-spring-boot
, that verifies the compatibility with the current release of Spring Boot.
For more details, see link: Apache Camel Spring-Boot examples.
6.3. List of the Camel components that do not have starter modules
The following components do not have starter modules because of compatibility issues:
- camel-blueprint (intended for OSGi only)
- camel-cdi (intended for CDI only)
- camel-core-osgi (intended for OSGi only)
- camel-ejb (intended for JEE only)
- camel-eventadmin (intended for OSGi only)
-
camel-ibatis (
camel-mybatis-starter
is included) - camel-jclouds
-
camel-mina (
camel-mina2-starter
is included) - camel-paxlogging (intended for OSGi only)
-
camel-quartz (
camel-quartz2-starter
is included) - camel-spark-rest
-
camel-swagger (
camel-swagger-java-starter
is included)
6.4. Using Camel Spring Boot starter
Apache Camel provides a starter module that allows you to quickly get started developing Spring Boot applications.
Procedure
Add the following dependency to your Spring Boot pom.xml file:
<dependency> <groupId>org.apache.camel</groupId> <artifactId>camel-spring-boot-starter</artifactId> </dependency>
Add the classes with your Camel routes as shown in the snippet below. Once these routes are added to the class path the routes are started automatically.
package com.example; import org.apache.camel.builder.RouteBuilder; import org.springframework.stereotype.Component; @Component public class MyRoute extends RouteBuilder { @Override public void configure() throws Exception { from("timer:foo") .to("log:bar"); } }
Optional. To keep the main thread blocked so that Camel stays up, do one of the following.
-
Include the
spring-boot-starter-web
dependency, Or add
camel.springboot.main-run-controller=true
to yourapplication.properties
orapplication.yml
file.You can customize the Camel application in the
application.properties
orapplication.yml
file withcamel.springboot.* properties
.
-
Include the
Optional. To refer to a custom bean by using the bean’s ID name, configure the options in the
src/main/resources/application.properties
(or theapplication.yml
) file. The following example shows how the xslt component refers to a custom bean by using the bean ID.Refer to a custom bean by the id
myExtensionFactory
.camel.component.xslt.saxon-extension-functions=myExtensionFactory
Then create the custom bean using Spring Boot @Bean annotation.
@Bean(name = "myExtensionFactory") public ExtensionFunctionDefinition myExtensionFactory() { }
Or, for a Jackson ObjectMapper, in the
camel-jackson
data-format:camel.dataformat.json-jackson.object-mapper=myJacksonMapper
6.5. About Camel context auto-configuration for Spring Boot
Camel Spring Boot auto-configuration provides a CamelContext
instance and creates a SpringCamelContext
. It also initializes and performs shutdown of that context. This Camel context is registered in the Spring application context under camelContext
bean name and you can access it like other Spring bean. You can access the camelContext
as shown below.
Example
@Configuration public class MyAppConfig { @Autowired CamelContext camelContext; @Bean MyService myService() { return new DefaultMyService(camelContext); } }
6.6. Auto-detecting Camel routes in Spring Boot Applications
Camel auto-configuration collects all the RouteBuilder
instances from the Spring context and automatically injects them into the CamelContext
. This simplifies the process of creating a new Camel route with the Spring Boot starter. You can create the routes as follows:
Example
Add the @Component
annotated class to your classpath.
@Component public class MyRouter extends RouteBuilder { @Override public void configure() throws Exception { from("jms:invoices").to("file:/invoices"); } }
Or create a new route RouteBuilder
bean in your @Configuration
class.
@Configuration public class MyRouterConfiguration { @Bean RoutesBuilder myRouter() { return new RouteBuilder() { @Override public void configure() throws Exception { from("jms:invoices").to("file:/invoices"); } }; } }
6.7. Configuring Camel properties for Camel Spring Boot auto-configuration
Spring Boot auto-configuration connects to the Spring Boot external configuration such as properties placeholders, OS environment variables, or system properties with Camel properties support.
Procedure
Define the properties either in the
application.properties
file:route.from = jms:invoices
Or set the Camel properies as the system properties, for example:
java -Droute.to=jms:processed.invoices -jar mySpringApp.jar
Use the configured properties as placeholders in Camel route as follows.
@Component public class MyRouter extends RouteBuilder { @Override public void configure() throws Exception { from("{{route.from}}").to("{{route.to}}"); } }
6.8. Configuring custom Camel context
To perform operations on the CamelContext
bean created by Camel Spring Boot auto-configuration, register a CamelContextConfiguration
instance in your Spring context.
Procedure
Register an instance of
CamelContextConfiguration
in the Spring context as shown below.@Configuration public class MyAppConfig { ... @Bean CamelContextConfiguration contextConfiguration() { return new CamelContextConfiguration() { @Override void beforeApplicationStart(CamelContext context) { // your custom configuration goes here } }; } }
The CamelContextConfiguration
and beforeApplicationStart(CamelContext)
methods are called before the Spring context is started, so the CamelContext
instance that is passed to this callback is fully auto-configured. You can add many instances of CamelContextConfiguration
into your Spring context and all of them will be executed.
6.9. Disabling JMX in the auto-configured CamelContext
To disable JMX in the auto-configured CamelContext
, you can use the camel.springboot.jmxEnabled
property as JMX is enabled by default.
Procedure
Add the following property to your
application.properties
file and set it tofalse
:camel.springboot.jmxEnabled = false
6.10. Injecting auto-configured consumer and producer templates into Spring-managed beans
Camel auto-configuration provides pre-configured ConsumerTemplate
and ProducerTemplate
instances. You can inject them into your Spring-managed beans.
Example
@Component public class InvoiceProcessor { @Autowired private ProducerTemplate producerTemplate; @Autowired private ConsumerTemplate consumerTemplate; public void processNextInvoice() { Invoice invoice = consumerTemplate.receiveBody("jms:invoices", Invoice.class); ... producerTemplate.sendBody("netty-http:http://invoicing.com/received/" + invoice.id()); } }
By default consumer templates and producer templates come with the endpoint cache sizes set to 1000. You can change these values by setting the following Spring properties to the desired cache size, for example:
camel.springboot.consumerTemplateCacheSize = 100 camel.springboot.producerTemplateCacheSize = 200
6.11. About the auto-configured TypeConverter in the Spring context
Camel auto-configuration registers a TypeConverter
instance named typeConverter
in the Spring context.
Example
@Component public class InvoiceProcessor { @Autowired private TypeConverter typeConverter; public long parseInvoiceValue(Invoice invoice) { String invoiceValue = invoice.grossValue(); return typeConverter.convertTo(Long.class, invoiceValue); } }
6.12. Spring type conversion API bridge
Spring consist of a powerful type conversion API. Spring API is similar to the Camel type converter API. Due to the similarities between the two APIs Camel Spring Boot automatically registers a bridge converter (SpringTypeConverter
) that delegates to the Spring conversion API. This means that out-of-the-box Camel will treat Spring Converters similar to Camel.
This allows you to access both Camel and Spring converters using the Camel TypeConverter
API, as shown below:
Example
@Component public class InvoiceProcessor { @Autowired private TypeConverter typeConverter; public UUID parseInvoiceId(Invoice invoice) { // Using Spring's StringToUUIDConverter UUID id = invoice.typeConverter.convertTo(UUID.class, invoice.getId()); } }
Here, Spring Boot delegates conversion to the Spring’s ConversionService
instances available in the application context. If no ConversionService
instance is available, Camel Spring Boot auto-configuration creates an instance of ConversionService
.
6.13. Disabling type conversions features
To disable the Camel Spring Boot type conversion features, set the camel.springboot.typeConversion
property to false
. When this property is set to false
, the auto-configuration does not register a type converter instance and does not enable the delegation of type conversion to the Spring Boot type conversion API.
Procedure
To disable the type conversion features of Camel Spring Boot component, set the
camel.springboot.typeConversion
property tofalse
as shown below:camel.springboot.typeConversion = false
6.14. Adding XML routes to the classpath for auto-configuration
By default, the Camel Spring Boot component auto-detects and includes the Camel XML routes that are in the classpath in the camel
directory. You can configure the directory name or disable this feature using the configuration option.
Procedure
Configure the Camel Spring Boot XML routes in the classpath as follows.
// turn off camel.springboot.xmlRoutes = false // scan in the com/foo/routes classpath camel.springboot.xmlRoutes = classpath:com/foo/routes/*.xml
NoteThe XML files should define the Camel XML route elements and not
CamelContext
elements, for example:<routes xmlns="http://camel.apache.org/schema/spring"> <route id="test"> <from uri="timer://trigger"/> <transform> <simple>ref:myBean</simple> </transform> <to uri="log:out"/> </route> </routes>
Using Spring XML files
To use Spring XML files with the <camelContext>, you can configure a Camel context in the Spring XML file or in the application.properties
file. To set the name of the Camel context and turn on the stream caching, add the following in the application.properties
file:
camel.springboot.name = MyCamel camel.springboot.stream-caching-enabled=true
6.15. Adding XML Rest-DSL Routes for auto-configuration
The Camel Spring Boot component auto-detects and embeds the Camel Rest-DSL XML routes that are added in the classpath under the camel-rest
directory. You can configure the directory name or disable this feature using the configuration option.
Procedure
Configure the Camel Spring Boot Rest-DSL XML routes in the classpath as follows.
// turn off camel.springboot.xmlRests = false // scan in the com/foo/routes classpath camel.springboot.xmlRests = classpath:com/foo/rests/*.xml
NoteThe Rest-DSL XML files should define the Camel XML REST elements and not
CamelContext
elements, for example:<rests xmlns="http://camel.apache.org/schema/spring"> <rest> <post uri="/persons"> <to uri="direct:postPersons"/> </post> <get uri="/persons"> <to uri="direct:getPersons"/> </get> <get uri="/persons/{personId}"> <to uri="direct:getPersionId"/> </get> <put uri="/persons/{personId}"> <to uri="direct:putPersionId"/> </put> <delete uri="/persons/{personId}"> <to uri="direct:deletePersionId"/> </delete> </rest> </rests>
6.16. Testing with Camel Spring Boot
When Camel runs on the Spring Boot, Spring Boot automatically embeds Camel and all its routes, which are annotated with @Component
. When testing with Spring Boot use @SpringBootTest
instead of @ContextConfiguration
to specify which configuration class to use.
When you have multiple Camel routes in different RouteBuilder classes, the Camel Spring Boot component automatically embeds all these routes when running the application. Hence, when you wish to test routes from only one RouteBuilder class you can use the following patterns to include or exclude which RouteBuilders to enable:
- java-routes-include-pattern: Used for including RouteBuilder classes that match the pattern.
- java-routes-exclude-pattern: Used for excluding RouteBuilder classes that match the pattern. Exclude takes precedence over include.
Procedure
Specify the
include
orexclude
patterns in your unit test classes as properties to@SpringBootTest
annotation, as shown below:@RunWith(CamelSpringBootRunner.class) @SpringBootTest(classes = {MyApplication.class); properties = {"camel.springboot.java-routes-include-pattern=**/Foo*"}) public class FooTest {
In the
FooTest
class, the include pattern is**/Foo*
, which represents an Ant style pattern. Here, the pattern starts with a double asterisk, which matches with any leading package name./Foo*
means the class name must start with Foo, for example, FooRoute.Run the test using the following maven command:
mvn test -Dtest=FooTest
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