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Chapter 14. Using Generic JMS
Abstract
Apache CXF provides a generic implementation of a JMS transport. The generic JMS transport is not restricted to using SOAP messages and allows for connecting to any application that uses JMS.
NOTE: Support for the JMS 1.0.2 APIs has been removed in CXF 3.0. If you are using RedHat JBoss Fuse 6.2 or higher (includes CXF 3.0), your JMS provider must support the JMS 1.1 APIs.
14.1. Approaches to Configuring JMS
The Apache CXF generic JMS transport can connect to any JMS provider and work with applications that exchange JMS messages with bodies of either TextMessage
or ByteMessage
.
There are two ways to enable and configure the JMS transport:
14.2. Using the JMS configuration bean
Overview
To simplify JMS configuration and make it more powerful, Apache CXF uses a single JMS configuration bean to configure JMS endpoints. The bean is implemented by the org.apache.cxf.transport.jms.JMSConfiguration
class. It can be used to either configure endpoint’s directly or to configure the JMS conduits and destinations.
Configuration namespace
The JMS configuration bean uses the Spring p-namespace to make the configuration as simple as possible. To use this namespace you need to declare it in the configuration’s root element as shown in Example 14.1, “Declaring the Spring p-namespace”.
Example 14.1. Declaring the Spring p-namespace
<beans ... xmlns:p="http://www.springframework.org/schema/p" ... > ... </beans>
Specifying the configuration
You specify the JMS configuration by defining a bean of class org.apache.cxf.transport.jms.JMSConfiguration
. The properties of the bean provide the configuration settings for the transport.
In CXF 3.0, the JMS transport no longer has a dependency on Spring JMS, so some Spring JMS-related options have been removed.
Table 14.1, “General JMS Configuration Properties” lists properties that are common to both providers and consumers.
Property | Default | Description |
---|---|---|
| [Required] Specifies a reference to a bean that defines a JMS ConnectionFactory. | |
|
| Removed in CXF 3.0
pre CXF 3.0 Specifies whether to wrap the ConnectionFactory with a Spring
Enable this property when using a ConnectionFactory that does not pool connections, as it will improve the performance of the JMS transport. This is so because the JMS transport creates a new connection for each message, and the |
|
| Deprecated in CXF 3.0 CXF always reconnects when an exception occurs. pre CXF 3.0 Specifies whether to create a new connection when an exception occurs.
When wrapping the ConnectionFactory with a Spring
|
| Specifies the JNDI name or provider-specific name of a destination. | |
| Specifies the JMS name of the JMS destination where replies are sent. This property allows the use of a user-defined destination for replies. For more details see Section 14.6, “Using a Named Reply Destination”. | |
| DynamicDestinationResolver |
Specifies a reference to a Spring This property allows you to define how destination names are resolved to JMS destinations. Valid values are:
|
| Specifies a reference to a Spring transaction manager. This enables the service to participate in JTA transactions. | |
|
| Removed in CXF 3.0 pre CXF 3.0 Specifies a reference to a Spring TaskExecutor. This is used in listeners to decide how to handle incoming messages. |
|
| Removed in CXF 3.0 CXF 3.0 supports JMS 1.1 features only. pre CXF 3.0 Specifies whether JMS 1.1 features are used. Valid values are:
|
|
| Removed in CXF 3.0 pre CXF 3.0 Specifies whether the JMS transport wants the JMS broker to provide message IDs. Valid values are:
|
|
| Removed in CXF 3.0 pre CXF 3.0 Specifies whether the JMS transport wants the JMS broker to provide message time stamps. Valid values are:
|
|
| Removed in CXF 3.0 pre CXF 3.0 Specifies the level of caching that the JMS listener container may apply. Valid values are:
For details, see Class DefaultMessageListenerContainer |
|
| Specifies whether to receive your own messages when using topics.
|
|
| Specifies the time, in milliseconds, to wait for response messages. |
|
|
Specifies whether the QoS settings (such as priority, persistence, time to live) are explicitly set for each message ( |
|
| Specifies whether a message is persistent. Valid values are:
|
|
|
Specifies message priority. JMS priority values range from |
|
| Specifies the time, in milliseconds, before a message that has been sent is discarded. |
|
| Specifies whether JMS transactions are used. |
|
| Removed in CXF 3.0 pre CXF 3.0 Specifies the minimum number of concurrent consumers for the listener. |
|
| Removed in CXF 3.0 pre CXF 3.0 Specifies the maximum number of concurrent consumers for the listener. |
| Specifies the string value of the selector used to filter incoming messages. This property enables multiple connections to share a queue. For more information on the syntax used to specify message selectors, see the JMS 1.1 specification. | |
|
| Specifies whether the server uses durable subscriptions. |
| Specifies the name (string) used to register the durable subscription. | |
|
| Specifies how the message data will be packaged as a JMS message. Valid values are:
|
|
| Specifies whether the target destination is a topic or a queue. Valid values are:
|
|
| Specifies whether the JMS provider is Tibco EMS.
When set to |
|
| Removed in CXF 3.0 Specifies whether JMS will use the message ID to correlate messages.
When set to |
|
| CXF 3.0 Specifies the maximum number of suspended continuations the JMS destination may have. When the current number exceeds the specified maximum, the JMSListenerContainer is stopped. |
|
|
CXF 3.0 Specifies when to restart the JMSListenerContainer stopped for exceeding
The listener container is restarted when its current number of suspended continuations falls below the value of |
As shown in Example 14.2, “JMS configuration bean”, the bean’s properties are specified as attributes to the bean
element. They are all declared in the Spring p
namespace.
Example 14.2. JMS configuration bean
<bean id="jmsConfig" class="org.apache.cxf.transport.jms.JMSConfiguration" p:connectionFactory="jmsConnectionFactory" p:targetDestination="dynamicQueues/greeter.request.queue" p:pubSubDomain="false" />
Applying the configuration to an endpoint
The JMSConfiguration
bean can be applied directly to both server and client endpoints using the Apache CXF features mechanism. To do so:
-
Set the endpoint’s
address
attribute tojms://
. -
Add a
jaxws:feature
element to the endpoint’s configuration. -
Add a bean of type
org.apache.cxf.transport.jms.JMSConfigFeature
to the feature. -
Set the
bean
element’sp:jmsConfig-ref
attribute to the ID of theJMSConfiguration
bean.
Example 14.3, “Adding JMS configuration to a JAX-WS client” shows a JAX-WS client that uses the JMS configuration from Example 14.2, “JMS configuration bean”.
Example 14.3. Adding JMS configuration to a JAX-WS client
<jaxws:client id="CustomerService" xmlns:customer="http://customerservice.example.com/" serviceName="customer:CustomerServiceService" endpointName="customer:CustomerServiceEndpoint" address="jms://" serviceClass="com.example.customerservice.CustomerService"> <jaxws:features> <bean xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans" class="org.apache.cxf.transport.jms.JMSConfigFeature" p:jmsConfig-ref="jmsConfig"/> </jaxws:features> </jaxws:client>
Applying the configuration to the transport
The JMSConfiguration
bean can be applied to JMS conduits and JMS destinations using the jms:jmsConfig-ref
element. The jms:jmsConfig-ref
element’s value is the ID of the JMSConfiguration
bean.
Example 14.4, “Adding JMS configuration to a JMS conduit” shows a JMS conduit that uses the JMS configuration from Example 14.2, “JMS configuration bean”.
Example 14.4. Adding JMS configuration to a JMS conduit
<jms:conduit name="{http://cxf.apache.org/jms_conf_test}HelloWorldQueueBinMsgPort.jms-conduit"> ... <jms:jmsConfig-ref>jmsConf</jms:jmsConfig-ref> </jms:conduit>
14.3. Optimizing Client-Side JMS Performance
Overview
Two major settings affect the JMS performance of clients: pooling and synchronous receives.
Pooling
On the client side, CXF creates a new JMS session and JMS producer for each message. This is so because neither session nor producer objects are thread safe. Creating a producer is especially time intensive because it requires communicating with the server.
Pooling connection factories improves performance by caching the connection, session, and producer.
For ActiveMQ, configuring pooling is simple; for example:
import org.apache.activemq.ActiveMQConnectionFactory; import org.apache.activemq.pool.PooledConnectionFactory; ConnectionFactory cf = new ActiveMQConnectionFactory("tcp://localhost:61616"); PooledConnectionFactory pcf = new PooledConnectionFactory(); //Set expiry timeout because the default (0) prevents reconnection on failure pcf.setExpiryTimeout(5000); pcf.setConnectionFactory(cf); JMSConfiguration jmsConfig = new JMSConfiguration(); jmsConfig.setConnectionFactory(pdf);
For more information on pooling, see "Appendix A Optimizing Performance of JMS Single- and Multiple-Resource Transactions" in the Red Hat JBoss Fuse Transaction Guide
Avoiding synchronous receives
For request/reply exchanges, the JMS transport sends a request and then waits for a reply. Whenever possible, request/reply messaging is implemented asynchronously using a JMS MessageListener
.
However, CXF must use a synchronous Consumer.receive()
method when it needs to share queues between endpoints. This scenario requires the MessageListener
to use a message selector to filter the messages. The message selector must be known in advance, so the MessageListener
is opened only once.
Two cases in which the message selector cannot be known in advance should be avoided:
When
JMSMessageID
is used as theJMSCorrelationID
If the JMS properties
useConduitIdSelector
andconduitSelectorPrefix
are not set on the JMS transport, the client does not set aJMSCorrelationId
. This causes the server to use theJMSMessageId
of the request message as theJMSCorrelationId
. AsJMSMessageID
cannot be known in advance, the client has to use a synchronousConsumer.receive()
method.Note that you must use the
Consumer.receive()
method with IBM JMS endpoints (their default).The user sets the
JMStype
in the request message and then sets a customJMSCorrelationID
.Again, as the custom
JMSCorrelationID
cannot be known in advance, the client has to use a synchronousConsumer.receive()
method.
So the general rule is to avoid using settings that require using a synchronous receive.
14.4. Configuring JMS Transactions
Overview
CXF 3.0 supports both local JMS transactions and JTA transactions on CXF endpoints, when using one-way messaging.
Local transactions
Transactions using local resources roll back the JMS message only when an exception occurs. They do not directly coordinate other resources, such as database transactions.
To set up a local transaction, configure the endpoint as you normally would, and set the property sessionTrasnsacted
to true
.
For more information on transactions and pooling, see the Red Hat JBoss Fuse Transaction Guide.
JTA transactions
Using JTA transactions, you can coordinate any number of XA resources. If a CXF endpoint is configured for JTA transactions, it starts a transaction before calling the service implementation. The transaction will be committed if no exception occurs. Otherwise, it will be rolled back.
In JTA transactions, a JMS message is consumed and the data written to a database. When an exception occurs, both resources are rolled back, so either the message is consumed and the data is written to the database, or the message is rolled back and the data is not written to the database.
Configuring JTA transactions requires two steps:
Defining a transaction manager
bean method
Define a transaction manager
<bean id="transactionManager" class="org.apache.geronimo.transaction.manager.GeronimoTransactionManager"/>
Set the name of the transaction manager in the JMS URI
jms:queue:myqueue?jndiTransactionManager=TransactionManager
This example finds a bean with the ID
TransactionManager
.
OSGi reference method
Look up the transaction manager as an OSGi service using Blueprint
<reference id="TransactionManager" interface="javax.transaction.TransactionManager"/>
Set the name of the transaction manager in the JMS URI
jms:jndi:myqueue?jndiTransactionManager=java:comp/env/TransactionManager
This example looks up the transaction manager in JNDI.
Configuring a JCA pooled connection factory
Using Spring to define the JCA pooled connection factory:
<bean id="xacf" class="org.apache.activemq.ActiveMQXAConnectionFactory"> <property name="brokerURL" value="tcp://localhost:61616" /> </bean> <bean id="ConnectionFactory" class="org.apache.activemq.jms.pool.JcaPooledConnectionFactory"> <property name="transactionManager" ref="transactionManager" /> <property name="connectionFactory" ref="xacf" /> </bean>
In this example, the first bean defines an ActiveMQ XA connection factory, which is given to a
JcaPooledConnectionFactory
. TheJcaPooledConnectionFactory
is then provided as the default bean with idConnectionFactory
.Note that the
JcaPooledConnectionFactory
looks like a normal ConnectionFactory. But when a new connection and session are opened, it checks for an XA transaction and, if found, automatically registers the JMS session as an XA resource. This allows the JMS session to participate in the JMS transaction.ImportantDirectly setting an XA ConnectionFactory on the JMS transport will not work!
14.5. Using WSDL to configure JMS
14.5.1. JMS WSDL Extension Namespance
The WSDL extensions for defining a JMS endpoint are defined in the namespace http://cxf.apache.org/transports/jms. In order to use the JMS extensions you will need to add the line shown in Example 14.5, “JMS WSDL extension namespace” to the definitions element of your contract.
Example 14.5. JMS WSDL extension namespace
xmlns:jms="http://cxf.apache.org/transports/jms"
14.5.2. Basic JMS configuration
Overview
The JMS address information is provided using the jms:address
element and its child, the jms:JMSNamingProperties
element. The jms:address
element’s attributes specify the information needed to identify the JMS broker and the destination. The jms:JMSNamingProperties
element specifies the Java properties used to connect to the JNDI service.
Information specified using the JMS feature will override the information in the endpoint’s WSDL file.
Specifying the JMS address
The basic configuration for a JMS endpoint is done by using a jms:address
element as the child of your service’s port
element. The jms:address
element used in WSDL is identical to the one used in the configuration file. Its attributes are listed in Table 14.2, “JMS endpoint attributes”.
Attribute | Description |
---|---|
Specifies if the JMS destination is a JMS queue or a JMS topic. | |
Specifies the JNDI name bound to the JMS connection factory to use when connecting to the JMS destination. | |
Specifies the JMS name of the JMS destination to which requests are sent. | |
Specifies the JMS name of the JMS destinations where replies are sent. This attribute allows you to use a user defined destination for replies. For more details see Section 14.6, “Using a Named Reply Destination”. | |
Specifies the JNDI name bound to the JMS destination to which requests are sent. | |
Specifies the JNDI name bound to the JMS destinations where replies are sent. This attribute allows you to use a user defined destination for replies. For more details see Section 14.6, “Using a Named Reply Destination”. | |
Specifies the user name to use when connecting to a JMS broker. | |
Specifies the password to use when connecting to a JMS broker. |
The jms:address
WSDL element uses a jms:JMSNamingProperties
child element to specify additional information needed to connect to a JNDI provider.
Specifying JNDI properties
To increase interoperability with JMS and JNDI providers, the jms:address
element has a child element, jms:JMSNamingProperties
, that allows you to specify the values used to populate the properties used when connecting to the JNDI provider. The jms:JMSNamingProperties
element has two attributes: name
and value
. name
specifies the name of the property to set. value
attribute specifies the value for the specified property. jms:JMSNamingProperties
element can also be used for specification of provider specific properties.
The following is a list of common JNDI properties that can be set:
-
java.naming.factory.initial
-
java.naming.provider.url
-
java.naming.factory.object
-
java.naming.factory.state
-
java.naming.factory.url.pkgs
-
java.naming.dns.url
-
java.naming.authoritative
-
java.naming.batchsize
-
java.naming.referral
-
java.naming.security.protocol
-
java.naming.security.authentication
-
java.naming.security.principal
-
java.naming.security.credentials
-
java.naming.language
-
java.naming.applet
For more details on what information to use in these attributes, check your JNDI provider’s documentation and consult the Java API reference material.
Example
Example 14.6, “JMS WSDL port specification” shows an example of a JMS WSDL port
specification.
Example 14.6. JMS WSDL port specification
<service name="JMSService"> <port binding="tns:Greeter_SOAPBinding" name="SoapPort"> <jms:address jndiConnectionFactoryName="ConnectionFactory" jndiDestinationName="dynamicQueues/test.Celtix.jmstransport" > <jms:JMSNamingProperty name="java.naming.factory.initial" value="org.activemq.jndi.ActiveMQInitialContextFactory" /> <jms:JMSNamingProperty name="java.naming.provider.url" value="tcp://localhost:61616" /> </jms:address> </port> </service>
14.5.3. JMS client configuration
Overview
JMS consumer endpoints specify the type of messages they use. JMS consumer endpoint can use either a JMS ByteMessage
or a JMS TextMessage
.
When using an ByteMessage
the consumer endpoint uses a byte[]
as the method for storing data into and retrieving data from the JMS message body. When messages are sent, the message data, including any formating information, is packaged into a byte[]
and placed into the message body before it is placed on the wire. When messages are received, the consumer endpoint will attempt to unmarshall the data stored in the message body as if it were packed in a byte[]
.
When using a TextMessage
, the consumer endpoint uses a string as the method for storing and retrieving data from the message body. When messages are sent, the message information, including any format-specific information, is converted into a string and placed into the JMS message body. When messages are received the consumer endpoint will attempt to unmarshall the data stored in the JMS message body as if it were packed into a string.
When native JMS applications interact with Apache CXF consumers, the JMS application is responsible for interpreting the message and the formatting information. For example, if the Apache CXF contract specifies that the binding used for a JMS endpoint is SOAP, and the messages are packaged as TextMessage
, the receiving JMS application will get a text message containing all of the SOAP envelope information.
Specifying the message type
The type of messages accepted by a JMS consumer endpoint is configured using the optional jms:client
element. The jms:client
element is a child of the WSDL port
element and has one attribute:
Specifies how the message data will be packaged as a JMS message. |
Example
Example 14.7, “WSDL for a JMS consumer endpoint” shows the WSDL for configuring a JMS consumer endpoint.
Example 14.7. WSDL for a JMS consumer endpoint
<service name="JMSService"> <port binding="tns:Greeter_SOAPBinding" name="SoapPort"> <jms:address jndiConnectionFactoryName="ConnectionFactory" jndiDestinationName="dynamicQueues/test.Celtix.jmstransport" > <jms:JMSNamingProperty name="java.naming.factory.initial" value="org.activemq.jndi.ActiveMQInitialContextFactory" /> <jms:JMSNamingProperty name="java.naming.provider.url" value="tcp://localhost:61616" /> </jms:address> <jms:client messageType="binary" /> </port> </service>
14.5.4. JMS provider configuration
Overview
JMS provider endpoints have a number of behaviors that are configurable. These include:
- how messages are correlated
- the use of durable subscriptions
- if the service uses local JMS transactions
- the message selectors used by the endpoint
Specifying the configuration
Provider endpoint behaviors are configured using the optional jms:server
element. The jms:server
element is a child of the WSDL wsdl:port
element and has the following attributes:
Attribute | Description |
---|---|
Specifies whether JMS will use the message ID to correlate messages. The default is | |
Specifies the name used to register a durable subscription. | |
Specifies the string value of a message selector to use. For more information on the syntax used to specify message selectors, see the JMS 1.1 specification. | |
Specifies whether the local JMS broker will create transactions around message processing. The default is | |
Example
Example 14.8, “WSDL for a JMS provider endpoint” shows the WSDL for configuring a JMS provider endpoint.
Example 14.8. WSDL for a JMS provider endpoint
<service name="JMSService"> <port binding="tns:Greeter_SOAPBinding" name="SoapPort"> <jms:address jndiConnectionFactoryName="ConnectionFactory" jndiDestinationName="dynamicQueues/test.Celtix.jmstransport" > <jms:JMSNamingProperty name="java.naming.factory.initial" value="org.activemq.jndi.ActiveMQInitialContextFactory" /> <jms:JMSNamingProperty name="java.naming.provider.url" value="tcp://localhost:61616" /> </jms:address> <jms:server messageSelector="cxf_message_selector" useMessageIDAsCorrelationID="true" transactional="true" durableSubscriberName="cxf_subscriber" /> </port> </service>
14.6. Using a Named Reply Destination
Overview
By default, Apache CXF endpoints using JMS create a temporary queue for sending replies back and forth. If you prefer to use named queues, you can configure the queue used to send replies as part of an endpoint’s JMS configuration.
Setting the reply destination name
You specify the reply destination using either the jmsReplyDestinationName
attribute or the jndiReplyDestinationName
attribute in the endpoint’s JMS configuration. A client endpoint will listen for replies on the specified destination and it will specify the value of the attribute in the ReplyTo
field of all outgoing requests. A service endpoint will use the value of the jndiReplyDestinationName
attribute as the location for placing replies if there is no destination specified in the request’s ReplyTo
field.
Example
Example 14.9, “JMS Consumer Specification Using a Named Reply Queue” shows the configuration for a JMS client endpoint.
Example 14.9. JMS Consumer Specification Using a Named Reply Queue
<jms:conduit name="{http://cxf.apache.org/jms_endpt}HelloWorldJMSPort.jms-conduit">
<jms:address destinationStyle="queue"
jndiConnectionFactoryName="myConnectionFactory"
jndiDestinationName="myDestination"
jndiReplyDestinationName="myReplyDestination" >
<jms:JMSNamingProperty name="java.naming.factory.initial"
value="org.apache.cxf.transport.jms.MyInitialContextFactory" />
<jms:JMSNamingProperty name="java.naming.provider.url"
value="tcp://localhost:61616" />
</jms:address>
</jms:conduit>