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Chapter 1. Overview
AMQ JMS Pool is a library that provides caching of JMS connections, sessions, and message producers. It enables reuse of connection resources beyond the standard lifecycle defined by the JMS API.
AMQ JMS Pool operates as a standard JMS ConnectionFactory
instance that wraps the ConnectionFactory
of your chosen JMS provider and manages the lifetime of Connection
objects from that provider based on the configuration of the JMS pool. It can be configured to share one or more connections among callers to the pool createConnection()
methods.
AMQ JMS Pool is part of AMQ Clients, a suite of messaging libraries supporting multiple languages and platforms. For an overview of the clients, see AMQ Clients Overview. For information about this release, see AMQ Clients 2.9 Release Notes.
AMQ JMS Pool is based on the Pooled JMS messaging library.
1.1. Key features
- JMS 1.1 and 2.0 compatible
- Automatic reconnect
- Configurable connection and session pool sizes
1.2. Supported standards and protocols
AMQ JMS Pool supports version 2.0 of the Java Message Service API.
1.3. Supported configurations
AMQ JMS Pool supports the OS and language versions listed below. For more information, see Red Hat AMQ 7 Supported Configurations.
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 and 8 with the following JDKs:
- OpenJDK 8 and 11
- Oracle JDK 8
- IBM JDK 8
- IBM AIX 7.1 with IBM JDK 8
- Microsoft Windows 10 Pro with Oracle JDK 8
- Microsoft Windows Server 2012 R2 and 2016 with Oracle JDK 8
- Oracle Solaris 10 and 11 with Oracle JDK 8
1.4. Document conventions
The sudo command
In this document, sudo
is used for any command that requires root privileges. Exercise caution when using sudo
because any changes can affect the entire system. For more information about sudo
, see Using the sudo command.
File paths
In this document, all file paths are valid for Linux, UNIX, and similar operating systems (for example, /home/andrea
). On Microsoft Windows, you must use the equivalent Windows paths (for example, C:\Users\andrea
).
Variable text
This document contains code blocks with variables that you must replace with values specific to your environment. Variable text is enclosed in arrow braces and styled as italic monospace. For example, in the following command, replace <project-dir>
with the value for your environment:
$ cd <project-dir>