Red Hat AMQ 6
As of February 2025, Red Hat is no longer supporting Red Hat AMQ 6. If you are using AMQ 6, please upgrade: Migrating to AMQ 7.Este conteúdo não está disponível no idioma selecionado.
Chapter 5. Getting More Information
Abstract
There is a wealth of information about Red Hat JBoss A-MQ. Most of it is written and maintained by Red Hat or our engineers.
5.1. Red Hat Documentation Copiar o linkLink copiado para a área de transferência!
Copiar o linkLink copiado para a área de transferência!
Overview Copiar o linkLink copiado para a área de transferência!
Copiar o linkLink copiado para a área de transferência!
The Red Hat JBoss A-MQ documentation is designed to be task oriented and lead to a user to the information they need quickly. The reading lists below are broken up by user type and organized in the order in which a user will likely want to read the content.
Basics Copiar o linkLink copiado para a área de transferência!
Copiar o linkLink copiado para a área de transferência!
The books listed here provide information about JMS messaging and the basic information needed to develop messaging applications with Red Hat JBoss A-MQ.
- Provides detailed instructions for installing the Red Hat JBoss A-MQ software on Windows, Linux, Unix, and OS X platforms, using the binary distributions or building from source code. It also lays out the prerequisites needed to ensure a successful installation.
- Describes all changes made to the Red Hat JBoss A-MQ software and provides instructions for integrating the changes into existing applications.
- Describes each of the supported transport options and connectivity protocols in detail and includes code examples.
- Describes the basic concepts of message persistence and provides detailed information on the supported message stores: KahaDB and JDBC database with/without journaling. It also describes how to use message cursors to improve the scalability of the message store.
- Describes basic network of brokers concepts and topologies, network connectors, discovery protocols for dynamically discovering and reconnecting to brokers in a network, and balancing consumer and producer loads.
- Describes how to implement fault tolerance using a master/slave cluster.
- Describes techniques for fine tuning your broker's performance.
- Describes how to secure the communications between your client applications and the broker. It also describes how to secure access to the broker's administrative interfaces.
- Links to the Red Hat JBoss A-MQ 6.0 Javadoc.
- Links to Red Hat JBoss A-MQ 6.0 XML Schema Reference, where, for each namespace, all available components are listed.
System administrators Copiar o linkLink copiado para a área de transferência!
Copiar o linkLink copiado para a área de transferência!
The books listed here provide information and instructions to support system administrator functions.
- Provides detailed instructions for installing the Red Hat JBoss A-MQ software on Windows, Linux, Unix, and OS X platforms, using the binary distributions or building from source code. It also lays out the prerequisites needed to ensure a successful installation.
- Describes all of the latest changes made to the Red Hat JBoss A-MQ software and, where necessary, provides instructions for integrating the changes into existing systems.
- Provides detailed instructions for managing a Red Hat JBoss A-MQ deployment.
- Describes how to secure transport protocols and Java clients, how to set up JAAS authentication on broker-to-broker configurations, and how to secure Red Hat JBoss A-MQ JMX connectors.
- Describes how to use the management console to monitor distributed Red Hat JBoss A-MQ deployments.
- Describes how to use JBoss Operations Network to monitor and manage Red Hat JBoss A-MQ.