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9.2. Demarcation by Marking the Route
Overview
If the consumer endpoint at the start of a route does not support transactions, you can nevertheless initiate a transaction immediately after receiving an incoming message by inserting the
transacted()
command into your route.
Demarcation using transacted()
By default, the
transacted()
command uses the first transaction manager of type PlatformTransactionManager
that it finds in the bean registry (which could either be an OSGi service, a bean defined in Spring XML, or a bean defined in blueprint). Because the PlatformTransactionManager
interface is, by default, exported as an OSGi service, the transacted()
command will automatically find the XA transaction manager.
When you use the
transacted()
command to mark a route as transacted, all of the processors following transacted()
participate in the transaction; all of the processors preceding transacted()
do not participate in the transaction. For example, you could use transacted()
to make a route transactional, as follows:
// Java import org.apache.camel.builder.RouteBuilder; public class MyRouteBuilder extends RouteBuilder { ... public void configure() { from("file:src/data?noop=true") .transacted() .beanRef("accountService","credit") .beanRef("accountService","debit") .to("jmstx:queue:processed"); } }
Important
If your container exports multiple OSGi services of
PlatformTransactionManager
type or if you register multiple TransactedPolicy
objects in the bean registry (for example, by defining beans in Spring XML), you cannot be certain which transaction manager would be picked up by the transacted()
command (see Default transaction manager and transacted policy). In such cases, it is recommended that you specify the transaction policy explicitly.
Specifying the transaction policy explicitly
To eliminate any ambiguity about which transaction manager is used, you can specify the transaction policy explicitly by passing the transaction policy's bean ID as an argument to the
transacted()
command. First of all, you need to define the transaction policy (of type, org.apache.camel.spring.spi.SpringTransactionPolicy
), which encapsulates a reference to the transaction manager you want to use—for example:
<beans ...> ... <!-- access through Spring's PlatformTransactionManager --> <osgi:reference id="osgiPlatformTransactionManager" interface="org.springframework.transaction.PlatformTransactionManager"/> ... <bean id="XA_TX_REQUIRED" class="org.apache.camel.spring.spi.SpringTransactionPolicy"> <property name="transactionManager" ref="osgiPlatformTransactionManager"/> </bean> ... </beans>
After the transaction policy bean is defined, you can use it by passing its bean ID,
XA_TX_REQUIRED
, as a string argument to the transacted()
command—for example:
// Java
import org.apache.camel.builder.RouteBuilder;
public class MyRouteBuilder extends RouteBuilder {
...
public void configure() {
from("file:src/data?noop=true")
.transacted("XA_TX_REQUIRED")
.beanRef("accountService","credit")
.beanRef("accountService","debit")
.to("jmstx:queue:processed");
}
}
For more details about transaction policies, see Propagation Policies.
XML syntax
You can also use the
transacted
command in Spring XML or blueprint files. For example, to demarcate an XA transaction in Spring XML:
<beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans"
xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" ... >
<camelContext xmlns="http://camel.apache.org/schema/spring">
<route>
<from uri="file:src/data?noop=true"/>
<transacted ref="XA_TX_REQUIRED"/>
<bean ref="accountService" method="credit"/>
<bean ref="accountService" method="debit"/>
<to uri="jmstx:queue:processed"/>
</route>
</camelContext>
</beans>