2014-12-11 07:17:29 -05:00
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# The JMS Bridge
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ActiveMQ includes a fully functional JMS message bridge.
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The function of the bridge is to consume messages from a source queue or
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topic, and send them to a target queue or topic, typically on a
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different server.
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The source and target servers do not have to be in the same cluster
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which makes bridging suitable for reliably sending messages from one
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cluster to another, for instance across a WAN, and where the connection
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may be unreliable.
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A bridge can be deployed as a standalone application, with ActiveMQ
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standalone server or inside a JBoss AS instance. The source and the
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target can be located in the same virtual machine or another one.
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The bridge can also be used to bridge messages from other non ActiveMQ
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JMS servers, as long as they are JMS 1.1 compliant.
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> **Note**
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>
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> Do not confuse a JMS bridge with a core bridge. A JMS bridge can be
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> used to bridge any two JMS 1.1 compliant JMS providers and uses the
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> JMS API. A core bridge (described in [Core Bidges](core-bridges.md)) is used to bridge any two
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> ActiveMQ instances and uses the core API. Always use a core bridge if
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> you can in preference to a JMS bridge. The core bridge will typically
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> provide better performance than a JMS bridge. Also the core bridge can
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> provide *once and only once* delivery guarantees without using XA.
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The bridge has built-in resilience to failure so if the source or target
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server connection is lost, e.g. due to network failure, the bridge will
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retry connecting to the source and/or target until they come back
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online. When it comes back online it will resume operation as normal.
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The bridge can be configured with an optional JMS selector, so it will
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only consume messages matching that JMS selector
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It can be configured to consume from a queue or a topic. When it
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consumes from a topic it can be configured to consume using a non
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durable or durable subscription
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Typically, the bridge is deployed by the JBoss Micro Container via a
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beans configuration file. This would typically be deployed inside the
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JBoss Application Server and the following example shows an example of a
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beans file that bridges 2 destinations which are actually on the same
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server.
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2015-01-21 13:27:19 -05:00
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The JMS Bridge is a simple POJO so can be deployed with most frameworks,
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simply instantiate the `org.apache.activemq.api.jms.bridge.impl.JMSBridgeImpl`
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class and set the appropriate parameters.
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2014-12-11 07:17:29 -05:00
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## JMS Bridge Parameters
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The main bean deployed is the `JMSBridge` bean. The bean is configurable
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by the parameters passed to its constructor.
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> **Note**
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>
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> To let a parameter be unspecified (for example, if the authentication
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> is anonymous or no message selector is provided), use `<null
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> />` for the unspecified parameter value.
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- Source Connection Factory Factory
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This injects the `SourceCFF` bean (also defined in the beans file).
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This bean is used to create the *source* `ConnectionFactory`
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- Target Connection Factory Factory
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This injects the `TargetCFF` bean (also defined in the beans file).
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This bean is used to create the *target* `ConnectionFactory`
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- Source Destination Factory Factory
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This injects the `SourceDestinationFactory` bean (also defined in
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the beans file). This bean is used to create the *source*
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`Destination`
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- Target Destination Factory Factory
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This injects the `TargetDestinationFactory` bean (also defined in
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the beans file). This bean is used to create the *target*
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`Destination`
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- Source User Name
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this parameter is the username for creating the *source* connection
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- Source Password
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this parameter is the parameter for creating the *source* connection
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- Target User Name
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this parameter is the username for creating the *target* connection
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- Target Password
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this parameter is the password for creating the *target* connection
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- Selector
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This represents a JMS selector expression used for consuming
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messages from the source destination. Only messages that match the
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selector expression will be bridged from the source to the target
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destination
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The selector expression must follow the [JMS selector
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syntax](http://docs.oracle.com/javaee/6/api/javax/jms/Message.html)
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- Failure Retry Interval
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This represents the amount of time in ms to wait between trying to
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recreate connections to the source or target servers when the bridge
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has detected they have failed
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- Max Retries
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This represents the number of times to attempt to recreate
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connections to the source or target servers when the bridge has
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detected they have failed. The bridge will give up after trying this
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number of times. `-1` represents 'try forever'
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- Quality Of Service
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This parameter represents the desired quality of service mode
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Possible values are:
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- `AT_MOST_ONCE`
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- `DUPLICATES_OK`
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- `ONCE_AND_ONLY_ONCE`
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2014-12-11 07:17:29 -05:00
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See Quality Of Service section for a explanation of these modes.
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- Max Batch Size
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This represents the maximum number of messages to consume from the
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source destination before sending them in a batch to the target
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destination. Its value must `>= 1`
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- Max Batch Time
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This represents the maximum number of milliseconds to wait before
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sending a batch to target, even if the number of messages consumed
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has not reached `MaxBatchSize`. Its value must be `-1` to represent
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'wait forever', or `>= 1` to specify an actual time
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- Subscription Name
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If the source destination represents a topic, and you want to
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consume from the topic using a durable subscription then this
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parameter represents the durable subscription name
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- Client ID
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If the source destination represents a topic, and you want to
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consume from the topic using a durable subscription then this
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attribute represents the the JMS client ID to use when
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creating/looking up the durable subscription
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- Add MessageID In Header
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If `true`, then the original message's message ID will be appended
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in the message sent to the destination in the header
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`ACTIVEMQ_BRIDGE_MSG_ID_LIST`. If the message is bridged more than
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once, each message ID will be appended. This enables a distributed
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request-response pattern to be used
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> **Note**
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>
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> when you receive the message you can send back a response using
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> the correlation id of the first message id, so when the original
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> sender gets it back it will be able to correlate it.
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- MBean Server
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To manage the JMS Bridge using JMX, set the MBeanServer where the
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JMS Bridge MBean must be registered (e.g. the JVM Platform
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MBeanServer or JBoss AS MBeanServer)
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- ObjectName
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If you set the MBeanServer, you also need to set the ObjectName used
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to register the JMS Bridge MBean (must be unique)
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The "transactionManager" property points to a JTA transaction manager
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implementation and should be set if you need to use the 'ONCE_AND_ONCE_ONLY'
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Quality of Service. ActiveMQ doesn't ship with such an implementation, but
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if you are running within an Application Server you can inject the Transaction
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Manager that is shipped.
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2014-12-11 07:17:29 -05:00
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## Source and Target Connection Factories
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The source and target connection factory factories are used to create
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the connection factory used to create the connection for the source or
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target server.
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The configuration example above uses the default implementation provided
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by ActiveMQ that looks up the connection factory using JNDI. For other
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Application Servers or JMS providers a new implementation may have to be
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provided. This can easily be done by implementing the interface
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`org.apache.activemq.jms.bridge.ConnectionFactoryFactory`.
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## Source and Target Destination Factories
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Again, similarly, these are used to create or lookup up the
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destinations.
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In the configuration example above, we have used the default provided by
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ActiveMQ that looks up the destination using JNDI.
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A new implementation can be provided by implementing
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`org.apache.activemq.jms.bridge.DestinationFactory` interface.
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2014-12-11 07:17:29 -05:00
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## Quality Of Service
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The quality of service modes used by the bridge are described here in
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more detail.
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2014-12-11 07:17:29 -05:00
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### AT_MOST_ONCE
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With this QoS mode messages will reach the destination from the source
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at most once. The messages are consumed from the source and acknowledged
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before sending to the destination. Therefore there is a possibility that
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if failure occurs between removing them from the source and them
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arriving at the destination they could be lost. Hence delivery will
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occur at most once.
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This mode is available for both durable and non-durable messages.
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### DUPLICATES_OK
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With this QoS mode, the messages are consumed from the source and then
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acknowledged after they have been successfully sent to the destination.
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Therefore there is a possibility that if failure occurs after sending to
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the destination but before acknowledging them, they could be sent again
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when the system recovers. I.e. the destination might receive duplicates
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after a failure.
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This mode is available for both durable and non-durable messages.
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2014-12-11 07:17:29 -05:00
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### ONCE_AND_ONLY_ONCE
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This QoS mode ensures messages will reach the destination from the
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source once and only once. (Sometimes this mode is known as "exactly
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once"). If both the source and the destination are on the same ActiveMQ
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server instance then this can be achieved by sending and acknowledging
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the messages in the same local transaction. If the source and
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destination are on different servers this is achieved by enlisting the
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sending and consuming sessions in a JTA transaction. The JTA transaction
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is controlled by a JTA Transaction Manager which will need to be set
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via the settransactionManager method on the Bridge.
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This mode is only available for durable messages.
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> **Note**
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>
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> For a specific application it may possible to provide once and only
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> once semantics without using the ONCE\_AND\_ONLY\_ONCE QoS level. This
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> can be done by using the DUPLICATES\_OK mode and then checking for
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> duplicates at the destination and discarding them. Some JMS servers
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> provide automatic duplicate message detection functionality, or this
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> may be possible to implement on the application level by maintaining a
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> cache of received message ids on disk and comparing received messages
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> to them. The cache would only be valid for a certain period of time so
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> this approach is not as watertight as using ONCE\_AND\_ONLY\_ONCE but
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> may be a good choice depending on your specific application.
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2014-12-11 07:17:29 -05:00
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### Time outs and the JMS bridge
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There is a possibility that the target or source server will not be
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available at some point in time. If this occurs then the bridge will try
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`Max Retries` to reconnect every `Failure Retry Interval` milliseconds
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as specified in the JMS Bridge definition.
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However since a third party JNDI is used, in this case the JBoss naming
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server, it is possible for the JNDI lookup to hang if the network were
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to disappear during the JNDI lookup. To stop this from occurring the
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JNDI definition can be configured to time out if this occurs. To do this
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set the `jnp.timeout` and the `jnp.sotimeout` on the Initial Context
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definition. The first sets the connection timeout for the initial
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connection and the second the read timeout for the socket.
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> **Note**
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>
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> Once the initial JNDI connection has succeeded all calls are made
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> using RMI. If you want to control the timeouts for the RMI connections
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> then this can be done via system properties. JBoss uses Sun's RMI and
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> the properties can be found
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> [here](http://docs.oracle.com/javase/6/docs/technotes/guides/rmi/sunrmiproperties.html).
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> The default connection timeout is 10 seconds and the default read
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> timeout is 18 seconds.
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If you implement your own factories for looking up JMS resources then
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you will have to bear in mind timeout issues.
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### Examples
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2015-02-25 08:37:19 -05:00
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Please see [the examples chapter](examples.md) which shows how to configure and use a JMS Bridge with
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JBoss AS to send messages to the source destination and consume them
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from the target destination and how to configure and use a JMS Bridge between
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two standalone ActiveMQ servers.
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