# Diverting and Splitting Message Flows Apache ActiveMQ Artemis allows you to configure objects called *diverts* with some simple server configuration. Diverts allow you to transparently divert messages routed to one address to some other address, without making any changes to any client application logic. Diverts can be *exclusive*, meaning that the message is diverted to the new address, and does not go to the old address at all, or they can be *non-exclusive* which means the message continues to go the old address, and a *copy* of it is also sent to the new address. Non-exclusive diverts can therefore be used for *splitting* message flows, e.g. there may be a requirement to monitor every order sent to an order queue. Diverts can also be configured to have an optional message filter. If specified then only messages that match the filter will be diverted. When an address has both exclusive and non-exclusive diverts configured, the exclusive ones are processed first. If any of the exclusive diverts diverted the message, the non-exclusive ones are not processed. Diverts can also be configured to apply a `Transformer`. If specified, all diverted messages will have the opportunity of being transformed by the `Transformer`. When an address has multiple diverts configured, all of them receive the same, original message. This means that the results of a transformer on a message are not directly available for other diverts or their filters on the same address. A divert will only divert a message to an address on the *same server*, however, if you want to divert to an address on a different server, a common pattern would be to divert to a local store-and-forward queue, then set up a bridge which consumes from that queue and forwards to an address on a different server. Diverts are therefore a very sophisticated concept, which when combined with bridges can be used to create interesting and complex routings. The set of diverts on a server can be thought of as a type of routing table for messages. Combining diverts with bridges allows you to create a distributed network of reliable routing connections between multiple geographically distributed servers, creating your global messaging mesh. Diverts are defined as xml in the `broker.xml` file at the `core` attribute level. There can be zero or more diverts in the file. Please see the examples for a full working example showing you how to configure and use diverts. Let's take a look at some divert examples: ## Exclusive Divert Let's take a look at an exclusive divert. An exclusive divert diverts all matching messages that are routed to the old address to the new address. Matching messages do not get routed to the old address. Here's some example xml configuration for an exclusive divert, it's taken from the divert example:
priceUpdates
priceForwarding org.apache.activemq.artemis.jms.example.AddForwardingTimeTransformer true
We define a divert called `prices-divert` that will divert any messages sent to the address `priceUpdates` to another local address `priceForwarding`. We also specify a message filter string so only messages with the message property `office` with value `New York` will get diverted, all other messages will continue to be routed to the normal address. The filter string is optional, if not specified then all messages will be considered matched. In this example a transformer class is specified. Again this is optional, and if specified the transformer will be executed for each matching message. This allows you to change the messages body or properties before it is diverted. In this example the transformer simply adds a header that records the time the divert happened. This example is actually diverting messages to a local store and forward queue, which is configured with a bridge which forwards the message to an address on another ActiveMQ Artemis server. Please see the example for more details. ## Non-exclusive Divert Now we'll take a look at a non-exclusive divert. Non exclusive diverts are the same as exclusive diverts, but they only forward a *copy* of the message to the new address. The original message continues to the old address You can therefore think of non-exclusive diverts as *splitting* a message flow. Non exclusive diverts can be configured in the same way as exclusive diverts with an optional filter and transformer, here's an example non-exclusive divert, again from the divert example:
orders
spyTopic false
The above divert example takes a copy of every message sent to the address '`orders`' and sends it to a local address called '`spyTopic`'.