activemq-artemis/examples/jms/jms-context
Clebert Suconic 3c44e26854 ACTIVEMQ6-3 renaming directories from activemq6 to activemq
https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/ACTIVEMQ6-3

We are renaming packages from activemq6 to activemq as that's more generic and version independent
On this first commit I'm just renaming the directories otherwise the history would be lost. The next commit will rename the text on the directories.
If I squash these two commits git will make us delete / add again.
2014-11-17 09:33:36 -05:00
..
src/main ACTIVEMQ6-3 renaming directories from activemq6 to activemq 2014-11-17 09:33:36 -05:00
pom.xml Use new package names in config and classes 2014-11-11 18:28:18 +00:00
readme.html ACTIVEMQ6-1 - Initial HornetQ Donation Commit 2014-11-10 10:31:25 -06:00

readme.html

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    <title>HornetQ JMS Context Example</title>
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    <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="../common/prettify.css" />
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     <h1>JMS Context Example</h1>

     <p>This example shows you how to send and receive a message to a JMS Queue using HornetQ by using a JMS Context</p>
     <p>A JMSContext is part of JMS 2.0 and combines the JMS Connection and Session Objects into a simple Interface</p>

     <h2>Example step-by-step</h2>
     <p><i>To run the example, simply type <code>mvn verify</code> from this directory</i></p>

     <ol>
        <li>First we need to get an initial context so we can look-up the JMS connection factory and destination objects from JNDI. This initial context will get it's properties from the <code>client-jndi.properties</code> file in the directory <code>../common/config</code></li>
        <pre class="prettyprint">
           <code>InitialContext initialContext = getContext();</code>
        </pre>

        <li>We look-up the JMS queue object from JNDI</li>
        <pre class="prettyprint">
           <code>Queue queue = (Queue) initialContext.lookup("/queue/exampleQueue");</code>
        </pre>

        <li>We look-up the JMS connection factory object from JNDI</li>
        <pre class="prettyprint">
           <code>ConnectionFactory cf = (ConnectionFactory) initialContext.lookup("/ConnectionFactory");</code>
        </pre>

        <li>We create a JMS context</li>
        <pre class="prettyprint">
           <code>jmsContext = cf.createContext();</code>
        </pre>

        <li>We create a JMS Producer, set the delivery mode and send a message all in one line. Note that we don't pass
        a message to the send method but just a String.</li>
        <pre class="prettyprint">
           <code>jmsContext.createProducer().setDeliveryMode(DeliveryMode.PERSISTENT).send(queue, "this is a string")</code>
        </pre>

        <li>We create a JMS message consumer and receive the payload of the message directly</li>
        <pre class="prettyprint">
          <code>String payLoad = jmsContext.createConsumer(queue).receiveBody(String.class);</code>
       </pre>

        <li>We create a JMS text message that we are going to send.</li>
        <pre class="prettyprint">
           <code>TextMessage message = session.createTextMessage("This is a text message");</code>
        </pre>

        <li>And finally, <b>always</b> remember to close your JMS connections and resources after use, in a <code>finally</code> block. Closing a JMS connection will automatically close all of its sessions, consumers, producer and browser objects</li>

        <pre class="prettyprint">
           <code>finally
           {
              if (initialContext != null)
              {
                 initialContext.close();
              }
              if (jmsContext != null)
              {
                 jmsContext.close();
              }
           }</code>
        </pre>



     </ol>
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