4.1 KiB
Intercepting Operations
Apache ActiveMQ Artemis supports interceptors to intercept packets entering and exiting the server. Incoming and outgoing interceptors are be called for any packet entering or exiting the server respectively. This allows custom code to be executed, e.g. for auditing packets, filtering or other reasons. Interceptors can change the packets they intercept. This makes interceptors powerful, but also potentially dangerous.
Implementing The Interceptors
All interceptors are protocol specific.
An interceptor for the core protocol must implement the interface Interceptor
:
package org.apache.artemis.activemq.api.core.interceptor;
public interface Interceptor
{
boolean intercept(Packet packet, RemotingConnection connection) throws ActiveMQException;
}
For stomp protocol an interceptor must implement the interface StompFrameInterceptor
:
package org.apache.activemq.artemis.core.protocol.stomp;
public interface StompFrameInterceptor extends BaseInterceptor<StompFrame>
{
boolean intercept(StompFrame stompFrame, RemotingConnection connection);
}
Likewise for MQTT protocol, an interceptor must implement the interface MQTTInterceptor
:
package org.apache.activemq.artemis.core.protocol.mqtt;
public interface MQTTInterceptor extends BaseInterceptor<MqttMessage>
{
boolean intercept(MqttMessage mqttMessage, RemotingConnection connection);
}
The returned boolean value is important:
-
if
true
is returned, the process continues normally -
if
false
is returned, the process is aborted, no other interceptors will be called and the packet will not be processed further by the server.
Configuring The Interceptors
Both incoming and outgoing interceptors are configured in
broker.xml
:
<remoting-incoming-interceptors>
<class-name>org.apache.activemq.artemis.jms.example.LoginInterceptor</class-name>
<class-name>org.apache.activemq.artemis.jms.example.AdditionalPropertyInterceptor</class-name>
</remoting-incoming-interceptors>
<remoting-outgoing-interceptors>
<class-name>org.apache.activemq.artemis.jms.example.LogoutInterceptor</class-name>
<class-name>org.apache.activemq.artemis.jms.example.AdditionalPropertyInterceptor</class-name>
</remoting-outgoing-interceptors>
The interceptors classes (and their dependencies) must be added to the server classpath to be properly instantiated and called.
Interceptors on the Client Side
The interceptors can also be run on the client side to intercept packets
either sent by the client to the server or by the server to the client.
This is done by adding the interceptor to the ServerLocator
with the
addIncomingInterceptor(Interceptor)
or
addOutgoingInterceptor(Interceptor)
methods.
As noted above, if an interceptor returns false
then the sending of
the packet is aborted which means that no other interceptors are be
called and the packet is not be processed further by the client.
Typically this process happens transparently to the client (i.e. it has
no idea if a packet was aborted or not). However, in the case of an
outgoing packet that is sent in a blocking
fashion a
ActiveMQException
will be thrown to the caller. The exception is
thrown because blocking sends provide reliability and it is considered
an error for them not to succeed. Blocking
sends occurs when, for
example, an application invokes setBlockOnNonDurableSend(true)
or
setBlockOnDurableSend(true)
on its ServerLocator
or if an
application is using a JMS connection factory retrieved from JNDI that
has either block-on-durable-send
or block-on-non-durable-send
set to
true
. Blocking is also used for packets dealing with transactions
(e.g. commit, roll-back, etc.). The ActiveMQException
thrown will
contain the name of the interceptor that returned false.
As on the server, the client interceptor classes (and their dependencies) must be added to the classpath to be properly instantiated and invoked.
Example
See the examples chapter for an example which shows how to use interceptors to add properties to a message on the server.