activemq-artemis/docs/user-manual/en/configuration-index.md

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Configuration Reference

This section is a quick index for looking up configuration. Click on the element name to go to the specific chapter.

Server Configuration

broker.xml

This is the main core server configuration file which contains to elements 'core' and 'jms'. The 'core' element contains the main server configuration while the 'jms' element is used by the server side JMS service to load JMS Queues, Topics

The core configuration

This describes the root of the XML configuration. You will see here also multiple sub-types listed. For example on the main config you will have bridges and at the list of bridge type we will describe the properties for that configuration.

Name Description
acceptors a list of remoting acceptors
acceptors.acceptor Each acceptor is composed for just an URL
address-settings a list of address-setting
allow-failback Should stop backup on live restart. default true
async-connection-execution-enabled If False delivery would be always asynchronous. default true
bindings-directory The folder in use for the bindings folder
bridges a list of bridge
broadcast-groups a list of broadcast-group
configuration-file-refresh-period The frequency in milliseconds the configuration file is checked for changes (default 5000)
check-for-live-server Used for a live server to verify if there are other nodes with the same ID on the topology
cluster-connections a list of cluster-connection
cluster-password Cluster password. It applies to all cluster configurations.
cluster-user Cluster username. It applies to all cluster configurations.
connection-ttl-override if set, this will override how long (in ms) to keep a connection alive without receiving a ping. -1 disables this setting. Default -1
connection-ttl-check-period how often (in ms) to check connections for ttl violation. Default 2000
connectors.connector The URL for the connector. This is a list
create-bindings-dir true means that the server will create the bindings directory on start up. Default=true
create-journal-dir true means that the journal directory will be created. Default=true
discovery-groups a list of discovery-group
diverts a list of diverts to use
graceful-shutdown-enabled true means that graceful shutdown is enabled. Default=true
graceful-shutdown-timeout Timeout on waitin for clients to disconnect before server shutdown. Default=-1
grouping-handler Message Group configuration
id-cache-size The duplicate detection circular cache size. Default=20000
jmx-domain the JMX domain used to registered MBeans in the MBeanServer. Default=org.apache.activemq
jmx-management-enabled true means that the management API is available via JMX. Default=true
journal-buffer-size The size of the internal buffer on the journal in KB. Default=490 KiB
journal-buffer-timeout The Flush timeout for the journal buffer
journal-compact-min-files The minimal number of data files before we can start compacting. Setting this to 0 means compacting is disabled. Default=10
journal-compact-percentage The percentage of live data on which we consider compacting the journal. Default=30
journal-directory the directory to store the journal files in. Default=data/journal
journal-file-size the size (in bytes) of each journal file. Default=10485760 (10 MB)
journal-max-io the maximum number of write requests that can be in the AIO queue at any one time. Default is 500 for AIO and 1 for NIO.
journal-min-files how many journal files to pre-create. Default=2
journal-pool-files The upper theshold of the journal file pool,-1 (default) means no Limit. The system will create as many files as needed however when reclaiming files it will shrink back to the journal-pool-files
journal-sync-non-transactional if true wait for non transaction data to be synced to the journal before returning response to client. Default=true
journal-sync-transactional if true wait for transaction data to be synchronized to the journal before returning response to client. Default=true
journal-type the type of journal to use. Default=ASYNCIO
large-messages-directory the directory to store large messages. Default=data/largemessages
management-address the name of the management address to send management messages to. It is prefixed with "jms.queue" so that JMS clients can send messages to it. Default=jms.queue.activemq.management
management-notification-address the name of the address that consumers bind to receive management notifications. Default=activemq.notifications
mask-password This option controls whether passwords in server configuration need be masked. If set to "true" the passwords are masked. Default=false
max-saved-replicated-journals-size This specifies how many times a replicated backup server can restart after moving its files on start. Once there are this number of backup journal files the server will stop permanently after if fails back. Default=2
memory-measure-interval frequency to sample JVM memory in ms (or -1 to disable memory sampling). Default=-1
memory-warning-threshold Percentage of available memory which will trigger a warning log. Default=25
message-counter-enabled true means that message counters are enabled. Default=false
message-counter-max-day-history how many days to keep message counter history. Default=10 (days)
message-counter-sample-period the sample period (in ms) to use for message counters. Default=10000
message-expiry-scan-period how often (in ms) to scan for expired messages. Default=30000
message-expiry-thread-priority the priority of the thread expiring messages. Default=3
page-max-concurrent-io The max number of concurrent reads allowed on paging. Default=5
paging-directory the directory to store paged messages in. Default=data/paging
persist-delivery-count-before-delivery True means that the delivery count is persisted before delivery. False means that this only happens after a message has been cancelled. Default=false
persistence-enabled true means that the server will use the file based journal for persistence. Default=true
persist-id-cache true means that ID's are persisted to the journal. Default=true
queues a list of queue to be created
remoting-incoming-interceptors A list of interceptor
resolveProtocols Use ServiceLoader to load protocol modules. Default=true
scheduled-thread-pool-max-size Maximum number of threads to use for the scheduled thread pool. Default=5
security-enabled true means that security is enabled. Default=true
security-invalidation-interval how long (in ms) to wait before invalidating the security cache. Default=10000
populate-validated-user whether or not to add the name of the validated user to the messages that user sends. Default=false
security-settings a list of security-setting
thread-pool-max-size Maximum number of threads to use for the thread pool. -1 means 'no limits'.. Default=30
transaction-timeout how long (in ms) before a transaction can be removed from the resource manager after create time. Default=300000
transaction-timeout-scan-period how often (in ms) to scan for timeout transactions. Default=1000
wild-card-routing-enabled true means that the server supports wild card routing. Default=true

#address-setting type

Name Description
match The filter to apply to the setting
dead-letter-address dead letter address
expiry-address expired messages address
expiry-delay expiration time override, -1 don't override with default=-1
redelivery-delay time to redeliver a message (in ms) with default=0
redelivery-delay-multiplier multiplier to apply to the "redelivery-delay"
max-redelivery-delay Max value for the redelivery-delay
max-delivery-attempts Number of retries before dead letter address, default=10
max-size-bytes Limit before paging. -1 = infinite
page-size-bytes Size of each file on page, default=10485760
page-max-cache-size Maximum number of files cached from paging default=5
address-full-policy Model to chose after queue full
message-counter-history-day-limit Days to keep in history
last-value-queue Queue is a last value queue, default=false
redistribution-delay Timeout before redistributing values after no consumers. default=-1
send-to-dla-on-no-route Forward messages to DLA when no queues subscribing. default=false

#bridge type

Name Description
name unique name
queue-name name of queue that this bridge consumes from
forwarding-address address to forward to. If omitted original address is used
ha whether this bridge supports fail-over
filter optional core filter expression
transformer-class-name optional name of transformer class
min-large-message-size Limit before message is considered large. default 100KB
check-period TTL check period for the bridge. -1 means disabled. default 30000 (ms)
connection-ttl TTL for the Bridge. This should be greater than the ping period. default 60000 (ms)
retry-interval period (in ms) between successive retries. default 2000
retry-interval-multiplier multiplier to apply to successive retry intervals. default 1
max-retry-interval Limit to the retry-interval growth. default 2000
reconnect-attempts maximum number of retry attempts, -1 means 'no limits'. default -1
use-duplicate-detection forward duplicate detection headers?. default true
confirmation-window-size number of bytes before confirmations are sent. default 1MB
producer-window-size Producer flow control size on the bridge. Default -1 (disabled)
user Username for the bridge, the default is the cluster username
password Password for the bridge, default is the cluster password
reconnect-attempts-same-node Number of retries before trying another node. default 10

broadcast-group type

Name Type
name unique name
local-bind-address local bind address that the datagram socket is bound to
local-bind-port local port to which the datagram socket is bound to
group-address multicast address to which the data will be broadcast
group-port UDP port number used for broadcasting
broadcast-period period in milliseconds between consecutive broadcasts. default 2000
jgroups-file Name of JGroups configuration file
jgroups-channel Name of JGroups Channel
connector-ref

#cluster-connection type

Name Description
name unique name
address name of the address this cluster connection applies to
connector-ref Name of the connector reference to use.
check-period The period (in milliseconds) used to check if the cluster connection has failed to receive pings from another server with default = 30000
connection-ttl Timeout for TTL. Default 60000
min-large-message-size Messages larger than this are considered large-messages, default=100KB
call-timeout Time(ms) before giving up on blocked calls. Default=30000
retry-interval period (in ms) between successive retries. Default=500
retry-interval-multiplier multiplier to apply to the retry-interval. Default=1
max-retry-interval Maximum value for retry-interval. Default=2000
reconnect-attempts How many attempts should be made to reconnect after failure. Default=-1
use-duplicate-detection should duplicate detection headers be inserted in forwarded messages?. Default=true
message-load-balancing how should messages be load balanced? Default=OFF
max-hops maximum number of hops cluster topology is propagated. Default=1
confirmation-window-size The size (in bytes) of the window used for confirming data from the server connected to. Default 1048576
producer-window-size Flow Control for the Cluster connection bridge. Default -1 (disabled)
call-failover-timeout How long to wait for a reply if in the middle of a fail-over. -1 means wait forever. Default -1
notification-interval how often the cluster connection will notify the cluster of its existence right after joining the cluster. Default 1000
notification-attempts how many times this cluster connection will notify the cluster of its existence right after joining the cluster Default 2

#discovery-group type

Name Description
name unique name
group-address Multicast IP address of the group to listen on
group-port UDP port number of the multi cast group
jgroups-file Name of a JGroups configuration file. If specified, the server uses JGroups for discovery.
jgroups-channel Name of a JGroups Channel. If specified, the server uses the named channel for discovery.
refresh-timeout Period the discovery group waits after receiving the last broadcast from a particular server before removing that servers connector pair entry from its list. Default=10000
local-bind-address local bind address that the datagram socket is bound to
local-bind-port local port to which the datagram socket is bound to. Default=-1
initial-wait-timeout time to wait for an initial broadcast to give us at least one node in the cluster. Default=10000

#divert type

Name Description
name unique name
transformer-class-name an optional class name of a transformer
exclusive whether this is an exclusive divert. Default=false
routing-name the routing name for the divert
address the address this divert will divert from
forwarding-address the forwarding address for the divert
filter optional core filter expression

#queue type

Name Description
name unique name
address address for the queue
filter optional core filter expression
durable whether the queue is durable (persistent). Default=true

#security-setting type

Name Description
match address expression
permission
permission.type the type of permission
permission.roles a comma-separated list of roles to apply the permission to

##The jms configuration

Name Type Description
queue Queue a queue
queue.name (attribute) String unique name of the queue
queue.durable Boolean is the queue durable?. Default=true
queue.filter String optional filter expression for the queue
topic Topic a topic
topic.name (attribute) String unique name of the topic

Using Masked Passwords in Configuration Files

By default all passwords in Apache ActiveMQ Artemis server's configuration files are in plain text form. This usually poses no security issues as those files should be well protected from unauthorized accessing. However, in some circumstances a user doesn't want to expose its passwords to more eyes than necessary.

Apache ActiveMQ Artemis can be configured to use 'masked' passwords in its configuration files. A masked password is an obscure string representation of a real password. To mask a password a user will use an 'encoder'. The encoder takes in the real password and outputs the masked version. A user can then replace the real password in the configuration files with the new masked password. When Apache ActiveMQ Artemis loads a masked password, it uses a suitable 'decoder' to decode it into real password.

Apache ActiveMQ Artemis provides a default password encoder and decoder. Optionally users can use or implement their own encoder and decoder for masking the passwords.

Password Masking in Server Configuration File

The password masking property

The server configuration file has a property that defines the default masking behaviors over the entire file scope.

mask-password: this boolean type property indicates if a password should be masked or not. Set it to "true" if you want your passwords masked. The default value is "false".

Specific masking behaviors

cluster-password

The nature of the value of cluster-password is subject to the value of property 'mask-password'. If it is true the cluster-password is masked.

Passwords in connectors and acceptors

In the server configuration, Connectors and Acceptors sometimes needs to specify passwords. For example if a users wants to use an SSL-enabled NettyAcceptor, it can specify a key-store-password and a trust-store-password. Because Acceptors and Connectors are pluggable implementations, each transport will have different password masking needs.

When a Connector or Acceptor configuration is initialised, Apache ActiveMQ Artemis will add the "mask-password" and "password-codec" values to the Connector or Acceptors params using the keys activemq.usemaskedpassword and activemq.passwordcodec respectively. The Netty and InVM implementations will use these as needed and any other implementations will have access to these to use if they so wish.

Passwords in Core Bridge configurations

Core Bridges are configured in the server configuration file and so the masking of its 'password' properties follows the same rules as that of 'cluster-password'.

Examples

The following table summarizes the relations among the above-mentioned properties

mask-password cluster-password acceptor/connector passwords bridge password
absent plain text plain text plain text
false plain text plain text plain text
true masked masked masked

Examples

Note: In the following examples if related attributed or properties are absent, it means they are not specified in the configure file.

example 1

<cluster-password>bbc</cluster-password>

This indicates the cluster password is a plain text value ("bbc").

example 2

<mask-password>true</mask-password>
<cluster-password>80cf731af62c290</cluster-password>

This indicates the cluster password is a masked value and Apache ActiveMQ Artemis will use its built-in decoder to decode it. All other passwords in the configuration file, Connectors, Acceptors and Bridges, will also use masked passwords.

JMS Bridge password masking

The JMS Bridges are configured and deployed as separate beans so they need separate configuration to control the password masking. A JMS Bridge has two password parameters in its constructor, SourcePassword and TargetPassword. It uses the following two optional properties to control their masking:

useMaskedPassword -- If set to "true" the passwords are masked. Default is false.

passwordCodec -- Class name and its parameters for the Decoder used to decode the masked password. Ignored if useMaskedPassword is false. The format of this property is a full qualified class name optionally followed by key/value pairs, separated by semi-colons. For example:

<property name="useMaskedPassword">true</property>
<property name="passwordCodec">com.foo.FooDecoder;key=value</property>

Apache ActiveMQ Artemis will load this property and initialize the class with a parameter map containing the "key"->"value" pair. If passwordCodec is not specified, the built-in decoder is used.

Masking passwords in ActiveMQ Artemis ResourceAdapters and MDB activation configurations

Both ra.xml and MDB activation configuration have a 'password' property that can be masked. They are controlled by the following two optional Resource Adapter properties in ra.xml:

UseMaskedPassword -- If setting to "true" the passwords are masked. Default is false.

PasswordCodec -- Class name and its parameters for the Decoder used to decode the masked password. Ignored if UseMaskedPassword is false. The format of this property is a full qualified class name optionally followed by key/value pairs. It is the same format as that for JMS Bridges. Example:

<config-property>
  <config-property-name>UseMaskedPassword</config-property-name>
  <config-property-type>boolean</config-property-type>
  <config-property-value>true</config-property-value>
</config-property>
<config-property>
  <config-property-name>PasswordCodec</config-property-name>
  <config-property-type>java.lang.String</config-property-type>
  <config-property-value>com.foo.ADecoder;key=helloworld</config-property-value>
</config-property>

With this configuration, both passwords in ra.xml and all of its MDBs will have to be in masked form.

Masking passwords in artemis-users.properties

Apache ActiveMQ Artemis's built-in security manager uses plain properties files where the user passwords are specified in plaintext forms by default. To mask those parameters the following two properties need to be set in the 'bootstrap.xml' file.

mask-password -- If set to "true" all the passwords are masked. Default is false.

password-codec -- Class name and its parameters for the Decoder used to decode the masked password. Ignored if mask-password is false. The format of this property is a full qualified class name optionally followed by key/value pairs. It is the same format as that for JMS Bridges. Example:

<mask-password>true</mask-password>
<password-codec>org.apache.activemq.artemis.utils.DefaultSensitiveStringCodec;key=hello world</password-codec>

When so configured, the Apache ActiveMQ Artemis security manager will initialize a DefaultSensitiveStringCodec with the parameters "key"->"hello world", then use it to decode all the masked passwords in this configuration file.

Choosing a decoder for password masking

As described in the previous sections, all password masking requires a decoder. A decoder uses an algorithm to convert a masked password into its original clear text form in order to be used in various security operations. The algorithm used for decoding must match that for encoding. Otherwise the decoding may not be successful.

For user's convenience Apache ActiveMQ Artemis provides a default built-in Decoder. However a user can if they so wish implement their own.

The built-in Decoder

Whenever no decoder is specified in the configuration file, the built-in decoder is used. The class name for the built-in decoder is org.apache.activemq.artemis.utils.DefaultSensitiveStringCodec. It has both encoding and decoding capabilities. It uses java.crypto.Cipher utilities to encrypt (encode) a plaintext password and decrypt a mask string using same algorithm. Using this decoder/encoder is pretty straightforward. To get a mask for a password, just run the main class at org.apache.activemq.artemis.utils.DefaultSensitiveStringCodec.

An easy way to do it is through activemq-tools--jar-with-dependencies.jar since it has all the dependencies:

    java -cp artemis-tools-1.0.0-jar-with-dependencies.jar org.apache.activemq.artemis.utils.DefaultSensitiveStringCodec "your plaintext password"

If you don't want to use the jar-with-dependencies, make sure the classpath is correct. You'll get something like

    Encoded password: 80cf731af62c290

Just copy "80cf731af62c290" and replace your plaintext password with it.

Using a different decoder

It is possible to use a different decoder rather than the built-in one. Simply make sure the decoder is in Apache ActiveMQ Artemis's classpath and configure the server to use it as follows:

    <password-codec>com.foo.SomeDecoder;key1=value1;key2=value2</password-codec>

If your decoder needs params passed to it you can do this via key/value pairs when configuring. For instance if your decoder needs say a "key-location" parameter, you can define like so:

    <password-codec>com.foo.NewDecoder;key-location=/some/url/to/keyfile</password-codec>

Then configure your cluster-password like this:

    <mask-password>true</mask-password>
    <cluster-password>masked_password</cluster-password>

When Apache ActiveMQ Artemis reads the cluster-password it will initialize the NewDecoder and use it to decode "mask_password". It also process all passwords using the new defined decoder.

Implementing your own codecs

To use a different decoder than the built-in one, you either pick one from existing libraries or you implement it yourself. All decoders must implement the org.apache.activemq.artemis.utils.SensitiveDataCodec<T> interface:

public interface SensitiveDataCodec<T>
{
   T decode(Object mask) throws Exception;

   void init(Map<String, String> params);
}

This is a generic type interface but normally for a password you just need String type. So a new decoder would be defined like

public class MyNewDecoder implements SensitiveDataCodec<String>
{
   public String decode(Object mask) throws Exception
   {
      //decode the mask into clear text password
      return "the password";
   }

   public void init(Map<String, String> params)
   {
      //initialization done here. It is called right after the decoder has been created.
   }
}

Last but not least, once you get your own decoder, please add it to the classpath. Otherwise Apache ActiveMQ Artemis will fail to load it!