mirror of
https://github.com/apache/activemq-artemis.git
synced 2025-02-06 18:18:43 +00:00
<html> <head> <title>ActiveMQ JMS Scale Down Example</title> <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="../common/common.css" /> <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="../common/prettify.css" /> <script type="text/javascript" src="../common/prettify.js"></script> </head> <body onload="prettyPrint()"> <h1>JMS Colocated Failover Shared Store Example</h1> <p>This example demonstrates how you can configure a live server to scale down messages to another live server on shutdown. <p>This example starts 2 live servers each one with a connector configured for the other live server.</p> <p>The second live server is killed and its messages are scaled down to the first server on shutdown.</p> <p>The following shows how to configure the live servers to scale down to one another.</p> <pre class="prettyprint"> <code> <ha-policy> <live-only> <scale-down> <connectors> <connector-ref>server0-connector</connector-ref> </connectors> </scale-down> </live-only> </ha-policy> </code> </pre> <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> Get an initial context for looking up JNDI for both servers</li> <pre class="prettyprint"> <code> initialContext1 = getContext(1); initialContext = getContext(0); </code> </pre> <li>Look up the JMS resources from JNDI</li> <pre class="prettyprint"> <code> Queue queue = (Queue)initialContext.lookup("/queue/exampleQueue"); ConnectionFactory connectionFactory = (ConnectionFactory)initialContext.lookup("/ConnectionFactory"); ConnectionFactory connectionFactory1 = (ConnectionFactory)initialContext1.lookup("/ConnectionFactory"); </code> </pre> <li>Create a JMS Connections</li> <pre class="prettyprint"> <code> connection = connectionFactory.createConnection(); connection1 = connectionFactory1.createConnection(); </code> </pre> <li>Create a *non-transacted* JMS Session with client acknowledgement</li> <pre class="prettyprint"> <code> Session session = connection.createSession(false, Session.CLIENT_ACKNOWLEDGE); Session session1 = connection1.createSession(false, Session.CLIENT_ACKNOWLEDGE); </code> </pre> <li>Create a JMS MessageProducer</li> <pre class="prettyprint"> <code> MessageProducer producer = session.createProducer(queue); MessageProducer producer1 = session1.createProducer(queue); </code> </pre> <li>Send some messages to both servers</li> <pre class="prettyprint"> <code> for (int i = 0; i < numMessages; i++) { TextMessage message = session.createTextMessage("This is text message " + i); producer.send(message); System.out.println("Sent message: " + message.getText()); message = session1.createTextMessage("This is another text message " + i); producer1.send(message); System.out.println("Sent message: " + message.getText()); } </code> </pre> <li>Crash server #0, the live server</li> <pre class="prettyprint"> <code> killServer(0); </code> </pre> <li>start the connection ready to receive messages</li> <pre class="prettyprint"> <code> connection.start(); </code> </pre> <li>create a consumer</li> <pre class="prettyprint"> <code> MessageConsumer consumer = session.createConsumer(queue); </code> </pre> <li>Receive and acknowledge all of the sent messages, you will notice that messages from both servers are received</li> <pre class="prettyprint"> <code> TextMessage message0 = null; for (int i = 0; i < numMessages; i++) { message0 = (TextMessage)consumer.receive(5000); System.out.println("Got message: " + message0.getText()); } message0.acknowledge(); </code> </pre> <li>And finally (no pun intended), <b>always</b> remember to close your JMS 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 (connection != null) { connection.close(); } if (initialContext != null) { initialContext.close(); } if (connection1 != null) { connection1.close(); } if (initialContext1 != null) { initialContext1.close(); } } </code> </pre> </ol> </body> </html>