Class GenericMessageEndpointManager

java.lang.Object
org.springframework.jca.endpoint.GenericMessageEndpointManager
All Implemented Interfaces:
DisposableBean, InitializingBean, Lifecycle, Phased, SmartLifecycle
Direct Known Subclasses:
JmsMessageEndpointManager

public class GenericMessageEndpointManager extends Object implements SmartLifecycle, InitializingBean, DisposableBean
Generic bean that manages JCA 1.7 message endpoints within a Spring application context, activating and deactivating the endpoint as part of the application context's lifecycle.

This class is completely generic in that it may work with any ResourceAdapter, any MessageEndpointFactory, and any ActivationSpec. It can be configured in standard bean style, for example through Spring's XML bean definition format, as follows:

 <bean class="org.springframework.jca.endpoint.GenericMessageEndpointManager">
  <property name="resourceAdapter" ref="resourceAdapter"/>
  <property name="messageEndpointFactory">
    <bean class="org.springframework.jca.endpoint.GenericMessageEndpointFactory">
      <property name="messageListener" ref="messageListener"/>
    </bean>
  </property>
  <property name="activationSpec">
    <bean class="org.apache.activemq.ra.ActiveMQActivationSpec">
      <property name="destination" value="myQueue"/>
      <property name="destinationType" value="jakarta.jms.Queue"/>
    </bean>
  </property>
 </bean>
 

In this example, Spring's own GenericMessageEndpointFactory is used to point to a standard message listener object that happens to be supported by the specified target ResourceAdapter: in this case, a JMS MessageListener object as supported by the ActiveMQ message broker, defined as a Spring bean:

 <bean id="messageListener" class="com.myorg.messaging.myMessageListener">
   <!-- ... -->
 </bean>
 

The target ResourceAdapter may be configured as a local Spring bean as well (the typical case) or obtained from JNDI. For the example above, a local ResourceAdapter bean could be defined as follows (matching the "resourceAdapter" bean reference above):

 <bean id="resourceAdapter" class="org.springframework.jca.support.ResourceAdapterFactoryBean">
  <property name="resourceAdapter">
    <bean class="org.apache.activemq.ra.ActiveMQResourceAdapter">
      <property name="serverUrl" value="tcp://localhost:61616"/>
    </bean>
  </property>
  <property name="workManager">
    <bean class="..."/>
  </property>
 </bean>
 

For a different target resource, the configuration would simply point to a different ResourceAdapter and a different ActivationSpec object (which are both specific to the resource provider), and possibly a different message listener (e.g. a CCI MessageListener for a resource adapter which is based on the JCA Common Client Interface).

The asynchronous execution strategy can be customized through the "workManager" property on the ResourceAdapterFactoryBean as shown above, where <bean class="..."/> should be replaced with configuration for any JCA-compliant WorkManager.

Transactional execution is a responsibility of the concrete message endpoint, as built by the specified MessageEndpointFactory. GenericMessageEndpointFactory supports XA transaction participation through its "transactionManager" property, typically with a Spring JtaTransactionManager or a plain TransactionManager implementation specified there.

 <bean class="org.springframework.jca.endpoint.GenericMessageEndpointManager">
  <property name="resourceAdapter" ref="resourceAdapter"/>
  <property name="messageEndpointFactory">
    <bean class="org.springframework.jca.endpoint.GenericMessageEndpointFactory">
      <property name="messageListener" ref="messageListener"/>
      <property name="transactionManager" ref="transactionManager"/>
    </bean>
  </property>
  <property name="activationSpec">
    <bean class="org.apache.activemq.ra.ActiveMQActivationSpec">
      <property name="destination" value="myQueue"/>
      <property name="destinationType" value="jakarta.jms.Queue"/>
    </bean>
  </property>
 </bean>

 <bean id="transactionManager" class="org.springframework.transaction.jta.JtaTransactionManager"/>
 

Alternatively, check out your resource provider's ActivationSpec object, which should support local transactions through a provider-specific config flag, e.g. ActiveMQActivationSpec's "useRAManagedTransaction" bean property.

 <bean class="org.springframework.jca.endpoint.GenericMessageEndpointManager">
  <property name="resourceAdapter" ref="resourceAdapter"/>
  <property name="messageEndpointFactory">
    <bean class="org.springframework.jca.endpoint.GenericMessageEndpointFactory">
      <property name="messageListener" ref="messageListener"/>
    </bean>
  </property>
  <property name="activationSpec">
    <bean class="org.apache.activemq.ra.ActiveMQActivationSpec">
      <property name="destination" value="myQueue"/>
      <property name="destinationType" value="jakarta.jms.Queue"/>
      <property name="useRAManagedTransaction" value="true"/>
    </bean>
  </property>
 </bean>
 
Since:
2.5
Author:
Juergen Hoeller
See Also:
  • Constructor Details

    • GenericMessageEndpointManager

      public GenericMessageEndpointManager()
  • Method Details

    • setResourceAdapter

      public void setResourceAdapter(@Nullable ResourceAdapter resourceAdapter)
      Set the JCA ResourceAdapter to manage endpoints for.
    • getResourceAdapter

      @Nullable public ResourceAdapter getResourceAdapter()
      Return the JCA ResourceAdapter to manage endpoints for.
    • setMessageEndpointFactory

      public void setMessageEndpointFactory(@Nullable MessageEndpointFactory messageEndpointFactory)
      Set the JCA MessageEndpointFactory to activate, pointing to a MessageListener object that the endpoints will delegate to.

      A MessageEndpointFactory instance may be shared across multiple endpoints (i.e. multiple GenericMessageEndpointManager instances), with different ActivationSpec objects applied.

      See Also:
    • getMessageEndpointFactory

      @Nullable public MessageEndpointFactory getMessageEndpointFactory()
      Return the JCA MessageEndpointFactory to activate.
    • setActivationSpec

      public void setActivationSpec(@Nullable ActivationSpec activationSpec)
      Set the JCA ActivationSpec to use for activating the endpoint.

      Note that this ActivationSpec instance should not be shared across multiple ResourceAdapter instances.

    • getActivationSpec

      @Nullable public ActivationSpec getActivationSpec()
      Return the JCA ActivationSpec to use for activating the endpoint.
    • setAutoStartup

      public void setAutoStartup(boolean autoStartup)
      Set whether to auto-start the endpoint activation after this endpoint manager has been initialized and the context has been refreshed.

      Default is "true". Turn this flag off to defer the endpoint activation until an explicit start() call.

    • isAutoStartup

      public boolean isAutoStartup()
      Return the value for the 'autoStartup' property. If "true", this endpoint manager will start upon a ContextRefreshedEvent.
      Specified by:
      isAutoStartup in interface SmartLifecycle
      See Also:
    • setPhase

      public void setPhase(int phase)
      Specify the phase in which this endpoint manager should be started and stopped. The startup order proceeds from lowest to highest, and the shutdown order is the reverse of that. By default, this value is Integer.MAX_VALUE meaning that this endpoint manager starts as late as possible and stops as soon as possible.
    • getPhase

      public int getPhase()
      Return the phase in which this endpoint manager will be started and stopped.
      Specified by:
      getPhase in interface Phased
      Specified by:
      getPhase in interface SmartLifecycle
      See Also:
    • afterPropertiesSet

      public void afterPropertiesSet() throws ResourceException
      Prepares the message endpoint, and automatically activates it if the "autoStartup" flag is set to "true".
      Specified by:
      afterPropertiesSet in interface InitializingBean
      Throws:
      ResourceException
    • start

      public void start()
      Activates the configured message endpoint.
      Specified by:
      start in interface Lifecycle
      See Also:
    • stop

      public void stop()
      Deactivates the configured message endpoint.
      Specified by:
      stop in interface Lifecycle
      See Also:
    • stop

      public void stop(Runnable callback)
      Description copied from interface: SmartLifecycle
      Indicates that a Lifecycle component must stop if it is currently running.

      The provided callback is used by the LifecycleProcessor to support an ordered, and potentially concurrent, shutdown of all components having a common shutdown order value. The callback must be executed after the SmartLifecycle component does indeed stop.

      The LifecycleProcessor will call only this variant of the stop method; i.e. Lifecycle.stop() will not be called for SmartLifecycle implementations unless explicitly delegated to within the implementation of this method.

      The default implementation delegates to Lifecycle.stop() and immediately triggers the given callback in the calling thread. Note that there is no synchronization between the two, so custom implementations may at least want to put the same steps within their common lifecycle monitor (if any).

      Specified by:
      stop in interface SmartLifecycle
      See Also:
    • isRunning

      public boolean isRunning()
      Return whether the configured message endpoint is currently active.
      Specified by:
      isRunning in interface Lifecycle
      Returns:
      whether the component is currently running
    • destroy

      public void destroy()
      Deactivates the message endpoint, preparing it for shutdown.
      Specified by:
      destroy in interface DisposableBean