Java tutorial
/* * 2001-2009, Progress Software Corporation and/or its subsidiaries or affiliates. All rights reserved. * * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. * You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and * limitations under the License. Sample Application Writing a Basic JMS Application with Point-to-Point Queues, using: - Synchronous Request/Reply - javax.jms.QueueRequestor class - JMSReplyTo Header When this program runs, it waits for messages on the queue, "SampleQ1" (by default). When that message arrives, a response based on the request is sent back to the "Requestor" specified in the JMSReplyTo header. This sample replies with a simple text manipulation of the request; the text is either folded to all UPPERCASE or all lowercase. Usage: java Replier -b <broker:port> -u <username> -p <password> -qr <queue> -m <code> -b broker:port points to your message broker Default: tcp://localhost:61616 -u username must be unique (but is not checked) Default: SampleReplier -p password password for user (not checked) Default: password -qr queue name of queue for receiving requests Default: Q1 -m mode replier mode (uppercase, or lowercase) Default: uppercase Suggested demonstration: - In a console window with the environment set, start a copy of the Replier. For example: java Replier -u SampleQReplier - In another console window, start a Requestor. For example: java Requestor -u SampleQRequestor - Enter text in the Requestor window then press Enter. The Replier responds with the message in all uppercase characters. - Start other Requestors with different user names to see that replies are not broadcast to all users. For example: java Requestor -u SampleRequestorFoo - Start other Repliers. - See that only one replier is receiving messages,(as it should). - See the Requestor only receives one response. java Replier -u toLower -m lowercase */ import org.apache.activemq.*; public class Replier implements javax.jms.MessageListener { private static final String DEFAULT_BROKER_NAME = "tcp://localhost:61616"; private static final String DEFAULT_USER_NAME = "SampleReplier"; private static final String DEFAULT_PASSWORD = "password"; private static final String DEFAULT_QUEUE = "Q1"; private static final String DEFAULT_MODE = "uppercase"; private static final int UPPERCASE = 0; private static final int LOWERCASE = 1; private javax.jms.Connection connect = null; private javax.jms.Session session = null; private javax.jms.MessageProducer replier = null; private int imode = UPPERCASE; /** Create JMS client for sending and receiving messages. */ private void start(String broker, String username, String password, String rQueue, String mode) { // Set the operation mode imode = (mode.equals("uppercase")) ? UPPERCASE : LOWERCASE; // Create a connection. try { javax.jms.ConnectionFactory factory; factory = new ActiveMQConnectionFactory(username, password, broker); connect = factory.createConnection(username, password); session = connect.createSession(true, javax.jms.Session.AUTO_ACKNOWLEDGE); } catch (javax.jms.JMSException jmse) { System.err.println("error: Cannot connect to Broker - " + broker); jmse.printStackTrace(); System.exit(1); } // Create Receivers to application queues as well as a Sender // to use for JMS replies. try { javax.jms.Queue queue = session.createQueue(rQueue); javax.jms.MessageConsumer receiver = session.createConsumer(queue); receiver.setMessageListener(this); replier = session.createProducer(null); // Queue will be set for each reply // Now that all setup is complete, start the Connection connect.start(); } catch (javax.jms.JMSException jmse) { jmse.printStackTrace(); exit(); } try { // Read standard input waiting for "EXIT" command. java.io.BufferedReader stdin = new java.io.BufferedReader(new java.io.InputStreamReader(System.in)); while (true) { System.out.println("\nReplier application:\n" + "============================\n" + "The application user " + username + " connects to the broker at " + DEFAULT_BROKER_NAME + ".\n" + "The application gets requests with JMSReplyTo set on the " + DEFAULT_QUEUE + " queue." + "The message is transformed to all uppercase or all lowercase, and then returned to the requestor." + "The Requestor application displays the result.\n\n" + "Enter EXIT or press Ctrl+C to close the Replier.\n"); String s = stdin.readLine(); if (s == null || s.equalsIgnoreCase("EXIT")) { System.out.println("\nStopping Replier. Please wait..\n>"); exit(); } } } catch (java.io.IOException ioe) { ioe.printStackTrace(); } } /** * Handle the message. * (as specified in the javax.jms.MessageListener interface). * * IMPORTANT NOTES: * (1)We must follow the design paradigm for JMS * synchronous requests. That is, we must: * - get the message * - look for the header specifying JMSReplyTo * - send a reply to the queue specified there. * Failing to follow these steps might leave the originator * of the request waiting forever. * (2)Unlike the 'Talk' sample and others using an asynchronous * message listener, it is possible here to use ONLY * ONE SESSION because the messages being sent are sent from * the same thread of control handling message delivery. For * more information see the JMS spec v1.0.2 section 4.4.6. * * OPTIONAL BEHAVIOR: The following actions taken by the * message handler represent good programming style, but are * not required by the design paradigm for JMS requests. * - set the JMSCorrelationID (tying the response back to * the original request. * - use transacted session "commit" so receipt of request * won't happen without the reply being sent. * */ public void onMessage(javax.jms.Message aMessage) { try { // Cast the message as a text message. javax.jms.TextMessage textMessage = (javax.jms.TextMessage) aMessage; // This handler reads a single String from the // message and prints it to the standard output. try { String string = textMessage.getText(); System.out.println("[Request] " + string); // Check for a ReplyTo Queue javax.jms.Queue replyQueue = (javax.jms.Queue) aMessage.getJMSReplyTo(); if (replyQueue != null) { // Send the modified message back. javax.jms.TextMessage reply = session.createTextMessage(); if (imode == UPPERCASE) reply.setText("Uppercasing-" + string.toUpperCase()); else reply.setText("Lowercasing-" + string.toLowerCase()); reply.setJMSCorrelationID(aMessage.getJMSMessageID()); replier.send(replyQueue, reply); session.commit(); } } catch (javax.jms.JMSException jmse) { jmse.printStackTrace(); } } catch (java.lang.RuntimeException rte) { rte.printStackTrace(); } } /** Cleanup resources cleanly and exit. */ private void exit() { try { connect.close(); } catch (javax.jms.JMSException jmse) { jmse.printStackTrace(); } System.exit(0); } // // NOTE: the remainder of this sample deals with reading arguments // and does not utilize any JMS classes or code. // /** Main program entry point. */ public static void main(String argv[]) { // Values to be read from parameters String broker = DEFAULT_BROKER_NAME; String username = DEFAULT_USER_NAME; String password = DEFAULT_PASSWORD; String queue = DEFAULT_QUEUE; String mode = DEFAULT_MODE; // Check parameters for (int i = 0; i < argv.length; i++) { String arg = argv[i]; if (arg.equals("-b")) { if (i == argv.length - 1 || argv[i + 1].startsWith("-")) { System.err.println("error: missing broker name:port"); System.exit(1); } broker = argv[++i]; continue; } if (arg.equals("-u")) { if (i == argv.length - 1 || argv[i + 1].startsWith("-")) { System.err.println("error: missing user name"); System.exit(1); } username = argv[++i]; continue; } if (arg.equals("-p")) { if (i == argv.length - 1 || argv[i + 1].startsWith("-")) { System.err.println("error: missing password"); System.exit(1); } password = argv[++i]; continue; } if (arg.equals("-qr")) { if (i == argv.length - 1 || argv[i + 1].startsWith("-")) { System.err.println("error: missing queue"); System.exit(1); } queue = argv[++i]; continue; } if (arg.equals("-m")) { if (i == argv.length - 1 || argv[i + 1].startsWith("-")) { System.err.println("error: missing mode"); System.exit(1); } mode = argv[++i]; if (!(mode.equals("uppercase") || mode.equals("lowercase"))) { System.err.println("error: mode must be 'uppercase' or 'lowercase'"); System.exit(1); } continue; } if (arg.equals("-h")) { printUsage(); System.exit(1); } // Invalid argument System.err.println("error: unexpected argument: " + arg); printUsage(); System.exit(1); } // Start the JMS client. Replier replier = new Replier(); replier.start(broker, username, password, queue, mode); } /** Prints the usage. */ private static void printUsage() { StringBuffer use = new StringBuffer(); use.append("usage: java Replier (options) ...\n\n"); use.append("options:\n"); use.append(" -b name:port Specify name:port of broker.\n"); use.append(" Default broker: " + DEFAULT_BROKER_NAME + "\n"); use.append(" -u name Specify unique user name.\n"); use.append(" Default broker: " + DEFAULT_USER_NAME + "\n"); use.append(" -p password Specify password for user.\n"); use.append(" Default password: " + DEFAULT_PASSWORD + "\n"); use.append(" -m mode Replier operating mode - uppercase or lowercase.\n"); use.append(" Default mode: " + DEFAULT_MODE + "\n"); use.append(" -qr queue Specify name of queue for receiving.\n"); use.append(" Default queue: " + DEFAULT_QUEUE + "\n"); use.append(" -h This help screen.\n"); System.err.println(use); } }