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JMS (Java Message Service)
Spring provides a JMS integration framework that simplifies the use of the JMS API in much the same way as Spring’s integration does for the JDBC API.
JMS can be roughly divided into two areas of functionality, namely the production and
consumption of messages. The JmsTemplate
class is used for message production and
synchronous message reception. For asynchronous reception similar to Jakarta EE’s
message-driven bean style, Spring provides a number of message-listener containers that
you can use to create Message-Driven POJOs (MDPs). Spring also provides a declarative way
to create message listeners.
The org.springframework.jms.core
package provides the core functionality for using
JMS. It contains JMS template classes that simplify the use of the JMS by handling the
creation and release of resources, much like the JdbcTemplate
does for JDBC. The
design principle common to Spring template classes is to provide helper methods to
perform common operations and, for more sophisticated usage, delegate the essence of the
processing task to user-implemented callback interfaces. The JMS template follows the
same design. The classes offer various convenience methods for sending messages,
consuming messages synchronously, and exposing the JMS session and message producer to
the user.
The org.springframework.jms.support
package provides JMSException
translation
functionality. The translation converts the checked JMSException
hierarchy to a
mirrored hierarchy of unchecked exceptions. If any provider-specific subclasses
of the checked jakarta.jms.JMSException
exist, this exception is wrapped in the
unchecked UncategorizedJmsException
.
The org.springframework.jms.support.converter
package provides a MessageConverter
abstraction to convert between Java objects and JMS messages.
The org.springframework.jms.support.destination
package provides various strategies
for managing JMS destinations, such as providing a service locator for destinations
stored in JNDI.
The org.springframework.jms.annotation
package provides the necessary infrastructure
to support annotation-driven listener endpoints by using @JmsListener
.
The org.springframework.jms.config
package provides the parser implementation for the
jms
namespace as well as the java config support to configure listener containers and
create listener endpoints.
Finally, the org.springframework.jms.connection
package provides an implementation of
the ConnectionFactory
suitable for use in standalone applications. It also contains an
implementation of Spring’s PlatformTransactionManager
for JMS (the cunningly named
JmsTransactionManager
). This allows for seamless integration of JMS as a transactional
resource into Spring’s transaction management mechanisms.
As of Spring Framework 5, Spring’s JMS package fully supports JMS 2.0 and requires the JMS 2.0 API to be present at runtime. We recommend the use of a JMS 2.0 compatible provider. If you happen to use an older message broker in your system, you may try upgrading to a JMS 2.0 compatible driver for your existing broker generation. Alternatively, you may also try to run against a JMS 1.1 based driver, simply putting the JMS 2.0 API jar on the classpath but only using JMS 1.1 compatible API against your driver. Spring’s JMS support adheres to JMS 1.1 conventions by default, so with corresponding configuration it does support such a scenario. However, please consider this for transition scenarios only. |