This version is still in development and is not considered stable yet. For the latest stable version, please use Spring Framework 6.2.0! |
Simple Broker
The built-in simple message broker handles subscription requests from clients, stores them in memory, and broadcasts messages to connected clients that have matching destinations. The broker supports path-like destinations, including subscriptions to Ant-style destination patterns.
Applications can also use dot-separated (rather than slash-separated) destinations. See Dots as Separators. |
If configured with a task scheduler, the simple broker supports
STOMP heartbeats.
To configure a scheduler, you can declare your own TaskScheduler
bean and set it through
the MessageBrokerRegistry
. Alternatively, you can use the one that is automatically
declared in the built-in WebSocket configuration, however, you’ll need @Lazy
to avoid
a cycle between the built-in WebSocket configuration and your
WebSocketMessageBrokerConfigurer
. For example:
@Configuration
@EnableWebSocketMessageBroker
public class WebSocketConfig implements WebSocketMessageBrokerConfigurer {
private TaskScheduler messageBrokerTaskScheduler;
@Autowired
public void setMessageBrokerTaskScheduler(@Lazy TaskScheduler taskScheduler) {
this.messageBrokerTaskScheduler = taskScheduler;
}
@Override
public void configureMessageBroker(MessageBrokerRegistry registry) {
registry.enableSimpleBroker("/queue/", "/topic/")
.setHeartbeatValue(new long[] {10000, 20000})
.setTaskScheduler(this.messageBrokerTaskScheduler);
// ...
}
}