Spring Integration provides support for file transfer operations via SFTP.
The Secure File Transfer Protocol (SFTP) is a network protocol which allows you to transfer files between two computers on the Internet over any reliable stream.
The SFTP protocol requires a secure channel, such as SSH, as well as visibility to a client’s identity throughout the SFTP session.
Spring Integration supports sending and receiving files over SFTP by providing three client side endpoints: Inbound Channel Adapter, Outbound Channel Adapter, and Outbound Gateway It also provides convenient namespace configuration to define these client components.
xmlns:int-sftp="http://www.springframework.org/schema/integration/sftp" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.springframework.org/schema/integration/sftp http://www.springframework.org/schema/integration/sftp/spring-integration-sftp.xsd"
Important | |
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Starting with version 3.0, sessions are no longer cached by default. See Section 27.5, “SFTP Session Caching”. |
Before configuring SFTP adapters, you must configure an SFTP Session Factory. You can configure the SFTP Session Factory via a regular bean definition:
<beans:bean id="sftpSessionFactory" class="org.springframework.integration.sftp.session.DefaultSftpSessionFactory"> <beans:property name="host" value="localhost"/> <beans:property name="privateKey" value="classpath:META-INF/keys/sftpTest"/> <beans:property name="privateKeyPassphrase" value="springIntegration"/> <beans:property name="port" value="22"/> <beans:property name="user" value="kermit"/> </beans:bean>
Every time an adapter requests a session object from its SessionFactory
, a new SFTP session is being created.
Under the covers, the SFTP Session Factory relies on the JSch library to provide the SFTP capabilities.
However, Spring Integration also supports the caching of SFTP sessions, please see Section 27.5, “SFTP Session Caching” for more information.
Important | |
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JSch supports multiple channels (operations) over a connection to the server.
By default, the Spring Integration session factory uses a separate physical connection for each channel.
Since Spring Integration 3.0, you can configure the session factory (using a boolean constructor arg - default When using this feature, you must wrap the session factory in a caching session factory, as described below, so that the connection is not physically closed when an operation completes. If the cache is reset, the session is disconnected only when the last channel is closed. The connection will be refreshed if it is found to be disconnected when a new operation obtains a session. |
Note | |
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If you experience connectivity problems and would like to trace Session creation as well as see which Sessions are polled you may enable it by setting the logger to TRACE level (e.g., log4j.category.org.springframework.integration.file=TRACE). Please also see Section 27.11, “SFTP/JSCH Logging”. |
Now all you need to do is inject this SFTP Session Factory into your adapters.
Note | |
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A more practical way to provide values for the SFTP Session Factory would be via Spring’s property placeholder support. |
Below you will find all properties that are exposed by the DefaultSftpSessionFactory.
isSharedSession (constructor argument)
When true, a single connection will be used and JSch Channels
will be multiplexed.
Defaults to false.
clientVersion
Allows you to set the client version property. It’s default depends on the underlying JSch version but it will look like:_SSH-2.0-JSCH-0.1.45_
enableDaemonThread
If true
, all threads will be daemon threads.
If set to false
, normal non-daemon threads will be used instead.
This property will be set on the underlying Session.
There, this property will default to false
, if not explicitly set.
host
The url of the host you want connect to. Mandatory.
hostKeyAlias
Sets the host key alias, used when comparing the host key to the known hosts list.
knownHosts
Specifies the filename that will be used for a host key repository.
The file has the same format as OpenSSH’s known_hosts file and is required and must be pre-populated if
allowUnknownKeys
is false.
password
The password to authenticate against the remote host.
If a password is not provided, then the privateKey property is mandatory.
Not allowed if userInfo
is set; the password is obtained from that object.
port
The port over which the SFTP connection shall be established.
If not specified, this value defaults to 22
.
If specified, this properties must be a positive number.
privateKey
Allows you to set a Resource, which represents the location of the private key used for authenticating against the remote host. If the privateKey is not provided, then the password property is mandatory.
privateKeyPassphrase
The password for the private key.
Not allowed if userInfo
is set; the passphrase is obtained from that object.
Optional.
proxy
Allows for specifying a JSch-based Proxy. If set, then the proxy object is used to create the connection to the remote host via the proxy. See Section 27.3, “Proxy Factory Bean” for a convenient way to configure the proxy.
serverAliveCountMax
Specifies the number of server-alive messages, which will be sent without any reply from the server before disconnecting.
If not set, this property defaults to 1
.
serverAliveInterval
Sets the timeout interval (milliseconds) before a server alive message is sent, in case no message is received from the server.
sessionConfig
Using Properties
, you can set additional configuration setting on the underlying JSch Session.
socketFactory
Allows you to pass in a SocketFactory. The socket factory is used to create a socket to the target host. When a proxy is used, the socket factory is passed to the proxy. By default plain TCP sockets are used.
timeout
The timeout property is used as the socket timeout parameter, as well as the default connection timeout.
Defaults to 0
, which means, that no timeout will occur.
user
The remote user to use. Mandatory.
Set to true
to allow connections to hosts with unknown (or changed) keys.
Default false (since 4.2 - defaults to true
in 4.1.7 and was not configurable before that version).
Only applied if no userInfo
is provided.
If false, a pre-populated knownHosts file is required.
userInfo
Set a custom UserInfo
used during authentication.
In particular, be aware that promptYesNo()
is invoked when an unknown (or changed) host key is received.
Also see allowUnknownHosts
.
When a UserInfo
is provided, the password
and private key passphrase
is obtained from it, and discrete
password
and privateKeyPassprase
properties cannot be set.
Jsch
provides a mechanism to connect to the server via an HTTP or SOCKS proxy.
To use this feature, configure the Proxy
and provide a reference to the DefaultSftpSessionFactory
as discussed
above.
Three implementations are provided by Jsch
, HTTP
, SOCKS4
and SOCKS5
.
Spring Integration 4.3 provides a FactoryBean
making configuration of these proxies easier, allowing property
injection:
<bean id="proxySocks5" class="org.springframework.integration.sftp.session.JschProxyFactoryBean"> <constructor-arg value="SOCKS5" /> <constructor-arg value="${sftp.proxy.address}" /> <constructor-arg value="${sftp.proxy.port}" /> <constructor-arg value="${sftp.proxy.user}" /> <constructor-arg value="${sftp.proxy.pw}" /> </bean> <bean id="sessionFactory" class="org.springframework.integration.sftp.session.DefaultSftpSessionFactory" > ... <property name="proxy" ref="proxySocks5" /> ... </bean>
Version 4.2 introduced the DelegatingSessionFactory
which allows the selection of the actual session factory at
runtime.
Prior to invoking the ftp endpoint, call setThreadKey()
on the factory to associate a key with the current thread.
That key is then used to lookup the actual session factory to be used.
The key can be cleared by calling clearThreadKey()
after use.
Convenience methods have been added so this can easily be done from a message flow:
<bean id="dsf" class="org.springframework.integration.file.remote.session.DelegatingSessionFactory"> <constructor-arg> <bean class="o.s.i.file.remote.session.DefaultSessionFactoryLocator"> <!-- delegate factories here --> </bean> </constructor-arg> </bean> <int:service-activator input-channel="in" output-channel="c1" expression="@dsf.setThreadKey(#root, headers['factoryToUse'])" /> <int-sftp:outbound-gateway request-channel="c1" reply-channel="c2" ... /> <int:service-activator input-channel="c2" output-channel="out" expression="@dsf.clearThreadKey(#root)" />
Important | |
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When using session caching (see Section 27.5, “SFTP Session Caching”), each of the delegates should be cached; you
cannot cache the |
Important | |
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Starting with Spring Integration version 3.0, sessions are no longer cached by default; the |
In versions prior to 3.0, the sessions were cached automatically by default.
A cache-sessions
attribute was available for disabling the auto caching, but that solution did not provide a way to configure other session caching attributes.
For example, you could not limit on the number of sessions created.
To support that requirement and other configuration options, a CachingSessionFactory
was provided.
It provides sessionCacheSize
and sessionWaitTimeout
properties.
As its name suggests, the sessionCacheSize
property controls how many active sessions the factory will maintain in its cache (the DEFAULT is unbounded).
If the sessionCacheSize
threshold has been reached, any attempt to acquire another session will block until either one of the cached sessions becomes available or until the wait time for a Session expires (the DEFAULT wait time is Integer.MAX_VALUE).
The sessionWaitTimeout
property enables configuration of that value.
If you want your Sessions to be cached, simply configure your default Session Factory as described above and then wrap it in an instance of CachingSessionFactory
where you may provide those additional properties.
<bean id="sftpSessionFactory" class="org.springframework.integration.sftp.session.DefaultSftpSessionFactory"> <property name="host" value="localhost"/> </bean> <bean id="cachingSessionFactory" class="org.springframework.integration.file.remote.session.CachingSessionFactory"> <constructor-arg ref="sftpSessionFactory"/> <constructor-arg value="10"/> <property name="sessionWaitTimeout" value="1000"/> </bean>
In the above example you see a CachingSessionFactory
created with the sessionCacheSize
set to 10 and the sessionWaitTimeout
set to 1 second (its value is in milliseconds).
Starting with Spring Integration version 3.0, the CachingConnectionFactory
provides a resetCache()
method.
When invoked, all idle sessions are immediately closed and in-use sessions are closed when they are returned to the cache.
When using isSharedSession=true
, the channel is closed, and the shared session is closed only when the last channel is closed.
New requests for sessions will establish new sessions as necessary.
Starting with Spring Integration version 3.0, a new abstraction is provided over the SftpSession
object.
The template provides methods to send, retrieve (as an InputStream
), remove, and rename files.
In addition an execute
method is provided allowing the caller to execute multiple operations on the session.
In all cases, the template takes care of reliably closing the session.
For more information, refer to the javadocs for RemoteFileTemplate
There is a subclass for SFTP: SftpRemoteFileTemplate
.
Additional methods were added in version 4.1 including getClientInstance()
which provides access to the underlying ChannelSftp
enabling access to low-level APIs.
The SFTP Inbound Channel Adapter is a special listener that will connect to the server and listen for the remote directory events (e.g., new file created) at which point it will initiate a file transfer.
<int-sftp:inbound-channel-adapter id="sftpAdapterAutoCreate" session-factory="sftpSessionFactory" channel="requestChannel" filename-pattern="*.txt" remote-directory="/foo/bar" preserve-timestamp="true" local-directory="file:target/foo" auto-create-local-directory="true" local-filename-generator-expression="#this.toUpperCase() + '.a'" local-filter="myFilter" temporary-file-suffix=".writing" delete-remote-files="false"> <int:poller fixed-rate="1000"/> </int-sftp:inbound-channel-adapter>
As you can see from the configuration above you can configure the SFTP Inbound Channel Adapter via the inbound-channel-adapter
element while also providing values for various attributes such as local-directory
- where files are going to be transferred TO and remote-directory
- the remote source directory where files are going to be transferred FROM - as well as other attributes including a session-factory
reference to the bean we configured earlier.
By default the transferred file will carry the same name as the original file.
If you want to override this behavior you can set the local-filename-generator-expression
attribute which allows you to provide a SpEL Expression to generate the name of the local file.
Unlike outbound gateways and adapters where the root object of the SpEL Evaluation Context is a Message
, this inbound adapter does not yet have the Message at the time of evaluation since that’s what it ultimately generates with the transferred file as its payload.
So, the root object of the SpEL Evaluation Context is the original name of the remote file (String).
Starting with Spring Integration 3.0, you can specify the preserve-timestamp
attribute (default false
); when true
, the local file’s modified timestamp will be set to the value retrieved from the server; otherwise it will be set to the current time.
Starting with version 4.2, you can specify remote-directory-expression
instead of remote-directory
, allowing
you to dynamically determine the directory on each poll.
e.g remote-directory-expression="@myBean.determineRemoteDir()"
.
Sometimes file filtering based on the simple pattern specified via filename-pattern
attribute might not be sufficient.
If this is the case, you can use the filename-regex
attribute to specify a Regular Expression (e.g.
filename-regex=".*\.test$"
).
And of course if you need complete control you can use the filter
attribute to provide a reference to a custom implementation of the org.springframework.integration.file.filters.FileListFilter
- a strategy interface for filtering a list of files.
This filter determines which remote files are retrieved.
You can also combine a pattern based filter with other filters, such as an AcceptOnceFileListFilter
to avoid synchronizing files that have previously been fetched, by using a CompositeFileListFilter
.
The AcceptOnceFileListFilter
stores its state in memory.
If you wish the state to survive a system restart, consider using the SftpPersistentAcceptOnceFileListFilter
instead.
This filter stores the accepted file names in an instance of the MetadataStore
strategy (Section 9.5, “Metadata Store”).
This filter matches on the filename and the remote modified time.
Since version 4.0, this filter requires a ConcurrentMetadataStore
.
When used with a shared data store (such as Redis
with the RedisMetadataStore
) this allows filter keys to be shared across multiple application or server instances.
The above discussion refers to filtering the files before retrieving them. Once the files have been retrieved, an additional filter is applied to the files on the file system. By default, this is an`AcceptOnceFileListFilter` which, as discussed, retains state in memory and does not consider the file’s modified time. Unless your application removes files after processing, the adapter will re-process the files on disk by default after an application restart.
Also, if you configure the filter
to use a FtpPersistentAcceptOnceFileListFilter
, and the remote file timestamp changes (causing it to be re-fetched), the default local filter will not allow this new file to be processed.
Use the local-filter
attribute to configure the behavior of the local file system filter.
To solve these particular use cases, you can use a FileSystemPersistentAcceptOnceFileListFilter
as a local filter instead.
This filter also stores the accepted file names and modified timestamp in an instance of the`MetadataStore` strategy (Section 9.5, “Metadata Store”), and will detect the change in the local file modified time.
Since version 4.1.5, these filters have a new property flushOnUpdate
which will cause them to flush the
metadata store on every update (if the store implements Flushable
).
Important | |
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Further, if you use a distributed |
The actual local filter is a CompositeFileListFilter
containing the supplied filter and a pattern filter that prevents processing files that are in the process of being downloaded (based on the temporary-file-suffix
); files are downloaded with this suffix (default: .writing
) and the file is renamed to its final name when the transfer is complete, making it visible to the filter.
Please refer to the schema for more detail on these attributes.
It is also important to understand that SFTP Inbound Channel Adapter is a Polling Consumer and therefore you must configure a poller (either a global default or a local sub-element).
Once the file has been transferred to a local directory, a Message with java.io.File
as its payload type will be generated and sent to the channel identified by the channel
attribute.
More on File Filtering and Large Files
Sometimes a file that just appeared in the monitored (remote) directory is not complete.
Typically such a file will be written with some temporary extension (e.g., foo.txt.writing) and then renamed after the writing process completes.
As a user in most cases you are only interested in files that are complete and would like to filter only those files.
To handle these scenarios, use filtering support provided via the filename-pattern
, filename-regex
and filter
attributes.
If you need a custom filter implementation simply include a reference in your adapter via the filter
attribute.
<int-sftp:inbound-channel-adapter id="sftpInbondAdapter" channel="receiveChannel" session-factory="sftpSessionFactory" filter="customFilter" local-directory="file:/local-test-dir" remote-directory="/remote-test-dir"> <int:poller fixed-rate="1000" max-messages-per-poll="10" task-executor="executor"/> </int-sftp:inbound-channel-adapter> <bean id="customFilter" class="org.foo.CustomFilter"/>
It is important to understand the architecture of the adapter.
There is a file synchronizer which fetches the files, and a FileReadingMessageSource
to emit a message for each
synchronized file.
As discussed above, there are two filters involved.
The filter
attribute (and patterns) refers to the remote (SFTP) file list - to avoid fetching files that have already
been fetched.
The local-filter
is used by the FileReadingMessageSource
to determine which files are to be sent as messages.
The synchronizer lists the remote files and consults its filter; the files are then transferred.
If an IO error occurs during file transfer, any files that have already been added to the filter are removed so they
are eligible to be re-fetched on the next poll.
This only applies if the filter implements ReversibleFileListFilter
(such as the AcceptOnceFileListFilter
).
If, after synchronizing the files, an error occurs on the downstream flow processing a file, there is no automatic rollback of the filter so the failed file will not be reprocessed by default.
If you wish to reprocess such files after a failure, you can use configuration similar to the following to facilitate
the removal of the failed file from the filter.
This will work for any ResettableFileListFilter
.
<int-sftp:inbound-channel-adapter id="sftpAdapter" session-factory="sftpSessionFactory" channel="requestChannel" remote-directory-expression="'/sftpSource'" local-directory="file:myLocalDir" auto-create-local-directory="true" filename-pattern="*.txt" local-filter="acceptOnceFilter"> <int:poller fixed-rate="1000"> <int:transactional synchronization-factory="syncFactory" /> </int:poller> </int-sftp:inbound-channel-adapter> <bean id="acceptOnceFilter" class="org.springframework.integration.file.filters.AcceptOnceFileListFilter" /> <int:transaction-synchronization-factory id="syncFactory"> <int:after-rollback expression="@acceptOnceFilter.remove(payload)" /> </int:transaction-synchronization-factory> <bean id="transactionManager" class="org.springframework.integration.transaction.PseudoTransactionManager" />
The following Spring Boot application provides an example of configuring the inbound adapter using Java configuration:
@SpringBootApplication public class SftpJavaApplication { public static void main(String[] args) { new SpringApplicationBuilder(SftpJavaApplication.class) .web(false) .run(args); } @Bean public SessionFactory<LsEntry> sftpSessionFactory() { DefaultSftpSessionFactory factory = new DefaultSftpSessionFactory(true); factory.setHost("localhost"); factory.setPort(port); factory.setUser("foo"); factory.setPassword("foo"); factory.setAllowUnknownKeys(true); return new CachingSessionFactory<LsEntry>(factory); } @Bean public SftpInboundFileSynchronizer sftpInboundFileSynchronizer() { SftpInboundFileSynchronizer fileSynchronizer = new SftpInboundFileSynchronizer(sftpSessionFactory()); fileSynchronizer.setDeleteRemoteFiles(false); fileSynchronizer.setRemoteDirectory("foo"); fileSynchronizer.setFilter(new SftpSimplePatternFileListFilter("*.xml")); return fileSynchronizer; } @Bean @InboundChannelAdapter(channel = "sftpChannel", poller = @Poller(fixedDelay = "5000")) public MessageSource<File> sftpMessageSource() { SftpInboundFileSynchronizingMessageSource source = new SftpInboundFileSynchronizingMessageSource(sftpInboundFileSynchronizer()); source.setLocalDirectory(new File("sftp-inbound")); source.setAutoCreateLocalDirectory(true); source.setLocalFilter(new AcceptOnceFileListFilter<File>()); return source; } @Bean @ServiceActivator(inputChannel = "sftpChannel") public MessageHandler handler() { return new MessageHandler() { @Override public void handleMessage(Message<?> message) throws MessagingException { System.out.println(message.getPayload()); } }; } }
The following Spring Boot application provides an example of configuring the inbound adapter using the Java DSL:
@SpringBootApplication public class SftpJavaApplication { public static void main(String[] args) { new SpringApplicationBuilder(SftpJavaApplication.class) .web(false) .run(args); } @Bean public IntegrationFlow sftpInboundFlow() { return IntegrationFlows .from(s -> s.sftp(this.sftpSessionFactory) .preserveTimestamp(true) .remoteDirectory("foo") .regexFilter(".*\\.txt$") .localFilenameExpression("#this.toUpperCase() + '.a'") .localDirectory(new File("sftp-inbound")), e -> e.id("sftpInboundAdapter") .autoStartup(true) .poller(Pollers.fixedDelay(5000))) .handle(m -> System.out.println(m.getPayload())) .get(); } }
The streaming inbound channel adapter was introduced in version 4.3.
This adapter produces message with payloads of type InputStream
, allowing files to be fetched without writing to the
local file system.
Since the session remains open, the consuming application is responsible for closing the session when the file has been
consumed.
The session is provided in the IntegrationMessageHeaderAccessor.CLOSEABLE_RESOURCE
header.
Standard framework components, such as the FileSplitter
and StreamTransformer
will automatically close the session.
See Section 14.5, “File Splitter” and the section called “Stream Transformer” for more information about these components.
<int-sftp:inbound-streaming-channel-adapter id="ftpInbound" channel="ftpChannel" session-factory="sessionFactory" filename-pattern="*.txt" filename-regex=".*\.txt" filter="filter" remote-file-separator="/" comparator="comparator" remote-directory-expression="'foo/bar'"> <int:poller fixed-rate="1000" /> </int-sftp:inbound-streaming-channel-adapter>
Only one of filename-pattern
, filename-regex
or filter
is allowed.
Important | |
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Unlike the non-streaming inbound channel adapter, this adapter does not prevent duplicates by default.
If you do not delete the remote file (e.g. using an outbound gateway with an rm command) and you wish to prevent the
file being processed again, you can configure an |
The following Spring Boot application provides an example of configuring the inbound adapter using Java configuration:
@SpringBootApplication public class SftpJavaApplication { public static void main(String[] args) { new SpringApplicationBuilder(SftpJavaApplication.class) .web(false) .run(args); } @Bean @InboundChannelAdapter(channel = "stream") public MessageSource<InputStream> ftpMessageSource() { SftpStreamingMessageSource messageSource = new SftpStreamingMessageSource(template(), null); messageSource.setRemoteDirectory("sftpSource/"); messageSource.setFilter(new SftpPersistentAcceptOnceFileListFilter(new SimpleMetadataStore(), "streaming")); return messageSource; } @Bean @Transformer(inputChannel = "stream", outputChannel = "data") public org.springframework.integration.transformer.Transformer transformer() { return new StreamTransformer(); } @Bean public SftpRemoteFileTemplate template() { return new SftpRemoteFileTemplate(sftpSessionFactory()); } }
The SFTP Outbound Channel Adapter is a special MessageHandler
that will connect to the remote directory and will
initiate a file transfer for every file it will receive as the payload of an incoming Message
.
It also supports several representations of the File so you are not limited to the File object.
Similar to the FTP outbound adapter, the SFTP Outbound Channel Adapter supports the following payloads:
1) java.io.File
- the actual file object;
2) byte[]
- byte array that represents the file contents;
3) java.lang.String
- text that represents the file contents.
<int-sftp:outbound-channel-adapter id="sftpOutboundAdapter" session-factory="sftpSessionFactory" channel="inputChannel" charset="UTF-8" remote-file-separator="/" remote-directory="foo/bar" remote-filename-generator-expression="payload.getName() + '-foo'" filename-generator="fileNameGenerator" use-temporary-filename="true" chmod="600" mode="REPLACE"/>
As you can see from the configuration above you can configure the SFTP Outbound Channel Adapter via the outbound-channel-adapter
element.
Please refer to the schema for more detail on these attributes.
SpEL and the SFTP Outbound Adapter
As with many other components in Spring Integration, you can benefit from the Spring Expression Language (SpEL) support when configuring an SFTP Outbound Channel Adapter, by specifying two attributes remote-directory-expression
and remote-filename-generator-expression
(see above).
The expression evaluation context will have the Message as its root object, thus allowing you to provide expressions which can dynamically compute the file name or the existing directory path based on the data in the Message (either from payload or headers).
In the example above we are defining the remote-filename-generator-expression
attribute with an expression value that computes the file name based on its original name while also appending a suffix: -foo.
Starting with version 4.1, you can specify the mode
when transferring the file.
By default, an existing file will be overwritten; the modes are defined on enum
FileExistsMode
, having values REPLACE
(default), APPEND
, IGNORE
, and FAIL
.
With IGNORE
and FAIL
, the file is not transferred; FAIL
causes an exception to be thrown whereas IGNORE
silently ignores the transfer (although a DEBUG
log entry is produced).
Avoiding Partially Written Files
One of the common problems, when dealing with file transfers, is the possibility of processing a partial file - a file might appear in the file system before its transfer is actually complete.
To deal with this issue, Spring Integration SFTP adapters use a very common algorithm where files are transferred under a temporary name and than renamed once they are fully transferred.
By default, every file that is in the process of being transferred will appear in the file system with an additional suffix which, by default, is .writing
; this can be changed using the temporary-file-suffix
attribute.
However, there may be situations where you don’t want to use this technique (for example, if the server does not permit renaming files).
For situations like this, you can disable this feature by setting use-temporary-file-name
to false
(default is true
).
When this attribute is false
, the file is written with its final name and the consuming application will need some other mechanism to detect that the file is completely uploaded before accessing it.
Version 4.3 introduced the chmod
attribute which changes the remote file permissions after upload.
Use the conventional Unix octal format, e.g. 600
allows read-write for the file owner only.
When configuring the adapter using java, you can use setChmodOctal("600")
or setChmodDecimal(384)
.
The following Spring Boot application provides an example of configuring the Outbound Adapter using Java configuration:
@SpringBootApplication @IntegrationComponentScan public class SftpJavaApplication { public static void main(String[] args) { ConfigurableApplicationContext context = new SpringApplicationBuilder(SftpJavaApplication.class) .web(false) .run(args); MyGateway gateway = context.getBean(MyGateway.class); gateway.sendToSftp(new File("/foo/bar.txt")); } @Bean public SessionFactory<LsEntry> sftpSessionFactory() { DefaultSftpSessionFactory factory = new DefaultSftpSessionFactory(true); factory.setHost("localhost"); factory.setPort(port); factory.setUser("foo"); factory.setPassword("foo"); factory.setAllowUnknownKeys(true); return new CachingSessionFactory<LsEntry>(factory); } @Bean @ServiceActivator(inputChannel = "toSftpChannel") public MessageHandler handler() { SftpMessageHandler handler = new SftpMessageHandler(sftpSessionFactory()); handler.setRemoteDirectoryExpression(new LiteralExpression("remote-target-dir")); handler.setFileNameGenerator(new FileNameGenerator() { @Override public String generateFileName(Message<?> message) { return "handlerContent.test"; } }); return handler; } @MessagingGateway public interface MyGateway { @Gateway(requestChannel = "toSftpChannel") void sendToSftp(File file); } }
The following Spring Boot application provides an example of configuring the Outbound Adapter using the Java DSL:
@SpringBootApplication public class SftpJavaApplication { public static void main(String[] args) { new SpringApplicationBuilder(SftpJavaApplication.class) .web(false) .run(args); } @Bean public IntegrationFlow sftpOutboundFlow() { return IntegrationFlows.from("toSftpChannel") .handle(Sftp.outboundAdapter(this.sftpSessionFactory, FileExistsMode.FAIL) .useTemporaryFileName(false) .remoteDirectory("/foo") ).get(); } }
The SFTP Outbound Gateway provides a limited set of commands to interact with a remote SFTP server. Commands supported are:
ls
ls lists remote file(s) and supports the following options:
FileInfo
objects.
In addition, filename filtering is provided, in the same manner as the inbound-channel-adapter
.
The message payload resulting from an ls operation is a list of file names, or a list of FileInfo
objects.
These objects provide information such as modified time, permissions etc.
The remote directory that the ls command acted on is provided in the file_remoteDirectory
header.
When using the recursive option (-R
), the fileName
includes any subdirectory elements, representing a relative path to the file (relative to the remote directory).
If the -dirs
option is included, each recursive directory is also returned as an element in the list.
In this case, it is recommended that the -1
is not used because you would not be able to determine files Vs.
directories, which is achievable using the FileInfo
objects.
get
get retrieves a remote file and supports the following option:
The remote directory is provided in the file_remoteDirectory
header, and the filename is provided in the file_remoteFile
header.
The message payload resulting from a get operation is a File
object representing the retrieved file, or
an InputStream
when the -stream
option is provided.
This option allows retrieving the file as a stream.
For text files, a common use case is to combine this operation with a File Splitter or
Stream Transformer.
When consuming remote files as streams, the user is responsible for closing the Session
after the stream is
consumed.
For convenience, the Session
is provided in the IntegrationMessageHeaderAccessor.CLOSEABLE_RESOURCE
header, a convenience method is provided on the
IntegrationMessageHeaderAccessor
:
Closeable closeable = new IntegrationMessageHeaderAccessor(message).getCloseableResource(); if (closeable != null) { closeable.close(); }
Note: In previous releases the session was in the file_remoteSession
header, but this is deprecated - use
IntegrationMessageHeaderAccessor.CLOSEABLE_RESOURCE
instead.
Framework components such as the File Splitter and Stream Transformer will automatically close the session after the data is transferred.
The following shows an example of consuming a file as a stream:
<int-sftp:outbound-gateway session-factory="ftpSessionFactory" request-channel="inboundGetStream" command="get" command-options="-stream" expression="payload" remote-directory="ftpTarget" reply-channel="stream" /> <int-file:splitter input-channel="stream" output-channel="lines" />
Note: if you consume the input stream in a custom component, you must close the Session
.
You can either do that in your custom code, or route a copy of the message to a service-activator
and use SpEL:
<int:service-activator input-channel="closeSession" expression="headers[T(org.springframework.integration.IntegrationMessageHeaderAccessor).CLOSEABLE_RESOURCE].close()" />
mget
mget retrieves multiple remote files based on a pattern and supports the following option:
The message payload resulting from an mget operation is a List<File>
object - a List of File objects, each representing a retrieved file.
The remote directory is provided in the file_remoteDirectory
header, and the pattern for the filenames is provided in the file_remoteFile
header.
Notes for when using recursion (-R ) | |
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The pattern is ignored, and The Typically, you would use the |
See also Section 27.10.3, “Outbound Gateway Partial Success (mget and mput)”
put
put sends a file to the remote server; the payload of the message can be a java.io.File
, a byte[]
or a String
.
A remote-filename-generator
(or expression) is used to name the remote file.
Other available attributes include remote-directory
, temporary-remote-directory
(and their *-expression
) equivalents, use-temporary-file-name
, and auto-create-directory
.
Refer to the schema documentation for more information.
The message payload resulting from a put operation is a String
representing the full path of the file on the server after transfer.
Version 4.3 introduced the chmod
attribute which changes the remote file permissions after upload.
Use the conventional Unix octal format, e.g. 600
allows read-write for the file owner only.
When configuring the adapter using java, you can use setChmod(0600)
.
mput
mput sends multiple files to the server and supports the following option:
The message payload must be a java.io.File
representing a local directory.
The same attributes as the put
command are supported.
In addition, files in the local directory can be filtered with one of mput-pattern
, mput-regex
or mput-filter
.
The filter works with recursion, as long as the subdirectories themselves pass the filter.
Subdirectories that do not pass the filter are not recursed.
The message payload resulting from an mget operation is a List<String>
object - a List of remote file paths resulting from the transfer.
See also Section 27.10.3, “Outbound Gateway Partial Success (mget and mput)”
Version 4.3 introduced the chmod
attribute which changes the remote file permissions after upload.
Use the conventional Unix octal format, e.g. 600
allows read-write for the file owner only.
When configuring the adapter using java, you can use setChmodOctal("600")
or setChmodDecimal(384)
.
rm
The rm command has no options.
The message payload resulting from an rm operation is Boolean.TRUE if the remove was successful, Boolean.FALSE otherwise.
The remote directory is provided in the file_remoteDirectory
header, and the filename is provided in the file_remoteFile
header.
mv
The mv command has no options.
The expression attribute defines the "from" path and the rename-expression attribute defines the "to" path.
By default, the rename-expression is headers['file_renameTo']
.
This expression must not evaluate to null, or an empty String
.
If necessary, any remote directories needed will be created.
The payload of the result message is Boolean.TRUE
.
The original remote directory is provided in the file_remoteDirectory
header, and the filename is provided in the file_remoteFile
header.
The new path is in the file_renameTo
header.
Additional Information
The get and mget commands support the local-filename-generator-expression attribute.
It defines a SpEL expression to generate the name of local file(s) during the transfer.
The root object of the evaluation context is the request Message but, in addition, the remoteFileName
variable is also available, which is particularly useful for mget, for example: local-filename-generator-expression="#remoteFileName.toUpperCase() + headers.foo"
The get and mget commands support the local-directory-expression attribute.
It defines a SpEL expression to generate the name of local directory(ies) during the transfer.
The root object of the evaluation context is the request Message but, in addition, the remoteDirectory
variable is also available, which is particularly useful for mget, for example: local-directory-expression="'/tmp/local/' + #remoteDirectory.toUpperCase() + headers.foo"
.
This attribute is mutually exclusive with local-directory attribute.
For all commands, the PATH that the command acts on is provided by the expression property of the gateway. For the mget command, the expression might evaluate to , meaning retrieve all files, or somedirectory/ etc.
Here is an example of a gateway configured for an ls command…
<int-ftp:outbound-gateway id="gateway1" session-factory="ftpSessionFactory" request-channel="inbound1" command="ls" command-options="-1" expression="payload" reply-channel="toSplitter"/>
The payload of the message sent to the toSplitter channel is a list of String objects containing the filename of each file.
If the command-options
was omitted, it would be a list of FileInfo
objects.
Options are provided space-delimited, e.g.
command-options="-1 -dirs -links"
.
Starting with version 4.2, the GET
, MGET
, PUT
and MPUT
commands support a FileExistsMode
property (mode
when using the namespace support). This affects the behavior when the local file exists (GET
and MGET
) or the remote
file exists (PUT
and MPUT
). Supported modes are REPLACE
, APPEND
, FAIL
and IGNORE
.
For backwards compatibility, the default mode for PUT
and MPUT
operations is REPLACE
and for GET
and MGET
operations, the default is FAIL
.
The following Spring Boot application provides an example of configuring the Outbound Gateway using Java configuration:
@SpringBootApplication public class SftpJavaApplication { public static void main(String[] args) { new SpringApplicationBuilder(SftpJavaApplication.class) .web(false) .run(args); } @Bean @ServiceActivator(inputChannel = "sftpChannel") public MessageHandler handler() { return new SftpOutboundGateway(ftpSessionFactory(), "ls"); } }
The following Spring Boot application provides an example of configuring the Outbound Gateway using the Java DSL:
@SpringBootApplication public class SftpJavaApplication { public static void main(String[] args) { new SpringApplicationBuilder(SftpJavaApplication.class) .web(false) .run(args); } @Bean public SessionFactory<FTPFile> ftpSessionFactory() { DefaultFtpSessionFactory sf = new DefaultFtpSessionFactory(); sf.setHost("localhost"); sf.setPort(port); sf.setUsername("foo"); sf.setPassword("foo"); return new CachingSessionFactory<FTPFile>(sf); } @Bean public QueueChannelSpec remoteFileOutputChannel() { return MessageChannels.queue(); } @Bean public IntegrationFlow sftpMGetFlow() { return IntegrationFlows.from("sftpMgetInputChannel") .handleWithAdapter(h -> h.sftpGateway(this.sftpSessionFactory, AbstractRemoteFileOutboundGateway.Command.MGET, "payload") .options(AbstractRemoteFileOutboundGateway.Option.RECURSIVE) .regexFileNameFilter("(subSftpSource|.*1.txt)") .localDirectoryExpression("'myDir/' + #remoteDirectory") .localFilenameExpression("#remoteFileName.replaceFirst('sftpSource', 'localTarget')")) .channel("remoteFileOutputChannel") .get(); } }
When performing operations on multiple files (mget
and mput
) it is possible that an exception occurs some time after
one or more files have been transferred.
In this case (starting with version 4.2), a PartialSuccessException
is thrown.
As well as the usual MessagingException
properties (failedMessage
and cause
), this exception has two additional
properties:
partialResults
- the successful transfer results.
derivedInput
- the list of files generated from the request message (e.g. local files to transfer for an mput
).
This will enable you to determine which files were successfully transferred, and which were not.
In the case of a recursive mput
, the PartialSuccessException
may have nested PartialSuccessException
s.
Consider:
root/ |- file1.txt |- subdir/ | - file2.txt | - file3.txt |- zoo.txt
If the exception occurs on file3.txt
, the PartialSuccessException
thrown by the gateway will have derivedInput
of file1.txt
, subdir
, zoo.txt
and partialResults
of file1.txt
.
It’s cause
will be another PartialSuccessException
with derivedInput
of file2.txt
, file3.txt
and
partialResults
of file2.txt
.
Since we use JSch libraries (http://www.jcraft.com/jsch/) to provide SFTP support, at times you may require more information from the JSch API itself, especially if something is not working properly (e.g., Authentication exceptions).
Unfortunately JSch does not use commons-logging but instead relies on custom implementations of their com.jcraft.jsch.Logger
interface.
As of Spring Integration 2.0.1, we have implemented this interface.
So, now all you need to do to enable JSch logging is to configure your logger the way you usually do.
For example, here is valid configuration of a logger using Log4J.
log4j.category.com.jcraft.jsch=DEBUG
Starting with Spring Integration version 4.2, a MessageSessionCallback<F, T>
implementation can be used with the
<int-ftp:outbound-gateway/>
(FtpOutboundGateway
) to perform any operation(s) on the Session<FTPFile>
with
the requestMessage
context.
It can be used for any non-standard or low-level FTP operation (or several); for example, allowing access
from an integration flow definition, and functional interface (Lambda) implementation injection:
@Bean @ServiceActivator(inputChannel = "sftpChannel") public MessageHandler sftpOutboundGateway(SessionFactory<ChannelSftp.LsEntry> sessionFactory) { return new SftpOutboundGateway(sessionFactory, (session, requestMessage) -> session.list(requestMessage.getPayload())); }
Another example might be to pre- or post- process the file data being sent/retrieved.
When using XML configuration, the <int-sftp:outbound-gateway/>
provides a session-callback
attribute to allow you
to specify the MessageSessionCallback
bean name.
Note | |
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The |