Routers are a crucial element in many messaging architectures. They consume Messages from a Message Channel and forward each consumed message to one or more different Message Channel depending on a set of conditions.
Spring Integration provides the following routers out-of-the-box:
Router implementations share many configuration parameters. Yet, certain differences exist between routers. Furthermore, the availability of configuration parameters depends on whether Routers are used inside or outside of a chain. In order to provide a quick overview, all available attributes are listed in the 2 tables below.
Table 6.1. Routers Outside of a Chain
Attribute | router | header value router | xpath router | payload type router | recipient list router | exception type router |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
apply-sequence | ||||||
default-output-channel | ||||||
resolution-required | ||||||
ignore-send-failures | ||||||
timeout | ||||||
id | ||||||
auto-startup | ||||||
input-channel | ||||||
order | ||||||
method | ||||||
ref | ||||||
expression | ||||||
header-name | ||||||
evaluate-as-string | ||||||
xpath-expression-ref | ||||||
converter |
Table 6.2. Routers Inside of a Chain
Attribute | router | header value router | xpath router | payload type router | recipient list router | exception type router |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
apply-sequence | ||||||
default-output-channel | ||||||
resolution-required | ||||||
ignore-send-failures | ||||||
timeout | ||||||
id | ||||||
auto-startup | ||||||
input-channel | ||||||
order | ||||||
method | ||||||
ref | ||||||
expression | ||||||
header-name | ||||||
evaluate-as-string | ||||||
xpath-expression-ref | ||||||
converter |
Important | |
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Router parameters have been more standardized across all router implementations with Spring Integration 2.1. Consequently, there are a few minor changes that leave the possibility of breaking older Spring Integration based applications. Since Spring Integration 2.1 the Prior to these changes, the If you do desire to drop messages silently simply set |
The following parameters are valid for all routers inside and outside of chains.
nullChannel
as the default output channel attribute value.
Note | |
---|---|
A Message will only be sent to the |
MessagingException
will be raised, in case the channel cannot be resolved.
Setting this attribute to false, will cause any unresovable channels to be ignored.
This optional attribute will, if not explicitly set, default to true.
Note | |
---|---|
A Message will only be sent to the |
MessageDeliveryException
will be thrown instead, and if the router resolves more than one channel, any subsequent channels will not receive the message.
The exact behavior of this attribute depends on the type of the Channel
messages are sent to.
For example, when using direct channels (single threaded), send-failures can be caused by exceptions thrown by components much further down-stream.
However, when sending messages to a simple queue channel (asynchronous) the likelihood of an exception to be thrown is rather remote.
Note | |
---|---|
While most routers will route to a single channel, they are allowed to return more than one channel name.
The |
This attribute defaults to false.
timeout
attribute specifies the maximum amount of time in milliseconds to wait, when sending Messages to the target Message Channels.
By default the send operation will block indefinitely.
The following parameters are valid only across all top-level routers that are ourside of chains.
Lifecycle
attribute signaled if this component should be started during startup of the Application Context.
This optional attribute defaults to true.
Since content-based routing often requires some domain-specific logic, most use-cases will require Spring Integration’s options for delegating to POJOs using the XML namespace support and/or Annotations. Both of these are discussed below, but first we present a couple implementations that are available out-of-the-box since they fulfill common requirements.
A PayloadTypeRouter
will send Messages to the channel as defined by payload-type mappings.
<bean id="payloadTypeRouter" class="org.springframework.integration.router.PayloadTypeRouter"> <property name="channelMapping"> <map> <entry key="java.lang.String" value-ref="stringChannel"/> <entry key="java.lang.Integer" value-ref="integerChannel"/> </map> </property> </bean>
Configuration of the PayloadTypeRouter
is also supported via the namespace provided by Spring Integration (see Section E.2, “Namespace Support”), which essentially simplifies configuration by combining the <router/>
configuration and its corresponding implementation defined using a <bean/>
element into a single and more concise configuration element.
The example below demonstrates a PayloadTypeRouter
configuration which is equivalent to the one above using the namespace support:
<int:payload-type-router input-channel="routingChannel"> <int:mapping type="java.lang.String" channel="stringChannel" /> <int:mapping type="java.lang.Integer" channel="integerChannel" /> </int:payload-type-router>
The equivalent router, using Java configuration:
@ServiceActivator(inputChannel = "routingChannel") @Bean public PayloadTypeRouter router() { PayloadTypeRouter router = new PayloadTypeRouter(); router.setChannelMapping(String.class.getName(), "stringChannel"); router.setChannelMapping(Integer.class.getName(), "integerChannel"); return router; }
When using the Java DSL, there are two options; 1) define the router object as above…
@Bean public IntegrationFlow routerFlow1() { return IntegrationFlows.from("routingChannel") .route(router()) .get(); } public PayloadTypeRouter router() { PayloadTypeRouter router = new PayloadTypeRouter(); router.setChannelMapping(String.class.getName(), "stringChannel"); router.setChannelMapping(Integer.class.getName(), "integerChannel"); return router; }
Note that the router can be, but doesn’t have to be, a @Bean
- the flow will register it if it is not.
2) define the routing function within the DSL flow itself…
@Bean public IntegrationFlow routerFlow2() { return IntegrationFlows.from("routingChannel") .<Object, Class<?>>route(Object::getClass, m -> m .channelMapping(String.class, "stringChannel") .channelMapping(Integer.class, "integerChannel")) .get(); }
A HeaderValueRouter
will send Messages to the channel based on the individual header value mappings.
When a HeaderValueRouter
is created it is initialized with the name of the header to be evaluated.
The value of the header could be one of two things:
1. Arbitrary value
2. Channel name
If arbitrary then additional mappings for these header values to channel names is required, otherwise no additional configuration is needed.
Spring Integration provides a simple namespace-based XML configuration to configure a HeaderValueRouter
.
The example below demonstrates two types of namespace-based configuration for the HeaderValueRouter
.
1. Configuration where mapping of header values to channels is required
<int:header-value-router input-channel="routingChannel" header-name="testHeader"> <int:mapping value="someHeaderValue" channel="channelA" /> <int:mapping value="someOtherHeaderValue" channel="channelB" /> </int:header-value-router>
During the resolution process this router may encounter channel resolution failures, causing an exception.
If you want to suppress such exceptions and send unresolved messages to the default output channel (identified with the default-output-channel
attribute) set resolution-required
to false
.
Normally, messages for which the header value is not explicitly mapped to a channel will be sent to the default-output-channel
.
However, in cases where the header value is mapped to a channel name but the channel cannot be resolved, setting the resolution-required
attribute to false
will result in routing such messages to the default-output-channel
.
Important | |
---|---|
With Spring Integration 2.1 the attribute was changed from |
The equivalent router, using Java configuration:
@ServiceActivator(inputChannel = "routingChannel") @Bean public HeaderValueRouter router() { HeaderValueRouter router = new HeaderValueRouter("testHeader"); router.setChannelMapping("someHeaderValue", "channelA"); router.setChannelMapping("someOtherHeaderValue", "channelB"); return router; }
When using the Java DSL, there are two options; 1) define the router object as above…
@Bean public IntegrationFlow routerFlow1() { return IntegrationFlows.from("routingChannel") .route(router()) .get(); } public HeaderValueRouter router() { HeaderValueRouter router = new HeaderValueRouter("testHeader"); router.setChannelMapping("someHeaderValue", "channelA"); router.setChannelMapping("someOtherHeaderValue", "channelB"); return router; }
Note that the router can be, but doesn’t have to be, a @Bean
- the flow will register it if it is not.
2) define the routing function within the DSL flow itself…
@Bean public IntegrationFlow routerFlow2() { return IntegrationFlows.from("routingChannel") .<Message<?>, String>route(m -> m.getHeaders().get("testHeader", String.class), m -> m .channelMapping("someHeaderValue", "channelA") .channelMapping("someOtherHeaderValue", "channelB"), e -> e.id("headerValueRouter")) .get(); }
2. Configuration where mapping of header values to channel names is not required since header values themselves represent channel names
<int:header-value-router input-channel="routingChannel" header-name="testHeader"/>
Note | |
---|---|
Since Spring Integration 2.1 the behavior of resolving channels is more explicit.
For example, if you ommit the Basically, by default the Router must be able to route messages successfully to at least one channel.
If you really want to drop messages, you must also have |
A RecipientListRouter
will send each received Message to a statically defined list of Message Channels:
<bean id="recipientListRouter" class="org.springframework.integration.router.RecipientListRouter"> <property name="channels"> <list> <ref bean="channel1"/> <ref bean="channel2"/> <ref bean="channel3"/> </list> </property> </bean>
Spring Integration also provides namespace support for the RecipientListRouter
configuration (see Section E.2, “Namespace Support”) as the example below demonstrates.
<int:recipient-list-router id="customRouter" input-channel="routingChannel" timeout="1234" ignore-send-failures="true" apply-sequence="true"> <int:recipient channel="channel1"/> <int:recipient channel="channel2"/> </int:recipient-list-router>
The equivalent router, using Java configuration:
@ServiceActivator(inputChannel = "routingChannel") @Bean public RecipientListRouter router() { RecipientListRouter router = new RecipientListRouter(); router.setSendTimeout(1_234L); router.setIgnoreSendFailures(true); router.setApplySequence(true); router.addRecipient("channel1"); router.addRecipient("channel2"); router.addRecipient("channel3"); return router; }
The equivalent router, using the Java DSL:
@Bean public IntegrationFlow routerFlow() { return IntegrationFlows.from("routingChannel") .routeToRecipients(r -> r .applySequence(true) .ignoreSendFailures(true) .recipient("channel1") .recipient("channel2") .recipient("channel3") .sendTimeout(1_234L)) .get(); }
Note | |
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The apply-sequence flag here has the same effect as it does for a publish-subscribe-channel, and like a publish-subscribe-channel, it is disabled by default on the recipient-list-router. Refer to the section called “PublishSubscribeChannel Configuration” for more information. |
Another convenient option when configuring a RecipientListRouter
is to use Spring Expression Language (SpEL) support as selectors for individual recipient channels.
This is similar to using a Filter at the beginning of chain to act as a "Selective Consumer".
However, in this case, it’s all combined rather concisely into the router’s configuration.
<int:recipient-list-router id="customRouter" input-channel="routingChannel"> <int:recipient channel="channel1" selector-expression="payload.equals('foo')"/> <int:recipient channel="channel2" selector-expression="headers.containsKey('bar')"/> </int:recipient-list-router>
In the above configuration a SpEL expression identified by the selector-expression
attribute will be evaluated to determine if this recipient should be included in the recipient list for a given input Message.
The evaluation result of the expression must be a boolean.
If this attribute is not defined, the channel will always be among the list of recipients.
Starting with version 4.1, the RecipientListRouter
provides several operation to manipulate with recipients dynamically at runtime.
These management operations are presented by RecipientListRouterManagement
@ManagedResource
.
They are available using Section 10.6, “Control Bus” as well as via JMX:
<control-bus input-channel="controlBus"/> <recipient-list-router id="simpleRouter" input-channel="routingChannelA"> <recipient channel="channel1"/> </recipient-list-router> <channel id="channel2"/>
messagingTemplate.convertAndSend(controlBus, "@'simpleRouter.handler'.addRecipient('channel2')");
From the application start up the simpleRouter
will have only one channel1
recipient.
But after the addRecipient
command above the new channel2
recipient will be added.
It is a "registering an interest in something that is part of the Message" use case, when we may be interested in messages from the router at some time period, so we are subscribing to the the recipient-list-router
and in some point decide to unsubscribe our interest.
Having the runtime management operation for the <recipient-list-router>
, it can be configured without any <recipient>
from the start.
In this case the behaviour of RecipientListRouter
is the same, when there is no one matching recipient for the message: if defaultOutputChannel
is configured, the message will be sent there, otherwise the MessageDeliveryException
is thrown.
The XPath Router is part of the XML Module. See Section 37.6, “Routing XML Messages Using XPath”.
Spring Integration also provides a special type-based router called ErrorMessageExceptionTypeRouter
for routing Error Messages (Messages whose payload
is a Throwable
instance).
ErrorMessageExceptionTypeRouter
is very similar to the PayloadTypeRouter
.
In fact they are almost identical.
The only difference is that while PayloadTypeRouter
navigates the instance hierarchy of a payload instance (e.g., payload.getClass().getSuperclass()
) to find the most specific type/channel mappings,
the ErrorMessageExceptionTypeRouter
navigates the hierarchy of exception causes (e.g., payload.getCause()
)
to find the most specific Throwable
type/channel mappings and uses mappingClass.isInstance(cause)
to match the
cause
to the class or any super class.
Note | |
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Since version 4.3 the |
Below is a sample configuration for ErrorMessageExceptionTypeRouter
.
<int:exception-type-router input-channel="inputChannel" default-output-channel="defaultChannel"> <int:mapping exception-type="java.lang.IllegalArgumentException" channel="illegalChannel"/> <int:mapping exception-type="java.lang.NullPointerException" channel="npeChannel"/> </int:exception-type-router> <int:channel id="illegalChannel" /> <int:channel id="npeChannel" />
The "router" element provides a simple way to connect a router to an input channel and also accepts the optional default-output-channel
attribute.
The ref
attribute references the bean name of a custom Router implementation (extending AbstractMessageRouter
):
<int:router ref="payloadTypeRouter" input-channel="input1" default-output-channel="defaultOutput1"/> <int:router ref="recipientListRouter" input-channel="input2" default-output-channel="defaultOutput2"/> <int:router ref="customRouter" input-channel="input3" default-output-channel="defaultOutput3"/> <beans:bean id="customRouterBean" class="org.foo.MyCustomRouter"/>
Alternatively, ref
may point to a simple POJO that contains the @Router annotation (see below), or the ref
may be combined with an explicit method
name.
Specifying a method
applies the same behavior described in the @Router annotation section below.
<int:router input-channel="input" ref="somePojo" method="someMethod"/>
Using a ref
attribute is generally recommended if the custom router implementation is referenced in other <router>
definitions.
However if the custom router implementation should be scoped to a single definition of the <router>
, you may provide an inner bean definition:
<int:router method="someMethod" input-channel="input3" default-output-channel="defaultOutput3"> <beans:bean class="org.foo.MyCustomRouter"/> </int:router>
Note | |
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Using both the |
Important | |
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If the "ref" attribute references a bean that extends |
The equivalent router, using Java Configuration:
@Bean @Router(inputChannel = "routingChannel") public AbstractMessageRouter myCustomRouter() { return new AbstractMessageRouter() { @Override protected Collection<MessageChannel> determineTargetChannels(Message<?> message) { return // determine channel(s) for message } }; }
The equivalent router, using the Java DSL:
@Bean public IntegrationFlow routerFlow() { return IntegrationFlows.from("routingChannel") .route(myCustomRouter()) .get(); } public AbstractMessageRouter myCustomRouter() { return new AbstractMessageRouter() { @Override protected Collection<MessageChannel> determineTargetChannels(Message<?> message) { return // determine channel(s) for message } }; }
or, if you can route on just some message payload data:
@Bean public IntegrationFlow routerFlow() { return IntegrationFlows.from("routingChannel") .route(String.class, p -> p.contains("foo") ? "fooChannel" : "barChannel") .get(); }
Routers and the Spring Expression Language (SpEL)
Sometimes the routing logic may be simple and writing a separate class for it and configuring it as a bean may seem like overkill. As of Spring Integration 2.0 we offer an alternative where you can now use SpEL to implement simple computations that previously required a custom POJO router.
Note | |
---|---|
For more information about the Spring Expression Language, please refer to the respective chapter in the Spring Framework Reference Documentation at: |
Generally a SpEL expression is evaluated and the result is mapped to a channel:
<int:router input-channel="inChannel" expression="payload.paymentType"> <int:mapping value="CASH" channel="cashPaymentChannel"/> <int:mapping value="CREDIT" channel="authorizePaymentChannel"/> <int:mapping value="DEBIT" channel="authorizePaymentChannel"/> </int:router>
The equivalent router, using Java Configuration:
@Router(inputChannel = "routingChannel") @Bean public ExpressionEvaluatingRouter router() { ExpressionEvaluatingRouter router = new ExpressionEvaluatingRouter("payload.paymentType"); router.setChannelMapping("CASH", "cashPaymentChannel"); router.setChannelMapping("CREDIT", "authorizePaymentChannel"); router.setChannelMapping("DEBIT", "authorizePaymentChannel"); return router; }
The equivalent router, using the Java DSL:
@Bean public IntegrationFlow routerFlow() { return IntegrationFlows.from("routingChannel") .route("payload.paymentType", r -> r .channelMapping("CASH", "cashPaymentChannel") .channelMapping("CREDIT", "authorizePaymentChannel") .channelMapping("DEBIT", "authorizePaymentChannel")) .get(); }
To simplify things even more, the SpEL expression may evaluate to a channel name:
<int:router input-channel="inChannel" expression="payload + 'Channel'"/>
In the above configuration the result channel will be computed by the SpEL expression which simply concatenates the value of the payload
with the literal String Channel.
Another value of SpEL for configuring routers is that an expression can actually return a Collection
, effectively making every <router>
a Recipient List Router.
Whenever the expression returns multiple channel values the Message will be forwarded to each channel.
<int:router input-channel="inChannel" expression="headers.channels"/>
In the above configuration, if the Message includes a header with the name channels the value of which is a List
of channel names then the Message will be sent to each channel in the list.
You may also find Collection Projection and Collection Selection expressions useful to select multiple channels.
For further information, please see:
When using @Router
to annotate a method, the method may return either a MessageChannel
or String
type.
In the latter case, the endpoint will resolve the channel name as it does for the default output channel.
Additionally, the method may return either a single value or a collection.
If a collection is returned, the reply message will be sent to multiple channels.
To summarize, the following method signatures are all valid.
@Router public MessageChannel route(Message message) {...} @Router public List<MessageChannel> route(Message message) {...} @Router public String route(Foo payload) {...} @Router public List<String> route(Foo payload) {...}
In addition to payload-based routing, a Message may be routed based on metadata available within the message header as either a property or attribute.
In this case, a method annotated with @Router
may include a parameter annotated with @Header
which is mapped to a header value as illustrated below and documented in Section E.6, “Annotation Support”.
@Router public List<String> route(@Header("orderStatus") OrderStatus status)
Note | |
---|---|
For routing of XML-based Messages, including XPath support, see Chapter 37, XML Support - Dealing with XML Payloads. |
Also see Section 9.9, “Message Routers” in Java DSL chapter for more information about routers configuration.
So as you can see, Spring Integration provides quite a few different router configurations for common content-based routing use cases as well as the option of implementing custom routers as POJOs.
For example PayloadTypeRouter
provides a simple way to configure a router which computes channels
based on the payload type
of the incoming Message while HeaderValueRouter
provides the same convenience in configuring a router which computes channels
by evaluating the value of a particular Message Header.
There are also expression-based (SpEL) routers where the channel
is determined based on evaluating an expression.
Thus, these type of routers exhibit some dynamic characteristics.
However these routers all require static configuration. Even in the case of expression-based routers, the expression itself is defined as part of the router configuration which means that_the same expression operating on the same value will always result in the computation of the same channel_. This is acceptable in most cases since such routes are well defined and therefore predictable. But there are times when we need to change router configurations dynamically so message flows may be routed to a different channel.
Example:
You might want to bring down some part of your system for maintenance and temporarily re-reroute messages to a different message flow.
Or you may want to introduce more granularity to your message flow by adding another route to handle a more concrete type of java.lang.Number
(in the case of PayloadTypeRouter
).
Unfortunately with static router configuration to accomplish this, you would have to bring down your entire application, change the configuration of the router (change routes) and bring it back up. This is obviously not the solution.
The Dynamic Router pattern describes the mechanisms by which one can change/configure routers dynamically without bringing down the system or individual routers.
Before we get into the specifics of how this is accomplished in Spring Integration, let’s quickly summarize the typical flow of the router, which consists of 3 simple steps:
channel identifier
which is a value calculated by the router once it receives the Message.
Typically it is a String
or and instance of the actual MessageChannel
.
channel identifier
to channel name
.
We’ll describe specifics of this process in a moment.
channel name
to the actual MessageChannel
There is not much that can be done with regard to dynamic routing if Step 1 results in the actual instance of the MessageChannel
, simply because the MessageChannel
is the final product of any router’s job.
However, if Step 1 results in a channel identifier
that is not an instance of MessageChannel
, then there are quite a few possibilities to influence the process of deriving the Message Channel
.
Lets look at couple of the examples in the context of the 3 steps mentioned above:
Payload Type Router
<int:payload-type-router input-channel="routingChannel"> <int:mapping type="java.lang.String" channel="channel1" /> <int:mapping type="java.lang.Integer" channel="channel2" /> </int:payload-type-router>
Within the context of the Payload Type Router the 3 steps mentioned above would be realized as:
channel identifier
which is the fully qualified name of the payload type (e.g., java.lang.String).
channel identifier
to channel name
where the result of the previous step is used to select the appropriate value from the payload type mapping defined via mapping
element.
channel name
to the actual instance of the MessageChannel
as a reference to a bean within the Application Context (which is hopefully a MessageChannel
) identified by the result of the previous step.
In other words, each step feeds the next step until the process completes.
Header Value Router
<int:header-value-router input-channel="inputChannel" header-name="testHeader"> <int:mapping value="foo" channel="fooChannel" /> <int:mapping value="bar" channel="barChannel" /> </int:header-value-router>
Similar to the PayloadTypeRouter:
channel identifier
which is the value of the header identified by the header-name
attribute.
channel identifier
to channel name
where the result of the previous step is used to select the appropriate value from the general mapping defined via mapping
element.
channel name
to the actual instance of the MessageChannel
as a reference to a bean within the Application Context (which is hopefully a MessageChannel
) identified by the result of the previous step.
The above two configurations of two different router types look almost identical.
However if we look at the alternate configuration of the HeaderValueRouter
we clearly see that there is no mapping
sub element:
<int:header-value-router input-channel="inputChannel" header-name="testHeader">
But the configuration is still perfectly valid. So the natural question is what about the mapping in the Step 2?
What this means is that Step 2 is now an optional step.
If mapping
is not defined then the channel identifier
value computed in Step 1 will automatically be treated as the channel name
, which will now be resolved to the actual MessageChannel
as in Step 3.
What it also means is that Step 2 is one of the key steps to provide dynamic characteristics to the routers, since it introduces a process which allows you to change the way channel identifier resolves to 'channel name', thus influencing the process of determining the final instance of the MessageChannel
from the initial channel identifier
.
For Example:
In the above configuration let’s assume that the testHeader
value is kermit which is now a channel identifier
(Step 1).
Since there is no mapping in this router, resolving this channel identifier
to a channel name
(Step 2) is impossible and this channel identifier
is now treated as channel name
.
However what if there was a mapping but for a different value?
The end result would still be the same and that is: if a new value cannot be determined through the process of resolving the channel identifier to a channel name, such channel identifier becomes channel name.
So all that is left is for Step 3 to resolve the channel name
(kermit) to an actual instance of the MessageChannel
identified by this name.
That basically involves a bean lookup for the name provided.
So now all messages which contain the header/value pair as testHeader=kermit
are going to be routed to a MessageChannel
whose bean name (id) is kermit.
But what if you want to route these messages to the simpson channel? Obviously changing a static configuration will work, but will also require bringing your system down.
However if you had access to the channel identifier
map, then you could just introduce a new mapping where the header/value pair is now kermit=simpson
, thus allowing Step 2 to treat kermit as a channel identifier
while resolving it to simpson as the channel name
.
The same obviously applies for PayloadTypeRouter
, where you can now remap or remove a particular payload type
mapping.
In fact, it applies to every other router, including expression-based routers, since their computed values will now have a chance to go through Step 2 to be additionally resolved to the actual channel name
.
Any router that is a subclass of the AbstractMappingMessageRouter
(which includes most framework defined routers) is a Dynamic Router simply because the channelMapping
is defined at the AbstractMappingMessageRouter
level.
That map’s setter method is exposed as a public method along with setChannelMapping and removeChannelMapping methods.
These allow you to change/add/remove router mappings at runtime as long as you have a reference to the router itself.
It also means that you could expose these same configuration options via JMX (see Section 10.2, “JMX Support”) or the Spring Integration ControlBus (see Section 10.6, “Control Bus”) functionality.
One way to manage the router mappings is through the Control Bus pattern which exposes a Control Channel where you can send control messages to manage and monitor Spring Integration components, including routers.
Note | |
---|---|
For more information about the Control Bus, please see chapter Section 10.6, “Control Bus”. |
Typically you would send a control message asking to invoke a particular operation on a particular managed component (e.g. router). Two managed operations (methods) that are specific to changing the router resolution process are:
public void setChannelMapping(String key, String channelName)
- will allow you to add a new or modify an existing mapping between channel identifier
and channel name
public void removeChannelMapping(String key)
- will allow you to remove a particular channel mapping, thus disconnecting the relationship between channel identifier
and channel name
Note that these methods can be used for simple changes (updating a single route or adding/removing a route). However, if you want to remove one route and add another, the updates are not atomic. This means the routing table may be in an indeterminate state between the updates. Starting with version 4.0, you can now use the control bus to update the entire routing table atomically.
public Map<String, String>getChannelMappings()
returns the current mappings.
public void replaceChannelMappings(Properties channelMappings)
updates the mappings.
Notice that the parameter is a properties object; this allows the use of the inbuilt StringToPropertiesConverter
by a control bus command, for example:
"@'router.handler'.replaceChannelMappings('foo=qux \n baz=bar')"
\n
).
For programmatic changes to the map, it is recommended that the setChannelMappings
method is used instead, for type-safety.
Any non-String keys or values passed into replaceChannelMappings
are ignored.
You can also expose a router instance with Spring’s JMX support, and then use your favorite JMX client (e.g., JConsole) to manage those operations (methods) for changing the router’s configuration.
Note | |
---|---|
For more information about Spring Integration’s JMX support, please see chapter Section 10.2, “JMX Support”. |
Starting with version 4.1, Spring Integration provides an implementation of the Routing Slip Enterprise Integration Pattern.
It is implemented as a routingSlip
message header which is used to determine the next channel in AbstractMessageProducingHandler
s, when an outputChannel
isn’t specified for the endpoint.
This pattern is useful in complex, dynamic, cases when it can become difficult to configure multiple routers to determine message flow.
When a message arrives at an endpoint that has no output-channel
, the routingSlip
is consulted to determine the next channel to which the message will be sent.
When the routing slip is exhausted, normal replyChannel
processing resumes.
Configuration for the Routing Slip is presented as a HeaderEnricher
option - a semicolon-separated Routing Slip path
entries:
<util:properties id="properties"> <beans:prop key="myRoutePath1">channel1</beans:prop> <beans:prop key="myRoutePath2">request.headers[myRoutingSlipChannel]</beans:prop> </util:properties> <context:property-placeholder properties-ref="properties"/> <header-enricher input-channel="input" output-channel="process"> <routing-slip value="${myRoutePath1}; @routingSlipRoutingPojo.get(request, reply); routingSlipRoutingStrategy; ${myRoutePath2}; finishChannel"/> </header-enricher>
In this sample we have:
<context:property-placeholder>
configuration to demonstrate that the entries in the Routing Slip path
can be specified as resolvable keys.
<header-enricher>
<routing-slip>
sub-element is used to populate the RoutingSlipHeaderValueMessageProcessor
to the HeaderEnricher
handler.
RoutingSlipHeaderValueMessageProcessor
accepts a String array of resolved Routing Slip path
entries and returns (from processMessage()
) a singletonMap
with the path
as key
and 0
as initial routingSlipIndex
.
Routing Slip path
entries can contain MessageChannel
bean names, RoutingSlipRouteStrategy
bean names and also Spring expressions (SpEL).
The RoutingSlipHeaderValueMessageProcessor
checks each Routing Slip path
entry against the BeanFactory
on the first processMessage
invocation.
It converts entries, which aren’t bean names in the application context, to ExpressionEvaluatingRoutingSlipRouteStrategy
instances.
RoutingSlipRouteStrategy
entries are invoked multiple times, until they return null, or an empty String.
Since the Routing Slip is involved in the getOutputChannel
process we have a request-reply context.
The RoutingSlipRouteStrategy
has been introduced to determine the next outputChannel
using the requestMessage
, as well as the reply
object.
An implementation of this strategy should be registered as a bean in the application context and its bean name is used in the Routing Slip path
.
The ExpressionEvaluatingRoutingSlipRouteStrategy
implementation is provided.
It accepts a SpEL expression, and an internal ExpressionEvaluatingRoutingSlipRouteStrategy.RequestAndReply
object is used as the root object of the evaluation context.
This is to avoid the overhead of EvaluationContext
creation for each ExpressionEvaluatingRoutingSlipRouteStrategy.getNextPath()
invocation.
It is a simple Java Bean with two properties - Message<?> request
and Object reply
.
With this expression implementation, we can specify Routing Slip path
entries using SpEL (@routingSlipRoutingPojo.get(request, reply)
, request.headers[myRoutingSlipChannel]
) avoiding a bean definition for the RoutingSlipRouteStrategy
.
Note | |
---|---|
The |
Important | |
---|---|
If a Routing Slip is involved in a distributed environment - cross-JVM application, |
For Java configuration, simply add a RoutingSlipHeaderValueMessageProcessor
instance to the HeaderEnricher
bean definition:
@Bean @Transformer(inputChannel = "routingSlipHeaderChannel") public HeaderEnricher headerEnricher() { return new HeaderEnricher(Collections.singletonMap(IntegrationMessageHeaderAccessor.ROUTING_SLIP, new RoutingSlipHeaderValueMessageProcessor("myRoutePath1", "@routingSlipRoutingPojo.get(request, reply)", "routingSlipRoutingStrategy", "request.headers[myRoutingSlipChannel]", "finishChannel"))); }
The Routing Slip algorithm works as follows when an endpoint produces a reply and there is no outputChannel
defined:
routingSlipIndex
is used to get a value from the Routing Slip path
list.
routingSlipIndex
is String
, it is used to get a bean from BeanFactory
.
MessageChannel
, it is used as the next outputChannel
and the routingSlipIndex
is incremented in the reply message header (the Routing Slip path
entries remain unchanged).
RoutingSlipRouteStrategy
and its getNextPath
doesn’t return an empty String, that result is used a bean name for the next outputChannel
.
The routingSlipIndex
remains unchanged.
RoutingSlipRouteStrategy.getNextPath
returns an empty String, the routingSlipIndex
is incremented and the getOutputChannelFromRoutingSlip
is invoked recursively for the next Routing Slip path
item;
path
entry isn’t a String it must be an instance of RoutingSlipRouteStrategy
;
routingSlipIndex
exceeds the size of the Routing Slip path
list, the algorithm moves to the default behavior for the standard replyChannel
header.
The EIP also defines the Process Manager pattern.
This pattern can now easily be implemented using custom Process Manager logic encapsulated in a RoutingSlipRouteStrategy
within the routing slip.
In addition to a bean name, the RoutingSlipRouteStrategy
can return any MessageChannel
object; and there is no requirement that this MessageChannel
instance is a bean in the application context.
This way, we can provide powerful dynamic routing logic, when there is no prediction which channel should be used; a MessageChannel
can be created within the RoutingSlipRouteStrategy
and returned.
A FixedSubscriberChannel
with an associated MessageHandler
implementation is good combination for such cases.
For example we can route to a Reactor Stream:
@Bean public PollableChannel resultsChannel() { return new QueueChannel(); } @Bean public RoutingSlipRouteStrategy routeStrategy() { return (requestMessage, reply) -> requestMessage.getPayload() instanceof String ? new FixedSubscriberChannel(m -> Mono.just((String) m.getPayload()) .map(String::toUpperCase) .subscribe(v -> messagingTemplate().convertAndSend(resultsChannel(), v))) : new FixedSubscriberChannel(m -> Mono.just((Integer) m.getPayload()) .map(v -> v * 2) .subscribe(v -> messagingTemplate().convertAndSend(resultsChannel(), v))); }
Message Filters are used to decide whether a Message should be passed along or dropped based on some criteria such as a Message Header value or Message content itself. Therefore, a Message Filter is similar to a router, except that for each Message received from the filter’s input channel, that same Message may or may not be sent to the filter’s output channel. Unlike the router, it makes no decision regarding which Message Channel to send the Message to but only decides whether to send.
Note | |
---|---|
As you will see momentarily, the Filter also supports a discard channel, so in certain cases it can play the role of a very simple router (or "switch") based on a boolean condition. |
In Spring Integration, a Message Filter may be configured as a Message Endpoint that delegates to an implementation of the MessageSelector
interface.
That interface is itself quite simple:
public interface MessageSelector { boolean accept(Message<?> message); }
The MessageFilter
constructor accepts a selector instance:
MessageFilter filter = new MessageFilter(someSelector);
In combination with the namespace and SpEL, very powerful filters can be configured with very little java code.
The <filter> element is used to create a Message-selecting endpoint.
In addition to input-channel
and output-channel
attributes, it requires a ref
.
The ref
may point to a MessageSelector
implementation:
<int:filter input-channel="input" ref="selector" output-channel="output"/> <bean id="selector" class="example.MessageSelectorImpl"/>
Alternatively, the method
attribute can be added at which point the ref
may refer to any object.
The referenced method may expect either the Message
type or the payload type of inbound Messages.
The method must return a boolean value.
If the method returns true, the Message will be sent to the output-channel.
<int:filter input-channel="input" output-channel="output" ref="exampleObject" method="someBooleanReturningMethod"/> <bean id="exampleObject" class="example.SomeObject"/>
If the selector or adapted POJO method returns false
, there are a few settings that control the handling of the rejected Message.
By default (if configured like the example above), rejected Messages will be silently dropped.
If rejection should instead result in an error condition, then set the throw-exception-on-rejection
attribute to true
:
<int:filter input-channel="input" ref="selector" output-channel="output" throw-exception-on-rejection="true"/>
If you want rejected messages to be routed to a specific channel, provide that reference as the discard-channel
:
<int:filter input-channel="input" ref="selector" output-channel="output" discard-channel="rejectedMessages"/>
Also see Section 8.9.7, “Advising Filters”.
Note | |
---|---|
Message Filters are commonly used in conjunction with a Publish Subscribe Channel. Many filter endpoints may be subscribed to the same channel, and they decide whether or not to pass the Message to the next endpoint which could be any of the supported types (e.g. Service Activator). This provides a reactive alternative to the more proactive approach of using a Message Router with a single Point-to-Point input channel and multiple output channels. |
Using a ref
attribute is generally recommended if the custom filter implementation is referenced in other <filter>
definitions.
However if the custom filter implementation is scoped to a single <filter>
element, provide an inner bean definition:
<int:filter method="someMethod" input-channel="inChannel" output-channel="outChannel"> <beans:bean class="org.foo.MyCustomFilter"/> </filter>
Note | |
---|---|
Using both the |
Important | |
---|---|
If the "ref" attribute references a bean that extends |
With the introduction of SpEL support, Spring Integration added the expression
attribute to the filter element.
It can be used to avoid Java entirely for simple filters.
<int:filter input-channel="input" expression="payload.equals('nonsense')"/>
The string passed as the expression attribute will be evaluated as a SpEL expression with the Message available in the evaluation context. If it is necessary to include the result of an expression in the scope of the application context you can use the #{} notation as defined in the SpEL reference documentation.
<int:filter input-channel="input" expression="payload.matches(#{filterPatterns.nonsensePattern})"/>
If the Expression itself needs to be dynamic, then an expression sub-element may be used. That provides a level of indirection for resolving the Expression by its key from an ExpressionSource. That is a strategy interface that you can implement directly, or you can rely upon a version available in Spring Integration that loads Expressions from a "resource bundle" and can check for modifications after a given number of seconds. All of this is demonstrated in the following configuration sample where the Expression could be reloaded within one minute if the underlying file had been modified. If the ExpressionSource bean is named "expressionSource", then it is not necessary to provide the` source` attribute on the <expression> element, but in this case it’s shown for completeness.
<int:filter input-channel="input" output-channel="output"> <int:expression key="filterPatterns.example" source="myExpressions"/> </int:filter> <beans:bean id="myExpressions" id="myExpressions" class="o.s.i.expression.ReloadableResourceBundleExpressionSource"> <beans:property name="basename" value="config/integration/expressions"/> <beans:property name="cacheSeconds" value="60"/> </beans:bean>
Then, the config/integration/expressions.properties file (or any more specific version with a locale extension to be resolved in the typical way that resource-bundles are loaded) would contain a key/value pair:
filterPatterns.example=payload > 100
Note | |
---|---|
All of these examples that use |
A filter configured using annotations would look like this.
public class PetFilter { ... @Filter public boolean dogsOnly(String input) { ... } }
An annotation indicating that this method shall be used as a filter. Must be specified if this class will be used as a filter. |
All of the configuration options provided by the xml element are also available for the @Filter
annotation.
The filter can be either referenced explicitly from XML or, if the @MessageEndpoint
annotation is defined on the class, detected automatically through classpath scanning.
Also see Section 8.9.8, “Advising Endpoints Using Annotations”.
The Splitter is a component whose role is to partition a message in several parts, and send the resulting messages to be processed independently. Very often, they are upstream producers in a pipeline that includes an Aggregator.
The API for performing splitting consists of one base class, AbstractMessageSplitter
, which is a MessageHandler
implementation, encapsulating features which are common to splitters, such as filling in the appropriate message headers CORRELATION_ID
, SEQUENCE_SIZE
, and SEQUENCE_NUMBER
on the messages that are produced.
This enables tracking down the messages and the results of their processing (in a typical scenario, these headers would be copied over to the messages that are produced by the various transforming endpoints), and use them, for example, in a Composed Message Processor scenario.
An excerpt from AbstractMessageSplitter
can be seen below:
public abstract class AbstractMessageSplitter extends AbstractReplyProducingMessageConsumer { ... protected abstract Object splitMessage(Message<?> message); }
To implement a specific Splitter in an application, extend AbstractMessageSplitter
and implement the splitMessage
method, which contains logic for splitting the messages.
The return value may be one of the following:
Collection
or an array of Messages, or an Iterable
(or Iterator
) that iterates over Messages - in this case the messages will be sent as such (after the CORRELATION_ID
, SEQUENCE_SIZE
and SEQUENCE_NUMBER
are populated).
Using this approach gives more control to the developer, for example for populating custom message headers as part of the splitting process.
Collection
or an array of non-Message objects, or an Iterable
(or Iterator
) that iterates over non-Message objects - works like the prior case, except that each collection element will be used as a Message payload.
Using this approach allows developers to focus on the domain objects without having to consider the Messaging system and produces code that is easier to test.
Message
or non-Message object (but not a Collection or an Array) - it works like the previous cases, except a single message will be sent out.
In Spring Integration, any POJO can implement the splitting algorithm, provided that it defines a method that accepts a single argument and has a return value.
In this case, the return value of the method will be interpreted as described above.
The input argument might either be a Message
or a simple POJO.
In the latter case, the splitter will receive the payload of the incoming message.
Since this decouples the code from the Spring Integration API and will typically be easier to test, it is the recommended approach.
Iterators
Starting with version 4.1, the AbstractMessageSplitter
supports the Iterator
type for the value
to split.
Note, in the case of an Iterator
(or Iterable
), we don’t have access to the number of underlying items and the SEQUENCE_SIZE
header is set to 0
.
This means that the default SequenceSizeReleaseStrategy
of an <aggregator>
won’t work and the group for the CORRELATION_ID
from the splitter
won’t be released; it will remain as incomplete
.
In this case you should use an appropriate custom ReleaseStrategy
or rely on send-partial-result-on-expiry
together with group-timeout
or a MessageGroupStoreReaper
.
Starting with version 5.0, the AbstractMessageSplitter
provides protected obtainSizeIfPossible()
methods to allow the determination of the size of the Iterable
and Iterator
objects if that is possible.
For example XPathMessageSplitter
can determine the size of the underlying NodeList
object.
An Iterator
object is useful to avoid the need for building an entire collection in the memory before splitting.
For example, when underlying items are populated from some external system (e.g.
DataBase or FTP MGET
) using iterations or streams.
Stream and Flux
Starting with version 5.0, the AbstractMessageSplitter
supports the Java Stream
and Reactive Streams Publisher
types for the value
to split.
In this case the target Iterator
is built on their iteration functionality.
In addition, if Splitter’s output channel is an instance of a ReactiveStreamsSubscribableChannel
, the AbstractMessageSplitter
produces a Flux
result instead of an Iterator
and the output channel is subscribed to this Flux
for back-pressure based splitting on downstream flow demand.
A splitter can be configured through XML as follows:
<int:channel id="inputChannel"/> <int:splitter id="splitter" ref="splitterBean" method="split" input-channel="inputChannel" output-channel="outputChannel" /> <int:channel id="outputChannel"/> <beans:bean id="splitterBean" class="sample.PojoSplitter"/>
The id of the splitter is optional. | |
A reference to a bean defined in the application context.
The bean must implement the splitting logic as described in the section above .Optional.
If reference to a bean is not provided, then it is assumed that the payload of the Message that arrived on the | |
The method (defined on the bean specified above) that implements the splitting logic.Optional. | |
The input channel of the splitter. Required. | |
The channel to which the splitter will send the results of splitting the incoming message. Optional (because incoming messages can specify a reply channel themselves). |
Using a ref
attribute is generally recommended if the custom splitter implementation may be referenced in other <splitter>
definitions.
However if the custom splitter handler implementation should be scoped to a single definition of the <splitter>
, configure an inner bean definition:
<int:splitter id="testSplitter" input-channel="inChannel" method="split" output-channel="outChannel"> <beans:bean class="org.foo.TestSplitter"/> </int:splitter>
Note | |
---|---|
Using both a |
Important | |
---|---|
If the "ref" attribute references a bean that extends |
The @Splitter
annotation is applicable to methods that expect either the Message
type or the message payload type, and the return values of the method should be a Collection
of any type.
If the returned values are not actual Message
objects, then each item will be wrapped in a Message as its payload.
Each message will be sent to the designated output channel for the endpoint on which the @Splitter
is defined.
@Splitter List<LineItem> extractItems(Order order) { return order.getItems() }
Also see Section 8.9.8, “Advising Endpoints Using Annotations”.
Also see Section 9.10, “Splitters” in Java DSL chapter.
Basically a mirror-image of the Splitter, the Aggregator is a type of Message Handler that receives multiple Messages and combines them into a single Message. In fact, an Aggregator is often a downstream consumer in a pipeline that includes a Splitter.
Technically, the Aggregator is more complex than a Splitter, because it is stateful as it must hold the Messages to be aggregated and determine when the complete group of Messages is ready to be aggregated.
In order to do this it requires a MessageStore
.
The Aggregator combines a group of related messages, by correlating and storing them, until the group is deemed complete. At that point, the Aggregator will create a single message by processing the whole group, and will send the aggregated message as output.
Implementing an Aggregator requires providing the logic to perform the aggregation (i.e., the creation of a single message from many). Two related concepts are correlation and release.
Correlation determines how messages are grouped for aggregation.
In Spring Integration correlation is done by default based on the IntegrationMessageHeaderAccessor.CORRELATION_ID
message header.
Messages with the same IntegrationMessageHeaderAccessor.CORRELATION_ID
will be grouped together.
However, the correlation strategy may be customized to allow other ways of specifying how the messages should be grouped together by implementing a CorrelationStrategy
(see below).
To determine the point at which a group of messages is ready to be processed, a ReleaseStrategy
is consulted.
The default release strategy for the Aggregator will release a group when all messages included in a sequence are present, based on the IntegrationMessageHeaderAccessor.SEQUENCE_SIZE
header.
This default strategy may be overridden by providing a reference to a custom ReleaseStrategy
implementation.
The Aggregation API consists of a number of classes:
MessageGroupProcessor
, and its subclasses: MethodInvokingAggregatingMessageGroupProcessor
and ExpressionEvaluatingMessageGroupProcessor
ReleaseStrategy
interface and its default implementation SimpleSequenceSizeReleaseStrategy
CorrelationStrategy
interface and its default implementation HeaderAttributeCorrelationStrategy
The AggregatingMessageHandler
(subclass of AbstractCorrelatingMessageHandler
) is a MessageHandler
implementation, encapsulating the common functionalities of an Aggregator (and other correlating use cases), which are:
MessageStore
until the group can be released
The responsibility of deciding how the messages should be grouped together is delegated to a CorrelationStrategy
instance.
The responsibility of deciding whether the message group can be released is delegated to a ReleaseStrategy
instance.
Here is a brief highlight of the base AbstractAggregatingMessageGroupProcessor
(the responsibility of implementing the aggregatePayloads
method is left to the developer):
public abstract class AbstractAggregatingMessageGroupProcessor implements MessageGroupProcessor { protected Map<String, Object> aggregateHeaders(MessageGroup group) { // default implementation exists } protected abstract Object aggregatePayloads(MessageGroup group, Map<String, Object> defaultHeaders); }
The CorrelationStrategy
is owned by the AbstractCorrelatingMessageHandler
and it has a default value based on the IntegrationMessageHeaderAccessor.CORRELATION_ID
message header:
public AbstractCorrelatingMessageHandler(MessageGroupProcessor processor, MessageGroupStore store, CorrelationStrategy correlationStrategy, ReleaseStrategy releaseStrategy) { ... this.correlationStrategy = correlationStrategy == null ? new HeaderAttributeCorrelationStrategy(IntegrationMessageHeaderAccessor.CORRELATION_ID) : correlationStrategy; this.releaseStrategy = releaseStrategy == null ? new SimpleSequenceSizeReleaseStrategy() : releaseStrategy; ... }
As for actual processing of the message group, the default implementation is the DefaultAggregatingMessageGroupProcessor
.
It creates a single Message whose payload is a List of the payloads received for a given group.
This works well for simple Scatter Gather implementations with either a Splitter, Publish Subscribe Channel, or Recipient List Router upstream.
Note | |
---|---|
When using a Publish Subscribe Channel or Recipient List Router in this type of scenario, be sure to enable the flag to |
When implementing a specific aggregator strategy for an application, a developer can extend AbstractAggregatingMessageGroupProcessor
and implement the aggregatePayloads
method.
However, there are better solutions, less coupled to the API, for implementing the aggregation logic which can be configured easily either through XML or through annotations.
In general, any POJO can implement the aggregation algorithm if it provides a method that accepts a single java.util.List
as an argument (parameterized lists are supported as well).
This method will be invoked for aggregating messages as follows:
java.util.Collection<T>
, and the parameter type T is assignable to Message
,
then the whole list of messages accumulated for aggregation will be sent to the aggregator
java.util.Collection
or the parameter type is not assignable to Message
,
then the method will receive the payloads of the accumulated messages
Message
, then it will be treated as the payload for a Message that will be created automatically by the framework.
Note | |
---|---|
In the interest of code simplicity, and promoting best practices such as low coupling, testability, etc., the preferred way of implementing the aggregation logic is through a POJO, and using the XML or annotation support for configuring it in the application. |
If the MessageGroupProcessor
's processMessageGroup
method returns a collection, it must be a collection of
Message<?>
s.
In this case, the messages are released individually.
Prior to version 4.2, it was not possible to provide a MessageGroupProcessor
using XML configuration, only POJO
methods could be used for aggregation.
Now, if the framework detects that the referenced (or inner) bean implements MessageProcessor
, it is used as the
aggregator’s output processor.
If you wish to release a collection of objects from a custom MessageGroupProcessor
as the payload of a message, your
class should extend AbstractAggregatingMessageGroupProcessor
and implement aggregatePayloads()
.
Also, since version 4.2, a SimpleMessageGroupProcessor
is provided; which simply returns the collection of
messages from the group, which, as indicated above, causes the released messages to be sent individually.
This allows the aggregator to work as a message barrier where arriving messages are held until the release strategy fires, and the group is released, as a sequence of individual messages.
The ReleaseStrategy
interface is defined as follows:
public interface ReleaseStrategy { boolean canRelease(MessageGroup group); }
In general, any POJO can implement the completion decision logic if it provides a method that accepts a single java.util.List
as an argument (parameterized lists are supported as well), and returns a boolean value.
This method will be invoked after the arrival of each new message, to decide whether the group is complete or not, as follows:
java.util.List<T>
, and the parameter type T is assignable to Message
, then the whole list of messages accumulated in the group will be sent to the method
java.util.List
or the parameter type is not assignable to Message
, then the method will receive the payloads of the accumulated messages
For example:
public class MyReleaseStrategy { @ReleaseStrategy public boolean canMessagesBeReleased(List<Message<?>>) {...} }
public class MyReleaseStrategy { @ReleaseStrategy public boolean canMessagesBeReleased(List<String>) {...} }
As you can see based on the above signatures, the POJO-based Release Strategy will be passed a Collection
of not-yet-released Messages (if you need access to the whole Message
) or a Collection
of payload objects (if the type parameter is anything other than Message
).
Typically this would satisfy the majority of use cases.
However if, for some reason, you need to access the full MessageGroup
then you should simply provide an implementation of the ReleaseStrategy
interface.
Warning | |
---|---|
When handling potentially large groups, it is important to understand how these methods are invoked because the release strategy may be invoked multiple times before the group is released.
The most efficient is an implementation of For these reasons, for large groups, it is recommended that you implement |
When the group is released for aggregation, all its not-yet-released messages are processed and removed from the group.
If the group is also complete (i.e.
if all messages from a sequence have arrived or if there is no sequence defined), then the group is marked as complete.
Any new messages for this group will be sent to the discard channel (if defined).
Setting expire-groups-upon-completion
to true
(default is false
) removes the entire group and any new messages, with the same correlation id as the removed group, will form a new group.
Partial sequences can be released by using a MessageGroupStoreReaper
together with send-partial-result-on-expiry
being set to true
.
Important | |
---|---|
To facilitate discarding of late-arriving messages, the aggregator must maintain state about the group after it has been released.
This can eventually cause out of memory conditions.
To avoid such situations, you should consider configuring a |
Spring Integration provides an out-of-the box implementation for ReleaseStrategy
, the SimpleSequenceSizeReleaseStrategy
.
This implementation consults the SEQUENCE_NUMBER
and SEQUENCE_SIZE
headers of each arriving message to decide when a message group is complete and ready to be aggregated.
As shown above, it is also the default strategy.
Note | |
---|---|
Before version 5.0, the default release strategy was |
If you are aggregating large groups, you don’t need to release partial groups, and you don’t need to detect/reject duplicate sequences, consider using the SimpleSequenceSizeReleaseStrategy
instead - it is much more efficient for these use cases, and is the default since version 5.0 when partial group release is not specified.
The 4.3 release changed the default Collection
for messages in a SimpleMessageGroup
to HashSet
(it was previously a BlockingQueue
).
This was expensive when removing individual messages from large groups (an O(n) linear scan was required).
Although the hash set is generally much faster for removing, it can be expensive for large messages because the hash has to be calculated (on both inserts and removes).
If you have messages that are expensive to hash, consider using some other collection type.
As discussed in Section 10.4.1, “MessageGroupFactory”, a SimpleMessageGroupFactory
is provided so you can select the Collection
that best suits your needs.
You can also provide your own factory implementation to create some other Collection<Message<?>>
.
Here is an example of how to configure an aggregator with the previous implementation and a SimpleSequenceSizeReleaseStrategy
.
<int:aggregator input-channel="aggregate" output-channel="out" message-store="store" release-strategy="releaser" /> <bean id="store" class="org.springframework.integration.store.SimpleMessageStore"> <property name="messageGroupFactory"> <bean class="org.springframework.integration.store.SimpleMessageGroupFactory"> <constructor-arg value="BLOCKING_QUEUE"/> </bean> </property> </bean> <bean id="releaser" class="SimpleSequenceSizeReleaseStrategy" />
The CorrelationStrategy
interface is defined as follows:
public interface CorrelationStrategy { Object getCorrelationKey(Message<?> message); }
The method returns an Object which represents the correlation key used for associating the message with a message group.
The key must satisfy the criteria used for a key in a Map with respect to the implementation of equals()
and hashCode()
.
In general, any POJO can implement the correlation logic, and the rules for mapping a message to a method’s argument (or arguments) are the same as for a ServiceActivator
(including support for @Header annotations).
The method must return a value, and the value must not be null
.
Spring Integration provides an out-of-the box implementation for CorrelationStrategy
, the HeaderAttributeCorrelationStrategy
.
This implementation returns the value of one of the message headers (whose name is specified by a constructor argument) as the correlation key.
By default, the correlation strategy is a HeaderAttributeCorrelationStrategy
returning the value of the CORRELATION_ID
header attribute.
If you have a custom header name you would like to use for correlation, then simply configure that on an instance of HeaderAttributeCorrelationStrategy
and provide that as a reference for the Aggregator’s correlation-strategy.
Changes to groups are thread safe; a LockRegistry
is used to obtain a lock for the resolved correlation id.
A DefaultLockRegistry
is used by default (in-memory).
For synchronizing updates across servers, where a shared MessageGroupStore
is being used, a shared lock registry
must be configured.
See Section 6.4.4, “Configuring an Aggregator” below for more information.
See Section 9.11, “Aggregators and Resequencers” for configuring an Aggregator in Java DSL.
Spring Integration supports the configuration of an aggregator via XML through the <aggregator/>
element.
Below you can see an example of an aggregator.
<channel id="inputChannel"/> <int:aggregator id="myAggregator" auto-startup="true" input-channel="inputChannel" output-channel="outputChannel" discard-channel="throwAwayChannel" message-store="persistentMessageStore" order="1" send-partial-result-on-expiry="false" send-timeout="1000" correlation-strategy="correlationStrategyBean" correlation-strategy-method="correlate" correlation-strategy-expression="headers['foo']" ref="aggregatorBean" method="aggregate" release-strategy="releaseStrategyBean" release-strategy-method="release" (16) release-strategy-expression="size() == 5" (17) expire-groups-upon-completion="false" (18) empty-group-min-timeout="60000" (19) lock-registry="lockRegistry" (20) group-timeout="60000" (21) group-timeout-expression="size() ge 2 ? 100 : -1" (22) expire-groups-upon-timeout="true" (23) scheduler="taskScheduler" > (24) <expire-transactional/> (25) <expire-advice-chain/> (26) </aggregator> <int:channel id="outputChannel"/> <int:channel id="throwAwayChannel"/> <bean id="persistentMessageStore" class="org.springframework.integration.jdbc.store.JdbcMessageStore"> <constructor-arg ref="dataSource"/> </bean> <bean id="aggregatorBean" class="sample.PojoAggregator"/> <bean id="releaseStrategyBean" class="sample.PojoReleaseStrategy"/> <bean id="correlationStrategyBean" class="sample.PojoCorrelationStrategy"/>
The id of the aggregator is Optional. | |
Lifecycle attribute signaling if aggregator should be started during Application Context startup. Optional (default is true). | |
The channel from which where aggregator will receive messages. Required. | |
The channel to which the aggregator will send the aggregation results. Optional (because incoming messages can specify a reply channel themselves via replyChannel Message Header). | |
The channel to which the aggregator will send the messages that timed out (if | |
A reference to a | |
Order of this aggregator when more than one handle is subscribed to the same DirectChannel (use for load balancing purposes). Optional. | |
Indicates that expired messages should be aggregated and sent to the output-channel or replyChannel once their containing | |
The timeout interval to wait when sending a reply | |
A reference to a bean that implements the message correlation (grouping) algorithm.
The bean can be an implementation of the | |
A method defined on the bean referenced by | |
A SpEL expression representing the correlation strategy.
Example: | |
A reference to a bean defined in the application context. The bean must implement the aggregation logic as described above. Optional (by default the list of aggregated Messages will become a payload of the output message). | |
A method defined on the bean referenced by | |
A reference to a bean that implements the release strategy.
The bean can be an implementation of the | |
A method defined on the bean referenced by | |
A SpEL expression representing the release strategy; the root object for the expression is a | |
When set to true (default false), completed groups are removed from the message store, allowing subsequent messages with the same correlation to form a new group. The default behavior is to send messages with the same correlation as a completed group to the discard-channel. | |
Only applies if a | |
A reference to a | |
A timeout in milliseconds to force the | |
The SpEL expression that evaluates to a | |
When a group is completed due to a timeout (or by a | |
A | |
Since version 4.1.
Allows a transaction to be started for the | |
Since version 4.1.
Allows the configuration of any |
Expiring Groups | |||
---|---|---|---|
There are two attributes related to expiring (completely removing) groups.
When a group is expired, there is no record of it and if a new message arrives with the same correlation, a new group is started.
When a group is completed (without expiry), the empty group remains and late arriving messages are discarded.
Empty groups can be removed later using a
If a group is not completed normally, but is released or discarded because of a timeout, the group is normally expired.
Since version 4.1, you can now control this behavior using
Starting with version 5.0 empty groups are also scheduled for removal after |
Using a ref
attribute is generally recommended if a custom aggregator handler implementation may be referenced in other <aggregator>
definitions.
However if a custom aggregator implementation is only being used by a single definition of the <aggregator>
, you can use an inner bean definition (starting with version 1.0.3) to configure the aggregation POJO within the <aggregator>
element:
<aggregator input-channel="input" method="sum" output-channel="output"> <beans:bean class="org.foo.PojoAggregator"/> </aggregator>
Note | |
---|---|
Using both a |
An example implementation of the aggregator bean looks as follows:
public class PojoAggregator { public Long add(List<Long> results) { long total = 0l; for (long partialResult: results) { total += partialResult; } return total; } }
An implementation of the completion strategy bean for the example above may be as follows:
public class PojoReleaseStrategy { ... public boolean canRelease(List<Long> numbers) { int sum = 0; for (long number: numbers) { sum += number; } return sum >= maxValue; } }
Note | |
---|---|
Wherever it makes sense, the release strategy method and the aggregator method can be combined in a single bean. |
An implementation of the correlation strategy bean for the example above may be as follows:
public class PojoCorrelationStrategy { ... public Long groupNumbersByLastDigit(Long number) { return number % 10; } }
For example, this aggregator would group numbers by some criterion (in our case the remainder after dividing by 10) and will hold the group until the sum of the numbers provided by the payloads exceeds a certain value.
Note | |
---|---|
Wherever it makes sense, the release strategy method, correlation strategy method and the aggregator method can be combined in a single bean (all of them or any two). |
Since Spring Integration 2.0, the various strategies (correlation, release, and aggregation) may be handled with SpEL which is recommended if the logic behind such release strategy is relatively simple. Let’s say you have a legacy component that was designed to receive an array of objects. We know that the default release strategy will assemble all aggregated messages in the List. So now we have two problems. First we need to extract individual messages from the list, and then we need to extract the payload of each message and assemble the array of objects (see code below).
public String[] processRelease(List<Message<String>> messages){ List<String> stringList = new ArrayList<String>(); for (Message<String> message : messages) { stringList.add(message.getPayload()); } return stringList.toArray(new String[]{}); }
However, with SpEL such a requirement could actually be handled relatively easily with a one-line expression, thus sparing you from writing a custom class and configuring it as a bean.
<int:aggregator input-channel="aggChannel" output-channel="replyChannel" expression="#this.![payload].toArray()"/>
In the above configuration we are using a Collection Projection expression to assemble a new collection from the payloads of all messages in the list and then transforming it to an Array, thus achieving the same result as the java code above.
The same expression-based approach can be applied when dealing with custom Release and Correlation strategies.
Instead of defining a bean for a custom CorrelationStrategy
via the correlation-strategy
attribute, you can implement your simple correlation logic via a SpEL expression and configure it via the correlation-strategy-expression
attribute.
For example:
correlation-strategy-expression="payload.person.id"
In the above example it is assumed that the payload has an attribute person
with an id
which is going to be used to correlate messages.
Likewise, for the ReleaseStrategy
you can implement your release logic as a SpEL expression and configure it via the release-strategy-expression
attribute.
The root object for evaluation context is the MessageGroup
itself.
The List of messages can be referenced using the message
property of the group within the expression.
Note | |
---|---|
In releases prior to version 5.0, the root object was the collection of |
For example:
release-strategy-expression="!messages.?[payload==5].empty"
In this example the root object of the SpEL Evaluation Context is the MessageGroup
itself, and you are simply stating that as soon as there are a message with payload as 5
in this group, it should be released.
Starting with version 4.0, two new mutually exclusive attributes have been introduced: group-timeout
and group-timeout-expression
(see the description above).
There are some cases where it is needed to emit the aggregator result (or discard the group) after a timeout if the ReleaseStrategy
doesn’t release when the current Message arrives.
For this purpose the groupTimeout
option allows scheduling the MessageGroup
to be forced complete:
<aggregator input-channel="input" output-channel="output" send-partial-result-on-expiry="true" group-timeout-expression="size() ge 2 ? 10000 : -1" release-strategy-expression="messages[0].headers.sequenceNumber == messages[0].headers.sequenceSize"/>
With this example, the normal release will be possible if the aggregator receives the last message in sequence as defined by the release-strategy-expression
.
If that specific message does not arrive, the groupTimeout
will force the group complete after 10 seconds as long as the group contains at least 2 Messages.
The results of forcing the group complete depends on the ReleaseStrategy
and the send-partial-result-on-expiry
.
First, the release strategy is again consulted to see if a normal release is to be made - while the group won’t have changed, the ReleaseStrategy
can decide to release the group at this time.
If the release strategy still does not release the group, it will be expired.
If send-partial-result-on-expiry
is true
, existing messages in the (partial) MessageGroup
will be released as a normal aggregator reply Message to the output-channel
, otherwise it will be discarded.
There is a difference between groupTimeout
behavior and MessageGroupStoreReaper
(see Section 6.4.4, “Configuring an Aggregator”).
The reaper initiates forced completion for all MessageGroup
s in the MessageGroupStore
periodically.
The groupTimeout
does it for each MessageGroup
individually, if a new Message doesn’t arrive during the groupTimeout
.
Also, the reaper can be used to remove empty groups (empty groups are retained in order to discard late messages, if expire-groups-upon-completion
is false).
An aggregator configured using annotations would look like this.
public class Waiter { ... @Aggregator public Delivery aggregatingMethod(List<OrderItem> items) { ... } @ReleaseStrategy public boolean releaseChecker(List<Message<?>> messages) { ... } @CorrelationStrategy public String correlateBy(OrderItem item) { ... } }
An annotation indicating that this method shall be used as an aggregator. Must be specified if this class will be used as an aggregator. | |
An annotation indicating that this method shall be used as the release strategy of an aggregator.
If not present on any method, the aggregator will use the | |
An annotation indicating that this method shall be used as the correlation strategy of an aggregator.
If no correlation strategy is indicated, the aggregator will use the |
All of the configuration options provided by the xml element are also available for the @Aggregator
annotation.
The aggregator can be either referenced explicitly from XML or, if the @MessageEndpoint
is defined on the class, detected automatically through classpath scanning.
Annotation configuration (@Aggregator
and others) for the Aggregator component covers only simple use cases,
where most default options are sufficient.
If you need more control over those options using Annotation configuration, consider using
a @Bean
definition for the AggregatingMessageHandler
and mark its
@Bean
method with @ServiceActivator
:
@ServiceActivator(inputChannel = "aggregatorChannel") @Bean public MessageHandler aggregator(MessageGroupStore jdbcMessageGroupStore) { AggregatingMessageHandler aggregator = new AggregatingMessageHandler(new DefaultAggregatingMessageGroupProcessor(), jdbcMessageGroupStore); aggregator.setOutputChannel(resultsChannel()); aggregator.setGroupTimeoutExpression(new ValueExpression<>(500L)); aggregator.setTaskScheduler(this.taskScheduler); return aggregator; }
See Section 6.4.3, “Programming model” and Section E.6.2, “Annotations on @Beans” for more information.
Note | |
---|---|
Starting with the version 4.2 the |
Aggregator (and some other patterns in Spring Integration) is a stateful pattern that requires decisions to be made based on a group of messages that have arrived over a period of time, all with the same correlation key.
The design of the interfaces in the stateful patterns (e.g.
ReleaseStrategy
) is driven by the principle that the components (whether defined by the framework or a user) should be able to remain stateless.
All state is carried by the MessageGroup
and its management is delegated to the MessageGroupStore
.
public interface MessageGroupStore { int getMessageCountForAllMessageGroups(); int getMarkedMessageCountForAllMessageGroups(); int getMessageGroupCount(); MessageGroup getMessageGroup(Object groupId); MessageGroup addMessageToGroup(Object groupId, Message<?> message); MessageGroup markMessageGroup(MessageGroup group); MessageGroup removeMessageFromGroup(Object key, Message<?> messageToRemove); MessageGroup markMessageFromGroup(Object key, Message<?> messageToMark); void removeMessageGroup(Object groupId); void registerMessageGroupExpiryCallback(MessageGroupCallback callback); int expireMessageGroups(long timeout); }
For more information please refer to the JavaDoc.
The MessageGroupStore
accumulates state information in MessageGroups
while waiting for a release strategy to be triggered, and that event might not ever happen.
So to prevent stale messages from lingering, and for volatile stores to provide a hook for cleaning up when the application shuts down, the MessageGroupStore
allows the user to register callbacks to apply to its MessageGroups
when they expire.
The interface is very straightforward:
public interface MessageGroupCallback { void execute(MessageGroupStore messageGroupStore, MessageGroup group); }
The callback has direct access to the store and the message group so it can manage the persistent state (e.g. by removing the group from the store entirely).
The MessageGroupStore
maintains a list of these callbacks which it applies, on demand, to all messages whose timestamp is earlier than a time supplied as a parameter (see the registerMessageGroupExpiryCallback(..)
and expireMessageGroups(..)
methods above).
The expireMessageGroups
method can be called with a timeout value.
Any message older than the current time minus this value will be expired, and have the callbacks applied.
Thus it is the user of the store that defines what is meant by message group "expiry".
As a convenience for users, Spring Integration provides a wrapper for the message expiry in the form of a MessageGroupStoreReaper
:
<bean id="reaper" class="org...MessageGroupStoreReaper"> <property name="messageGroupStore" ref="messageStore"/> <property name="timeout" value="30000"/> </bean> <task:scheduled-tasks scheduler="scheduler"> <task:scheduled ref="reaper" method="run" fixed-rate="10000"/> </task:scheduled-tasks>
The reaper is a Runnable
, and all that is happening in the example above is that the message group store’s expire method is being called once every 10 seconds.
The timeout itself is 30 seconds.
Note | |
---|---|
It is important to understand that the timeout property of the |
In addition to the reaper, the expiry callbacks are invoked when the application shuts down via a lifecycle callback in the AbstractCorrelatingMessageHandler
.
The AbstractCorrelatingMessageHandler
registers its own expiry callback, and this is the link with the boolean flag send-partial-result-on-expiry
in the XML configuration of the aggregator.
If the flag is set to true, then when the expiry callback is invoked, any unmarked messages in groups that are not yet released can be sent on to the output channel.
Important | |
---|---|
When a shared Some For more information about |
Related to the Aggregator, albeit different from a functional standpoint, is the Resequencer.
The Resequencer works in a similar way to the Aggregator, in the sense that it uses the CORRELATION_ID
to store messages in groups, the difference being that the Resequencer does not process the messages in any way.
It simply releases them in the order of their SEQUENCE_NUMBER
header values.
With respect to that, the user might opt to release all messages at once (after the whole sequence, according to the SEQUENCE_SIZE
, has been released), or as soon as a valid sequence is available.
Important | |
---|---|
The resequencer is intended to resequence relatively short sequences of messages with small gaps. If you have a large number of disjoint sequences with many gaps, you may experience performance issues. |
See Section 9.11, “Aggregators and Resequencers” for configuring a Resequencer in Java DSL.
Configuring a resequencer requires only including the appropriate element in XML.
A sample resequencer configuration is shown below.
<int:channel id="inputChannel"/> <int:channel id="outputChannel"/> <int:resequencer id="completelyDefinedResequencer" input-channel="inputChannel" output-channel="outputChannel" discard-channel="discardChannel" release-partial-sequences="true" message-store="messageStore" send-partial-result-on-expiry="true" send-timeout="86420000" correlation-strategy="correlationStrategyBean" correlation-strategy-method="correlate" correlation-strategy-expression="headers['foo']" release-strategy="releaseStrategyBean" release-strategy-method="release" release-strategy-expression="size() == 10" empty-group-min-timeout="60000" lock-registry="lockRegistry" (16) group-timeout="60000" (17) group-timeout-expression="size() ge 2 ? 100 : -1" (18) scheduler="taskScheduler" /> (19) expire-group-upon-timeout="false" /> (20)
The id of the resequencer is optional. | |
The input channel of the resequencer. Required. | |
The channel to which the resequencer will send the reordered messages. Optional. | |
The channel to which the resequencer will send the messages that timed out (if | |
Whether to send out ordered sequences as soon as they are available, or only after the whole message group arrives. Optional (false by default). | |
A reference to a | |
Whether, upon the expiration of the group, the ordered group should be sent out (even if some of the messages are missing). Optional (false by default). See Section 6.4.5, “Managing State in an Aggregator: MessageGroupStore”. | |
The timeout interval to wait when sending a reply | |
A reference to a bean that implements the message correlation (grouping) algorithm.
The bean can be an implementation of the | |
A method defined on the bean referenced by | |
A SpEL expression representing the correlation strategy.
Example: | |
A reference to a bean that implements the release strategy.
The bean can be an implementation of the | |
A method defined on the bean referenced by | |
A SpEL expression representing the release strategy; the root object for the expression is a | |
Only applies if a | |
See the section called “Configuring an Aggregator with XML”. | |
See the section called “Configuring an Aggregator with XML”. | |
See the section called “Configuring an Aggregator with XML”. | |
See the section called “Configuring an Aggregator with XML”. | |
When a group is completed due to a timeout (or by a |
Note | |
---|---|
Since there is no custom behavior to be implemented in Java classes for resequencers, there is no annotation support for it. |
The MessageHandlerChain
is an implementation of MessageHandler
that can be configured as a single Message Endpoint while actually delegating to a chain of other handlers, such as Filters, Transformers, Splitters, and so on.
This can lead to a much simpler configuration when several handlers need to be connected in a fixed, linear progression.
For example, it is fairly common to provide a Transformer before other components.
Similarly, when providing a Filter before some other component in a chain, you are essentially creating a Selective Consumer.
In either case, the chain only requires a single input-channel
and a single output-channel
eliminating the need to define channels for each individual component.
Tip | |
---|---|
Spring Integration’s |
The handler chain simplifies configuration while internally maintaining the same degree of loose coupling between components, and it is trivial to modify the configuration if at some point a non-linear arrangement is required.
Internally, the chain will be expanded into a linear setup of the listed endpoints, separated by anonymous channels. The reply channel header will not be taken into account within the chain: only after the last handler is invoked will the resulting message be forwarded on to the reply channel or the chain’s output channel. Because of this setup all handlers except the last required to implement the MessageProducer interface (which provides a setOutputChannel() method). The last handler only needs an output channel if the outputChannel on the MessageHandlerChain is set.
Note | |
---|---|
As with other endpoints, the |
In most cases there is no need to implement MessageHandlers yourself.
The next section will focus on namespace support for the chain element.
Most Spring Integration endpoints, like Service Activators and Transformers, are suitable for use within a MessageHandlerChain
.
The <chain> element provides an input-channel
attribute, and if the last element in the chain is capable of producing reply messages (optional), it also supports an output-channel
attribute.
The sub-elements are then filters, transformers, splitters, and service-activators.
The last element may also be a router or an outbound-channel-adapter.
<int:chain input-channel="input" output-channel="output"> <int:filter ref="someSelector" throw-exception-on-rejection="true"/> <int:header-enricher> <int:header name="foo" value="bar"/> </int:header-enricher> <int:service-activator ref="someService" method="someMethod"/> </int:chain>
The <header-enricher> element used in the above example will set a message header named "foo" with a value of "bar" on the message.
A header enricher is a specialization of Transformer
that touches only header values.
You could obtain the same result by implementing a MessageHandler that did the header modifications and wiring that as a bean, but the header-enricher is obviously a simpler option.
The <chain> can be configured as the last black-box consumer of the message flow. For this solution it is enough to put at the end of the <chain> some <outbound-channel-adapter>:
<int:chain input-channel="input"> <int-xml:marshalling-transformer marshaller="marshaller" result-type="StringResult" /> <int:service-activator ref="someService" method="someMethod"/> <int:header-enricher> <int:header name="foo" value="bar"/> </int:header-enricher> <int:logging-channel-adapter level="INFO" log-full-message="true"/> </int:chain>
Disallowed Attributes and Elements
It is important to note that certain attributes, such as order and input-channel are not allowed to be specified on components used within a chain. The same is true for the poller sub-element.
Important | |
---|---|
For the Spring Integration core components, the XML Schema itself will enforce some of these constraints. However, for non-core components or your own custom components, these constraints are enforced by the XML namespace parser, not by the XML Schema. These XML namespace parser constraints were added with Spring Integration 2.2.
The XML namespace parser will throw an |
'id' Attribute
Beginning with Spring Integration 3.0, if a chain element is given an id, the bean name for the element is a combination of the chain’s id and the id of the element itself.
Elements without an id are not registered as beans, but they are given componentName
s that include the chain id.
For example:
<int:chain id="fooChain" input-channel="input"> <int:service-activator id="fooService" ref="someService" method="someMethod"/> <int:object-to-json-transformer/> </int:chain>
<chain>
root element has an id fooChain.
So, the AbstractEndpoint
implementation (PollingConsumer
or EventDrivenConsumer
, depending on the input-channel type) bean takes this value as it’s bean name.
MessageHandlerChain
bean acquires a bean alias fooChain.handler, which allows direct access to this bean from the BeanFactory
.
<service-activator>
is not a fully-fledged Messaging Endpoint (PollingConsumer
or EventDrivenConsumer
) - it is simply a MessageHandler
within the <chain>
.
In this case, the bean name registered with the BeanFactory
is fooChain$child.fooService.handler.
ServiceActivatingHandler
takes the same value, but without the .handler suffix - fooChain$child.fooService.
<chain>
sub-component, <object-to-json-transformer>
, doesn’t have an id attribute.
Its componentName is based on its position in the <chain>
.
In this case, it is fooChain$child#1.
(The final element of the name is the order within the chain, beginning with #0).
Note, this transformer isn’t registered as a bean within the application context, so, it doesn’t get a beanName, however its componentName has a value which is useful for logging etc.
The id attribute for <chain>
elements allows them to be eligible for JMX export and they are trackable via Message History.
They can also be accessed from the BeanFactory
using the appropriate bean name as discussed above.
Tip | |
---|---|
It is useful to provide an explicit id attribute on |
Calling a Chain from within a Chain
Sometimes you need to make a nested call to another chain from within a chain and then come back and continue execution within the original chain. To accomplish this you can utilize a Messaging Gateway by including a <gateway> element. For example:
<int:chain id="main-chain" input-channel="in" output-channel="out"> <int:header-enricher> <int:header name="name" value="Many" /> </int:header-enricher> <int:service-activator> <bean class="org.foo.SampleService" /> </int:service-activator> <int:gateway request-channel="inputA"/> </int:chain> <int:chain id="nested-chain-a" input-channel="inputA"> <int:header-enricher> <int:header name="name" value="Moe" /> </int:header-enricher> <int:gateway request-channel="inputB"/> <int:service-activator> <bean class="org.foo.SampleService" /> </int:service-activator> </int:chain> <int:chain id="nested-chain-b" input-channel="inputB"> <int:header-enricher> <int:header name="name" value="Jack" /> </int:header-enricher> <int:service-activator> <bean class="org.foo.SampleService" /> </int:service-activator> </int:chain>
In the above example the nested-chain-a will be called at the end of main-chain processing by the gateway element configured there.
While in nested-chain-a a call to a nested-chain-b will be made after header enrichment and then it will come back to finish execution in nested-chain-b.
Finally the flow returns to the main-chain.
When the nested version of a <gateway> element is defined in the chain, it does not require the service-interface
attribute.
Instead, it simple takes the message in its current state and places it on the channel defined via the request-channel
attribute.
When the downstream flow initiated by that gateway completes, a Message
will be returned to the gateway and continue its journey within the current chain.
Starting with version 4.1, Spring Integration provides an implementation of the Scatter-Gather Enterprise Integration Pattern. It is a compound endpoint, where the goal is to send a message to the recipients and aggregate the results. Quoting the EIP Book, it is a component for scenarios like best quote, when we need to request information from several suppliers and decide which one provides us with the best term for the requested item.
Previously, the pattern could be configured using discrete components, this enhancement brings more convenient configuration.
The ScatterGatherHandler
is a request-reply endpoint that combines a PublishSubscribeChannel
(or RecipientListRouter
) and an AggregatingMessageHandler
.
The request message is sent to the scatter
channel and the ScatterGatherHandler
waits for the reply from the aggregator to sends to the outputChannel
.
The Scatter-Gather
pattern suggests two scenarios - Auction and Distribution.
In both cases, the aggregation
function is the same and provides all options available for the AggregatingMessageHandler
.
Actually the ScatterGatherHandler
just requires an AggregatingMessageHandler
as a constructor argument.
See Section 6.4, “Aggregator” for more information.
Auction
The Auction Scatter-Gather
variant uses publish-subscribe
logic for the request message, where the scatter
channel is a PublishSubscribeChannel
with apply-sequence="true"
.
However, this channel can be any MessageChannel
implementation as is the case with the request-channel
in the ContentEnricher
(see Section 7.2, “Content Enricher”) but, in this case, the end-user should support his own custom correlationStrategy
for the aggregation
function.
Distribution
The Distribution Scatter-Gather
variant is based on the RecipientListRouter
(see the section called “RecipientListRouter”) with all available options for the RecipientListRouter
.
This is the second ScatterGatherHandler
constructor argument.
If you want to rely just on the default correlationStrategy
for the recipient-list-router
and the aggregator
, you should specify apply-sequence="true"
.
Otherwise, a custom correlationStrategy
should be supplied for the aggregator
.
Unlike the PublishSubscribeChannel
(Auction) variant, having a recipient-list-router
selector
option, we can filter target suppliers based on the message.
With apply-sequence="true"
the default sequenceSize
will be supplied and the aggregator
will be able to release the group correctly.
The Distribution option is mutually exclusive with the Auction option.
In both cases, the request (scatter) message is enriched with the gatherResultChannel
QueueChannel
header, to wait for a reply message from the aggregator
.
By default, all suppliers should send their result to the replyChannel
header (usually by omitting the output-channel
from the ultimate endpoint).
However, the gatherChannel
option is also provided, allowing suppliers to send their reply to that channel for the aggregation.
For Java and Annotation configuration, the bean definition for the Scatter-Gather
is:
@Bean public MessageHandler distributor() { RecipientListRouter router = new RecipientListRouter(); router.setApplySequence(true); router.setChannels(Arrays.asList(distributionChannel1(), distributionChannel2(), distributionChannel3())); return router; } @Bean public MessageHandler gatherer() { return new AggregatingMessageHandler( new ExpressionEvaluatingMessageGroupProcessor("^[payload gt 5] ?: -1D"), new SimpleMessageStore(), new HeaderAttributeCorrelationStrategy( IntegrationMessageHeaderAccessor.CORRELATION_ID), new ExpressionEvaluatingReleaseStrategy("size() == 2")); } @Bean @ServiceActivator(inputChannel = "distributionChannel") public MessageHandler scatterGatherDistribution() { ScatterGatherHandler handler = new ScatterGatherHandler(distributor(), gatherer()); handler.setOutputChannel(output()); return handler; }
Here, we configure the RecipientListRouter
distributor
bean, with applySequence="true"
and the list of recipient channels.
The next bean is for an AggregatingMessageHandler
.
Finally, we inject both those beans into the ScatterGatherHandler
bean definition and mark it as a @ServiceActivator
to wire the Scatter-Gather component into the integration flow.
Configuring the <scatter-gather>
endpoint using the XML namespace:
<scatter-gather id="" auto-startup="" input-channel="" output-channel="" scatter-channel="" gather-channel="" order="" phase="" send-timeout="" gather-timeout="" requires-reply="" > <scatterer/> <gatherer/> </scatter-gather>
The id of the Endpoint.
The | |
Lifecycle attribute signaling if the Endpoint should be started during Application Context initialization.
In addition, the | |
The channel to receive request messages to handle them in the | |
The channel to which the Scatter-Gather will send the aggregation results.
Optional (because incoming messages can specify a reply channel themselves via | |
The channel to send the scatter message for the Auction scenario.
Optional.
Mutually exclusive with | |
The channel to receive replies from each supplier for the aggregation.
is used as the | |
Order of this component when more than one handler is subscribed to the same DirectChannel (use for load balancing purposes). Optional. | |
Specify the phase in which the endpoint 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 container starts as late as possible and stops as soon as possible. Optional. | |
The timeout interval to wait when sending a reply | |
Allows you to specify how long the Scatter-Gather will wait for the reply message before returning.
By default it will wait indefinitely.
null is returned if the reply times out.
Optional.
Defaults to | |
Specify whether the Scatter-Gather must return a non-null value.
This value is | |
The | |
The |
Sometimes, we need to suspend a message flow thread until some other asynchronous event occurs. For example, consider an HTTP request that publishes a message to RabbitMQ. We might wish to not reply to the user until the RabbitMQ broker has issued an acknowledgment that the message was received.
Spring Integration version 4.2 introduced the <barrier/>
component for this purpose.
The underlying MessageHandler
is the BarrierMessageHandler
; this class also implements
MessageTriggerAction
where a message passed to the trigger()
method releases a corresponding thread in the
handleRequestMessage()
method (if present).
The suspended thread and trigger thread are correlated by invoking a CorrelationStrategy
on the messages.
When a message is sent to the input-channel
, the thread is suspended for up to timeout
milliseconds, waiting for
a corresponding trigger message.
The default correlation strategy uses the IntegrationMessageHeaderAccessor.CORRELATION_ID
header.
When a trigger message arrives with the same correlation, the thread is released.
The message sent to the output-channel
after release is constructed using a MessageGroupProcessor
.
By default, the message is a Collection<?>
of the two payloads and the headers are merged, using a
DefaultAggregatingMessageGroupProcessor
.
Caution | |
---|---|
If the |
The requires-reply
property determines the action if the suspended thread times out before the trigger message
arrives.
By default, it is false
which means the endpoint simply returns null
, the flow ends and the thread returns to the
caller.
When true
, a ReplyRequiredException
is thrown.
You can call the trigger()
method programmatically (obtain the bean reference using the name barrier.handler
- where barrier is the bean name of the barrier endpoint) or you can configure
an <outbound-channel-adapter/>
to trigger the release.
Important | |
---|---|
Only one thread can be suspended with the same correlation; the same correlation can be used multiple times but only once concurrently. An exception is thrown if a second thread arrives with the same correlation. |
<int:barrier id="barrier1" input-channel="in" output-channel="out" correlation-strategy-expression="headers['myHeader']" output-processor="myOutputProcessor" discard-channel="lateTriggerChannel" timeout="10000"> </int:barrier> <int:outbound-channel-adapter channel="release" ref="barrier1.handler" method="trigger" />
In this example, a custom header is used for correlation.
Either the thread sending a message to in
or the one sending a message to release
will wait for
up to 10 seconds until the other arrives.
When the message is released, the out
channel will be sent a message combining the result of invoking the
custom MessageGroupProcessor
bean myOutputProcessor
.
If the main thread times out and a trigger arrives later, you can configure a discard channel to which the late trigger will be sent.
Java configuration is shown below.
@Configuration @EnableIntegration public class Config { @ServiceActivator(inputChannel="in") @Bean public BarrierMessageHandler barrier() { BarrierMessageHandler barrier = new BarrierMessageHandler(10000); barrier.setOutputChannel(out()); barrier.setDiscardChannel(lateTriggers()); return barrier; } @ServiceActivator (inputChannel="release") @Bean public MessageHandler releaser() { return new MessageHandler() { @Override public void handleMessage(Message<?> message) throws MessagingException { barrier().trigger(message); } }; } }
See the barrier sample application for an example of this component.