THIS IS A TEST INSTANCE. ALL YOUR CHANGES WILL BE LOST!!!!
...
Code Block | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||
private void sendToCamelLog(String name) {
try {
// get the log component
Component component = camel.getComponent("log");
// create an endpoint and configure it.
// Notice the URI parameters this is a common pratice in Camel to configure
// endpoints based on URI.
// com.mycompany.part2 = the log category used. Will log at INFO level as default
Endpoint endpoint = component.createEndpoint("log:com.mycompany.part2");
// create an Exchange that we want to send to the endpoint
Exchange exchange = endpoint.createExchange();
// set the in message payload (=body) with the name parameter
exchange.getIn().setBody(name);
// now we want to send the exchange to this endpoint and we then need a producer
// for this, so we create and start the producer.
Producer producer = endpoint.createProducer();
producer.start();
// process the exchange will send the exchange to the log component, that will process
// the exchange and yes log the payload
producer.process(exchange);
// stop the producer, we want to be nice and cleanup
producer.stop();
} catch (Exception e) {
// we ignore any exceptions and just rethrow as runtime
throw new RuntimeException(e);
}
}
|
Okay there are code comments in the code block above that should explain what is happening. We run the code by invoking our unit test with maven mvn test
, and we should get this log line:
...
Okay I missed by one, its in fact only 9 lines of java code and 2 fields.