Part 4
Introduction
This section is about regular Camel. The examples presented here in this section is much more in common of all the examples we have in the Camel documentation.
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Before we jump into it, we want to state that this tutorial is about Developers not loosing control. In my humble experience one of the key fears of developers is that they are forced into a tool/framework where they loose control and/or power, and the possible is now impossible. So in this part we stay clear with this vision and our starting point is as follows:
- We have generated the webservice source code using the CXF wsdl2java generator and we have our ReportIncidentEndpointImpl.java file where we as a Developer feels home and have the power.
So the starting point is:
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As an end-user you usually use the RouteBuilder as of follows:
- create your own Route class that extends RouteBuilder
- implement your routing DSL in the configure method
So we create a new class ReportIncidentRoutes and implement the first part of the routing:
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In the example above we have a very common routing, that can be distilled from pseudo verbs to actual code with:
- from A to B
- From Endpoint A To Endpoint B
- from("endpointA").to("endpointB")
- from("direct:start").to("velocity:MailBody.vm");
from("direct:start") is the consumer that is kick-starting our routing flow. It will wait for messages to arrive on the direct queue and then dispatch the message.
to("velocity:MailBody.vm") is the producer that will receive a message and let Velocity generate the mail body response.
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Notice that we get the producer template using the createProducerTemplate method on the CamelContext. Then we send the input parameters to the direct:start endpoint and it will route it to the velocity endpoint that will generate the mail body. Since we use direct as the consumer endpoint (=from) and its a synchronous exchange we will get the response back from the route. And the response is of course the output from the velocity endpoint.
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In the example above we create a new |
We have now completed this part of the picture:
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Now we have a nice solution, but as a sidetrack I want to demonstrate the Camel has other languages out-of-the-box, and that scripting language is a first class citizen in Camel where it etc. can be used in content based routing. However we want it to be used for the filename generation.
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Using a script language to set the filenameWe could do as in the previous parts where we send the computed filename as a message header when we "kick-start" the route. But we want to learn new stuff so we look for a different solution using some of Camels many Languages. As OGNL is a favorite language of mine (used by WebWork) so we pick this baby for a Camel ride. For starters we must add it to our pom.xml:
And remember to refresh your editor so you got the new .jars. In OGNL glory this is done as:
where
Now we got the expression to dynamic compute the filename on the fly we need to set it on our route so we turn back to our route, where we can add the OGNL expression:
And since we are on Java 1.5 we can use the static import of ognl so we have:
Notice the import static also applies for all the other languages, such as the Bean Language we used previously. |
We Whatever worked for you we have now completed this part implemented the backup of the picturedata files:
Sending the email
What we need to do before the solution is completed is to actually send the email with the mail body we generated and stored as a file. In the previous part we did this with a File consumer, that we manually added to the CamelContext. We can do this quite easily with the routing.
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We have now completed the pictureintegration:
#Resources
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Conclusion
We have just briefly touched the routing in Camel and shown how to implement them using the fluent builder syntax in Java. There is much more to the routing in Camel than shown here, but we are learning step by step. We continue in part 5. See you there.
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