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Tube name will be URL decoded, so if your tube names include special characters like + or ?, you need to URL-encode them appropriately, or use the RAW syntax, see more details here.
By the way, you cannot specify several tubes when you are writing jobs into Beanstalk.
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Name | Default value | Description |
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onFailure | bury | Command to use when processing failed. You can choose among: bury, delete or release. | useBlockIO | true | Whether to use blockIO. | awaitJob | true | Whether to wait for job to complete before ack the job from beanstalk |
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The beanstalk consumer is a Scheduled Polling Consumer which means there is more options you can configure, such as how frequent the consumer should poll. For more details see Polling Consumer. |
The consumer stores a number of job headers in the Exchange message:
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Property | Type | Description |
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beanstalk.jobId | long | Job ID | beanstalk.tube | string | the name of the tube that contains this job | beanstalk.state | string | “ready” or “delayed” or “reserved” or “buried” (must be “reserved”) | beanstalk.priority | long | the priority value set | beanstalk.age | int | the time in seconds since the put command that created this job | beanstalk.time-left | int | the number of seconds left until the server puts this job into the ready queue | beanstalk.timeouts | int | the number of times this job has timed out during a reservation | beanstalk.releases | int | the number of times a client has released this job from a reservation | beanstalk.buries | int | the number of times this job has been buried | beanstalk.kicks | int | the number of times this job has been kicked |
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Examples
This Camel component lets you both request the jobs for processing and supply them to Beanstalkd daemon. Our simple demo routes may look like
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from("beanstalk:testTube").
log("Processing job #${property.beanstalk.jobId} with body ${in.body}").
process(new Processor() {
@Override
public void process(Exchange exchange) {
// try to make integer value out of body
exchange.getIn().setBody( Integer.valueOf(exchange.getIn().getBody(classOf[String])) );
}
}).
log("Parsed job #${property.beanstalk.jobId} to body ${in.body}"); |
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from("timer:dig?period=30seconds").
setBody(constant(10)).log("Kick ${in.body} buried/delayed tasks").
to("beanstalk:testTube?command=kick"); |
In the first route we are listening for new jobs in tube “testTube”. When they are arriving, we are trying to parse integer value from the message body. If done successful, we log it and this successful exchange completion makes Camel component to delete this job from Beanstalk automatically. Contrary, when we cannot parse the job data, the exchange failed and the Camel component buries it by default, so that it can be processed later or probably we are going to inspect failed jobs manually.
So the second route periodically requests Beanstalk to kick 10 jobs out of buried and/or delayed state to the normal queue.
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| Endpoint See Also |
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| Endpoint See Also |
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