Intercept
The intercept feature in Camel supports intercepting Exchanges while they are on route.
Camel supports three kinds of interceptors:
intercept
that intercepts each and every processing step while routing an Exchange in the route.interceptFrom
that intercepts incoming Exchange in the route.interceptSendToEndpoint
new in Camel 2.0 that intercepts when an Exchange is about to be sent to the given Endpoint.
TODO: Is being reworked in Camel 2.0, so expect some minor changes
These interceptors supports the following features:
- Predicate using
when
to only trigger the interceptor in certain conditions proceed
when used withinterceptFrom
to continue routing from the point of interception when the interceptor is finished.proceed
is default and can be omitted.stop
when used withinterceptFrom
will stops routing the Exchange completely. Camel will by default not stop.skip
when used withinterceptSendToEndpoint
will skip sending the Exchange to the original intended endpoint. Camel will by default not skip.
Intercept
Intercept
is like a regular interceptor that is applied each each processing step the Exchange undergo while its being routed. You can think of it as a AOP before that is applied at each DSL keyword you have defined in your route.
The classic Hello World example would be:
intercept().to("log:hello"); from("jms:queue:order").to("bean:validateOrder").to("bean:processOrder");
What happens is that the Exchange is intercepted before each processing step, that means that it will be intercepted before
.to("bean:validateOrder")
.to("bean:processOrder")
So in this sample we intercept the Exchange twice.
The when
predicate is also support on the intercept
so we can attach a Predicate to only trigger the interception under certain conditions.
For instance in the sample below we only intercept if the message body contains the string word Hello:
Using from Spring DSL
The same hello world sample in Spring DSL would be:
<camelContext ...> <intercept> <to uri="log:hello"/> </intercept> <route> <from uri="jms:queue:order"/> <to uri="bean:validateOrder"/> <to uri="bean:handleOrder"/> </route> </camelContext>
And the sample for using the when predicate would be:
InterceptFrom
InterceptFrom
is for intercepting any incoming Exchange, in any route (it intercepts all the from
DSLs). This allows you to do some custom behavior for received Exchanges. You can provide a specific uri for a given Endpoint then it only applies for that particular route.
So lets start with the logging example. We want to log all the incoming requests so we use interceptFrom
to route to the Log component. As proceed
is default then the Exchange will continue its route, and thus it will continue to mock:first
.
You can also attach a Predicate to only trigger if certain conditions is meet. For instance in the route below we intercept when a test message is send to us, so we can do some custom processing before we continue routing:
And if we want to filter out certain messages we can use the stop()
to instruct Camel to stop continue routing the Exchange:
And if want to only apply a specific endpoint, as the seda:bar endpoint in the sample below, we can do it like this:
Using from Spring DSL
Intercept is of course also available using Spring DSL as shown in the sample below:
InterceptSendToEndpoint
Available as of Camel 2.0
Intercept send to endpoint is triggered when an Exchange is being sent to the intercepted endpoint. This allows you to route the Exchange to a Detour or do some custom processing before the Exchange is sent to the original intended destination. You can also skip sending to the intended destination. By default Camel will send to the original intended destination after the intercepted route completes. And as the regular intercept you can also define an when
Predicate so we only intercept if the Predicate evaluates to true. This allows you do do a bit of filtering, to only intercept when certain criteria is meet.
Let start with a simple example, where we want to intercept when an Exchange is being sent to mock:foo
:
And this time we add the Predicate so its only when the message body is Hello World
we intercept.
And to skip sending to the mock:foo
endpoint we use the *skip()
DSL in the route at the end to instruct Camel to skip sending to the original intended endpoint.
Using from Spring DSL
Intercept endpoint is of course also available using Spring DSL.
We start with the first example from above in Spring DSL:
And the 2nd. Notice how we can leverage the Simple language for the Predicate:
And the 3rd with the skip
, notice skip is set with the skipSendToOriginalEndpoint
attribute on the interceptSendToEndpoint tag: