The stream: component provides access to the
System.in, System.out and
System.err streams as well as allowing streaming of file and
URL.
stream:in[?options] stream:out[?options] stream:err[?options] stream:header[?options]
In addition, the file and url
endpoint URIs are supported in Apache Camel 2.0:
stream:file?fileName=/foo/bar.txt stream:url[?options]
If the stream:header URI is specified, the
stream header is used to find the stream to write to. This option
is available only for stream producers (that is, it cannot appear in
from()).
You can append query options to the URI in the following format,
?option=value&option=value&...
| Name | Default Value | Description |
|---|---|---|
delay
|
0
|
Initial delay in milliseconds before consuming or producing the stream. |
encoding
|
JVM Default | As of 1.4, you can configure the encoding (is a charset name) to use text-based streams (for example, message body
is a String object). If not provided, Apache Camel uses the JVM default Charset. |
promptMessage
|
null
|
Apache Camel 2.0: Message prompt to use when
reading from stream:in; for example, you could set this to
Enter a command:
|
promptDelay
|
0
|
Apache Camel 2.0: Optional delay in milliseconds before showing the message prompt. |
initialPromptDelay
|
2000
|
Apache Camel 2.0: Initial delay in milliseconds before showing the message prompt. This delay occurs only once. Can be used during system startup to avoid message prompts being written while other logging is done to the system out. |
fileName
|
null
|
Apache Camel 2.0: When using the
stream:file URI format, this option specifies the
filename to stream to/from. |
url
|
null
|
When using the stream:url URI format, this option specifies the URL to stream to/from. The input/output stream will be opened using the JDK URLConnection facility. |
scanStream
|
false
|
Apache Camel 2.0: To be used
for continuously reading a stream such as the unix |
retry
|
false
|
Camel 2.7: will retry opening the file if it's overwritten, somewhat like tail --retry
|
scanStreamDelay
|
0
|
Apache Camel 2.0: Delay in milliseconds between
read attempts when using scanStream. |
groupLines
|
0
|
Camel 2.5: To group X number of lines in the consumer. For example to group 10 lines and therefore only spit out an Exchange with 10 lines, instead of 1 Exchange per line. |
autoCloseCount
|
0
|
*Camel 2.10.0:* (2.9.3 and 2.8.6) Number of messages to process before closing stream on Producer side. Never close stream by default (only when Producer is stopped). If more messages are sent, the stream is reopened for another autoCloseCount batch. |
The stream: component supports either String or
byte[] for writing to streams. Just add either
String or byte[] content to the message.in.body.
Messages sent to the stream: producer in binary mode are not followed by
the newline character (as opposed to the String messages).
Message with null body will not be appended to the output stream.
In the following sample we route messages from the direct:in
endpoint to the System.out stream:
// Route messages to the standard output.
from("direct:in").to("stream:out");
// Send String payload to the standard output.
// Message will be followed by the newline.
template.sendBody("direct:in", "Hello Text World");
// Send byte[] payload to the standard output.
// No newline will be added after the message.
template.sendBody("direct:in", "Hello Bytes World".getBytes());The following sample demonstrates how the header type can be used to determine which
stream to use. In the sample we use our own output stream,
MyOutputStream.
private OutputStream mystream = new MyOutputStream();
private StringBuffer sb = new StringBuffer();
@Test
public void testStringContent() {
template.sendBody("direct:in", "Hello");
// StreamProducer appends \n in text mode
assertEquals("Hello\n", sb.toString());
}
@Test
public void testBinaryContent() {
template.sendBody("direct:in", "Hello".getBytes());
// StreamProducer is in binary mode so no \n is appended
assertEquals("Hello", sb.toString());
}
protected RouteBuilder createRouteBuilder() {
return new RouteBuilder() {
public void configure() {
from("direct:in").setHeader("stream", constant(mystream)).
to("stream:header");
}
};
}
private class MyOutputStream extends OutputStream {
public void write(int b) throws IOException {
sb.append((char)b);
}
}The following sample demonstrates how to continuously read a file stream (analogous to
the UNIX tail command):
from("stream:file?fileName=/server/logs/server.log&scanStream=true&scanStreamDelay=1000").to("bean:logService?method=parseLogLine");![]() | Note |
|---|---|
One difficulty with using the combination of |






![[Note]](imagesdb/note.gif)

