Jump To Close Expand all Collapse all Table of contents ESB Programmers Guide Preface 1. Preface Expand section "1. Preface" Collapse section "1. Preface" 1.1. Business Integration 1.2. What is a Service-Oriented Architecture? 1.3. Key Points of a Service-Oriented Architecture 1.4. What is the JBoss Enterprise SOA Platform? 1.5. The Service-Oriented Architecture Paradigm 1.6. Core and Components 1.7. Components of the JBoss Enterprise SOA Platform 1.8. JBoss Enterprise SOA Platform Features 1.9. Features of the JBoss Enterprise SOA Platform's JBossESB Component 1.10. Task Management 1.11. Integration Use Case 1.12. Utilising the JBoss Enterprise SOA Platform in a Business Environment I. Introduction Expand section "I. Introduction" Collapse section "I. Introduction" 2. Preliminaries Expand section "2. Preliminaries" Collapse section "2. Preliminaries" 2.1. Intended Audience 2.2. Aim of This Book 2.3. Back Up Your Data 2.4. Red Hat Documentation Site 2.5. Variable Name: SOA_ROOT Directory 2.6. Variable Name: PROFILE 3. Introducing the JBoss Enterprise SOA Platform Expand section "3. Introducing the JBoss Enterprise SOA Platform" Collapse section "3. Introducing the JBoss Enterprise SOA Platform" 3.1. Enterprise Service Bus 3.2. Core Components of the Enterprise Service Bus 3.3. Integration Between EDS and the JBoss Enterprise SOA Platform 3.4. Enterprise Data Services Overview 3.5. Developing with Enterprise Data Services II. Theory Expand section "II. Theory" Collapse section "II. Theory" 4. Services and Messages Expand section "4. Services and Messages" Collapse section "4. Services and Messages" 4.1. Services Expand section "4.1. Services" Collapse section "4.1. Services" 4.1.1. Service 4.1.2. Action Pipeline 4.1.3. ESB-Awareness 4.1.4. Message Listeners 4.1.5. ServiceInvoker 4.1.6. InVM Transport 4.1.7. Creating Your First Service 4.1.8. Types of Message Listener 4.1.9. Gateway Listener 4.1.10. Adding a Gateway Listener to a Service 4.2. Messages Expand section "4.2. Messages" Collapse section "4.2. Messages" 4.2.1. ESB Message 4.2.2. Components of an ESB Message 4.2.3. How Message Objects are Sent to the Queue 4.2.4. Message Interface 4.2.5. Message Header 4.2.6. Message Header Format 4.2.7. The To Field 4.2.8. Message Context 4.2.9. Message Body 4.2.10. Message Payload 4.2.11. Serialize 4.2.12. Message Body Format 4.2.13. Message Fault 4.2.14. Fault Message Format 4.2.15. Message Properties 4.2.16. Message Attachment 4.2.17. Message Attachment Interface 4.2.18. Choosing the Right Method 4.2.19. Advice on Adding Data to the Body of a Message 4.2.20. Configure for Legacy Message Payload Exchange 4.2.21. Extensions to the Message Body 4.2.22. End-Point Reference 4.2.23. Logical EPR 4.2.24. Logical EPR Use 4.2.25. FaultTo Field 4.2.26. Dead Letter Queue 4.2.27. ReplyTo Field 4.2.28. Table of ReplyTo Field Settings 4.2.29. Advice on Serializing Messages 4.2.30. Change the Default Message Type 4.2.31. Register a Marshaling Plug-In III. Developing Expand section "III. Developing" Collapse section "III. Developing" 5. Building and Using Services Expand section "5. Building and Using Services" Collapse section "5. Building and Using Services" 5.1. Message Listener Configuration Properties 5.2. Characteristics of Filesystem Gateway Listeners 5.3. Pipeline Interceptor 5.4. Working with Pipeline Interceptors 5.5. Routers 5.6. Router Configuration 5.7. Content-Based Router 5.8. Static-Based Router 5.9. Notifier 5.10. ServiceInvoker 5.11. Developing with the ServiceInvoker 5.12. RegistryException 5.13. FaultMessageException 5.14. MessageDeliverException 5.15. Java Message Service 5.16. JMS Transacted Session 5.17. IncompatibleTransactionScopeException 5.18. InVM Expand section "5.18. InVM" Collapse section "5.18. InVM" 5.18.1. InVM Transport 5.18.2. InVM Limitations 5.18.3. Developing with the InVM 5.18.4. Set an InVM Scope for an Individual Service 5.18.5. Set the Default InVM Scope for a Deployment 5.18.6. Change the Number of Listener Threads Associated with an InVM Transport 5.18.7. Lock-Step Delivery 5.18.8. Lock-Step Delivery Settings 5.19. Load Balancing Expand section "5.19. Load Balancing" Collapse section "5.19. Load Balancing" 5.19.1. Load Balancing 5.19.2. Configure a Load-Balancing Policy 5.19.3. Load Balancing Policies 5.20. Service Contract Definition Expand section "5.20. Service Contract Definition" Collapse section "5.20. Service Contract Definition" 5.20.1. Service Contract 5.20.2. Declaring Service Contract Schemas 5.20.3. Message Validation 5.21. Exposing ESB Services via Web Service End-Points Expand section "5.21. Exposing ESB Services via Web Service End-Points" Collapse section "5.21. Exposing ESB Services via Web Service End-Points" 5.21.1. Exposing ESB Services via Web Service End-points 6. Other Components Expand section "6. Other Components" Collapse section "6. Other Components" 6.1. Message Store 6.2. Smooks 6.3. Visitor Logic in Smooks 6.4. Data Transformation 6.5. Content-Based Router 6.6. Content Based Routing Using the JBoss Rules Engine 6.7. Service Registry 6.8. jUDDI Registry 6.9. jUDDI and the JBoss Enterprise SOA Platform 7. Tutorial on Developing Messages Expand section "7. Tutorial on Developing Messages" Collapse section "7. Tutorial on Developing Messages" 7.1. Overview 7.2. Message Structure 7.3. Developing the Service 7.4. Decode the Payload 7.5. Construct the Client 7.6. Configuring a Remote Service Invoker 7.7. Start the JBoss Enterprise SOA Platform 7.8. Deploy the "Hello World" Quickstart on Your Test Server 7.9. Test the Configuration of the Remote Client 7.10. Verify That a Remote Client's Configuration is Correct 7.11. Further Advice for When Building Clients and Services 8. Advanced Topics Expand section "8. Advanced Topics" Collapse section "8. Advanced Topics" 8.1. Node 8.2. The Bus 8.3. Delivery Channel 8.4. Run the Same Service on More than One Node in a Cluster 8.5. Remove Failed End-Point References from the Registry 8.6. How Services Work 8.7. Application Service 8.8. How Service Replication Works 8.9. JBossMessaging 8.10. Cluster 8.11. Stateless Service Failover 8.12. Enable JMS Clustering 8.13. Protocol Clustering 8.14. Running the Same Service Across Different Nodes in a Cluster 8.15. Configure the Registry Cache Time-Out Value 8.16. Channel Fail-Over 8.17. Deactivate Automatic Fail-Over 8.18. Load Balancing 8.19. Configure a Load-Balancing Policy 8.20. Load Balancing Policies 8.21. Transactions and the Action Pipeline 8.22. Rollbacks 8.23. Rollbacks and the JMS JCA Listener 8.24. Message Re-delivery 8.25. Scheduling Expand section "8.25. Scheduling" Collapse section "8.25. Scheduling" 8.25.1. Quartz Scheduler 8.25.2. Configuring Quartz Scheduler 8.25.3. Scheduling Services 8.25.4. Simple Schedule 8.25.5. Cron Schedule 8.25.6. Scheduled Listener 8.25.7. Sample Configuration Combining the Scheduled Listener and Cron Scheduler 9. Fault Tolerance and Reliability Expand section "9. Fault Tolerance and Reliability" Collapse section "9. Fault Tolerance and Reliability" 9.1. System Reliability 9.2. Fault Tolerance 9.3. Dependability 9.4. Message Loss 9.5. Failed End-Points 9.6. Supported Crash Recovery Modes 9.7. Message Failure, Component by Component 9.8. Ways in Which You Can Minimize the Risk of Failures 10. Defining Service Configurations Expand section "10. Defining Service Configurations" Collapse section "10. Defining Service Configurations" 10.1. Introduction to Configuring the Product 10.2. Providers 10.3. Types of Providers 10.4. Services 10.5. Attributes of a Service 10.6. Attributes of a Listener 10.7. Actions 10.8. Attributes of an Action 10.9. Implementing a Transport-Specific Configuration 10.10. Configuring the File System Provider 10.11. Configuring an FTP Provider 10.12. UDP Gateway 10.13. Configuring the UDP Gateway 10.14. JBoss Remoting Gateway 10.15. Configuring the JBoss Remoting Gateway 10.16. HTTP Gateway 10.17. Configuring the HTTP Gateway 10.18. Securing the HTTP Gateway 10.19. Secure the HTTP Gateway 10.20. Further HTTP Gateway Security 10.21. Apache Camel 10.22. Camel Gateway 10.23. Configuring the Camel Gateway 10.24. Transitioning from the Old Configuration Model to the New 10.25. Configuring the Enterprise Service Bus 11. Data Decoding: Mime Decoders Expand section "11. Data Decoding: Mime Decoders" Collapse section "11. Data Decoding: Mime Decoders" 11.1. Message Composer 11.2. Mime Decoder 11.3. Implement a Mime Decoder 11.4. ConfigTree 11.5. Mime Decoder Implementations Available Out-of-the-Box 11.6. Using Mime Decoders in Gateway Implementations 12. Web Services Support Expand section "12. Web Services Support" Collapse section "12. Web Services Support" 12.1. JBoss Web Services 12.2. JBoss Web Services Support 13. Actions Available for Use Out of the Box Expand section "13. Actions Available for Use Out of the Box" Collapse section "13. Actions Available for Use Out of the Box" 13.1. Out-of-the-Box Actions 13.2. JBoss Enterprise SOA Platform Out-of-the-Box Actions 13.3. Transformer Actions Expand section "13.3. Transformer Actions" Collapse section "13.3. Transformer Actions" 13.3.1. Transformers 13.3.2. ByteArrayToString 13.3.3. LongToDateConverter 13.3.4. ObjectInvoke 13.3.5. ObjectToCSVString 13.3.6. ObjectToXStream 13.3.7. XStreamToObject 13.3.8. XsltAction 13.3.9. Validating XsltActions 13.3.10. Smooks 13.3.11. Using Smooks 13.3.12. SmooksTransformer 13.3.13. SmooksAction 13.3.14. Use SmooksAction to Process XML, EDI, CSV and "Other Type" Message Payloads 13.3.15. Specifying the SmooksAction Result Type 13.3.16. PersistAction 13.4. Business Process Management Actions Expand section "13.4. Business Process Management Actions" Collapse section "13.4. Business Process Management Actions" 13.4.1. jBPM 13.4.2. JBPM Integration 13.4.3. jBPM BpmProcessor 13.5. Scripting Actions Expand section "13.5. Scripting Actions" Collapse section "13.5. Scripting Actions" 13.5.1. Scripting Actions 13.5.2. Groovy 13.5.3. GroovyActionProcessor 13.5.4. Bean Scripting Framework (BSF) 13.5.5. ScriptingAction 13.6. Service Actions Expand section "13.6. Service Actions" Collapse section "13.6. Service Actions" 13.6.1. Service Actions 13.6.2. EJBProcessor 13.7. Routing Actions Expand section "13.7. Routing Actions" Collapse section "13.7. Routing Actions" 13.7.1. Routing Actions 13.7.2. Aggregator 13.7.3. Streaming Aggregator 13.7.4. EchoRouter 13.7.5. HttpRouter 13.7.6. Java Message Service 13.7.7. JMSRouter 13.7.8. EmailRouter 13.7.9. Content-Based Router 13.7.10. The RegexProvider 13.7.11. XPath Domain-Specific Language 13.7.12. ContentBasedRouter 13.7.13. StaticRouter 13.7.14. SyncServiceInvoker 13.7.15. StaticWireTap 13.7.16. E.-Mail WireTap 13.8. Notifier Actions Expand section "13.8. Notifier Actions" Collapse section "13.8. Notifier Actions" 13.8.1. Notifier Action 13.8.2. Notifier 13.8.3. NotifyConsole 13.8.4. NotifyFiles 13.8.5. NotifySqlTable 13.8.6. NotifyQueues 13.8.7. NotifyTopics 13.8.8. NotifyEmail 13.8.9. NotifyFTP 13.8.10. NotifyFTPList 13.8.11. NotifyTCP 13.9. SOAP Client Actions Expand section "13.9. SOAP Client Actions" Collapse section "13.9. SOAP Client Actions" 13.9.1. Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP) 13.9.2. SOAPProcessor 13.9.3. SOAPProcessor Action Configuration 13.9.4. Use the SOAPProcessor Action 13.9.5. SOAPClient 13.9.6. Object Graph Navigation Library (OGNL) 13.9.7. Using the Object Graph Navigation Library 13.9.8. SOAP Operation Parameters 13.9.9. Specify an End-Point Operation for the SOAPClient Action 13.9.10. Dealing with SOAP Response Messages 13.9.11. Use XStream to Populate an Object Graph 13.9.12. Extract SOAP response data to an OGNL Keyed Map 13.9.13. HttpClient 13.9.14. Configuring the HttpClient 13.9.15. Specify the HttpClientFactory Configuration on the SOAPClient 13.9.16. Configure the HttpClient Directly in the Action Configuration 13.9.17. SOAPProxy 13.9.18. Using the SOAPProxy Action 13.10. Miscellaneous Actions Expand section "13.10. Miscellaneous Actions" Collapse section "13.10. Miscellaneous Actions" 13.10.1. SystemPrintln 13.10.2. Using SystemPrintln 13.10.3. SchemaValidationAction 13.10.4. Using SchemaValidationAction 13.10.5. ServiceLoggerAction 13.10.6. Using the ServiceLoggerAction 14. Developing Your Own Actions Expand section "14. Developing Your Own Actions" Collapse section "14. Developing Your Own Actions" 14.1. Developing Custom Actions 14.2. Configuring an Action by Setting Properties for It 14.3. Reflection 14.4. Managed Lifecycle 14.5. Life-cycle Action 14.6. ActionLifecycle 14.7. ActionPipelineProcessor 14.8. Implementing ActionLifecycle and ActionPipelineProcessor 14.9. Java Bean Action 14.10. Configuring a Java Bean Action 14.11. Annotated Action 14.12. Using Annotations 14.13. Legacy Action 14.14. Behaviour and Attributes of a Legacy Action 15. Gateways and Connectors Expand section "15. Gateways and Connectors" Collapse section "15. Gateways and Connectors" 15.1. Introduction to Gateways and Connectors 15.2. Gateways Expand section "15.2. Gateways" Collapse section "15.2. Gateways" 15.2.1. Gateway Listener 15.2.2. Differences Between a Gateway Listener and a Normal Listener 15.2.3. Gateway Data Mappings 15.2.4. Changing Gateway Data Mappings 15.3. Connectors Expand section "15.3. Connectors" Collapse section "15.3. Connectors" 15.3.1. Java Connector Architecture (JCA) 15.3.2. Connecting via JCA 15.3.3. Configuring a JCA Inflow Gateway 15.3.4. Mapping Standard Activation Properties 16. JAXB Annotation Introductions Expand section "16. JAXB Annotation Introductions" Collapse section "16. JAXB Annotation Introductions" 16.1. JAXB Annotation Introductions 16.2. Using JAXB Annotation Introductions 16.3. Writing JAXB Annotation Introduction Configurations A. Revision History Legal Notice Settings Close Language: 日本語 English Language: 日本語 English Format: Multi-page Single-page PDF Format: Multi-page Single-page PDF Language and Page Formatting Options Language: 日本語 English Language: 日本語 English Format: Multi-page Single-page PDF Format: Multi-page Single-page PDF Red Hat Training A Red Hat training course is available for JBoss Enterprise SOA Platform 4.2.11. Serialize To serialize an object is to convert it to a data object. Report a bug Previous Next