javax.jms.TopicSubscriber Maven / Gradle / Ivy
/*
* @(#)TopicSubscriber.java 1.28 02/04/09
*
* Copyright 1997-2002 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
*
* SUN PROPRIETARY/CONFIDENTIAL.
* This software is the proprietary information of Sun Microsystems, Inc.
* Use is subject to license terms.
*
*/
package javax.jms;
/** A client uses a TopicSubscriber
object to receive messages that
* have been published to a topic. A TopicSubscriber
object is the
* publish/subscribe form of a message consumer. A MessageConsumer
* can be created by using Session.createConsumer
.
*
* A TopicSession
allows the creation of multiple
* TopicSubscriber
objects per topic. It will deliver each
* message for a topic to each
* subscriber eligible to receive it. Each copy of the message
* is treated as a completely separate message. Work done on one copy has
* no effect on the others; acknowledging one does not acknowledge the
* others; one message may be delivered immediately, while another waits
* for its subscriber to process messages ahead of it.
*
*
Regular TopicSubscriber
objects are not durable. They
* receive only messages that are published while they are active.
*
*
Messages filtered out by a subscriber's message selector will never
* be delivered to the subscriber. From the subscriber's perspective, they
* do not exist.
*
*
In some cases, a connection may both publish and subscribe to a topic.
* The subscriber NoLocal
attribute allows a subscriber to inhibit
* the
* delivery of messages published by its own connection.
*
*
If a client needs to receive all the messages published on a topic,
* including the ones published while the subscriber is inactive, it uses
* a durable TopicSubscriber
. The JMS provider retains a record of
* this durable
* subscription and insures that all messages from the topic's publishers
* are retained until they are acknowledged by this durable
* subscriber or they have expired.
*
*
Sessions with durable subscribers must always provide the same client
* identifier. In addition, each client must specify a name that uniquely
* identifies (within client identifier) each durable subscription it creates.
* Only one session at a time can have a TopicSubscriber
for a
* particular durable subscription.
*
*
A client can change an existing durable subscription by creating a
* durable TopicSubscriber
with the same name and a new topic
* and/or message
* selector. Changing a durable subscription is equivalent to unsubscribing
* (deleting) the old one and creating a new one.
*
*
The unsubscribe
method is used to delete a durable
* subscription. The unsubscribe
method can be used at the
* Session
or TopicSession
level.
* This method deletes the state being
* maintained on behalf of the subscriber by its provider.
*
*
Creating a MessageConsumer
provides the same features as
* creating a TopicSubscriber
. To create a durable subscriber,
* use of Session.CreateDurableSubscriber
is recommended. The
* TopicSubscriber
is provided to support existing code.
*
*
* @version 1.1 - February 2, 2002
* @author Mark Hapner
* @author Rich Burridge
* @author Kate Stout
*
* @see javax.jms.Session#createConsumer
* @see javax.jms.Session#createDurableSubscriber
* @see javax.jms.TopicSession
* @see javax.jms.TopicSession#createSubscriber
* @see javax.jms.MessageConsumer
*/
public interface TopicSubscriber extends MessageConsumer {
/** Gets the Topic
associated with this subscriber.
*
* @return this subscriber's Topic
*
* @exception JMSException if the JMS provider fails to get the topic for
* this topic subscriber
* due to some internal error.
*/
Topic
getTopic() throws JMSException;
/** Gets the NoLocal
attribute for this subscriber.
* The default value for this attribute is false.
*
* @return true if locally published messages are being inhibited
*
* @exception JMSException if the JMS provider fails to get the
* NoLocal
attribute for
* this topic subscriber
* due to some internal error.
*/
boolean
getNoLocal() throws JMSException;
}