mq5.1-source.src.share.java.examples.jms20.deliverydelay.README Maven / Gradle / Ivy
The newest version!
deliverydelay examples
----------------------
Description
-----------
A message producer can set delivery delay time which means a message must not be delivered until after that specified delivery delay time.
This example illustrates how to write an application that demonstrates the
use of new JMS2.0 apis setDeliveryDelay & getDeliveryDelay.
It also illustrates the use of jdk7 feature try-with-resources in JMS application.
Some basic info on this example:
- DeliveryDelayProducer.class sends messages to the particular topic specified with the delivery delay set on
producer to random time intervals.
- DeliveryDelayConsumer.class receives the message , checks the delivery time, & displays the messages
received with the delivery time. You will see the messages receiving until after that specified delivery
delay time on producer.
- Start DeliveryDelayConsumer before starting the producer DeliveryDelayProducer
since a topic subscription will not receive messages which were sent to the topic before the subscription
was created.
Files
-----
DeliveryDelayConsumer.java Source file for this example.
DeliveryDelayProducer.java Source file for this example.
*.class Prebuilt Java class files for this example.
README This file.
Configuring the environment
---------------------------
To recompile or run this example, you need to set CLASSPATH
to include at least:
jms.jar
imq.jar
directory containing this example
A detailed guideline on configuring your environment and setting CLASSPATH
is found in the top-level README file of the examples (demo) directory of
the Message Queue installation (/examples/README) as well as in
the "Quick Start Tutorial" in the Oracle GlassFish(tm) Server Message Queue
Developer's Guide.
Building the example
--------------------
Run the following:
javac DeliveryDelayConsumer.java
javac DeliveryDelayProducer.java
Running the example
-------------------
Start a broker
imqbrokerd -tty
Run the following command first on one terminal:
java DeliveryDelayConsumer []
Run the following command on another terminal:
java DeliveryDelayProducer []
The output of DeliveryDelayConsumer looks like this:
java DeliveryDelayConsumer topic1 5
Topic name is topic1
Created jms context successfully
Created topic successfully
Message Message 1 received with delivery time 1361836834958 ms
Message Message 2 received with delivery time 1361836844972 ms
Message Message 3 received with delivery time 1361836854975 ms
Message Message 4 received with delivery time 1361836864978 ms
Message Message 5 received with delivery time 1361836875273 ms
The output of DeliveryDelayProducer looks like this:
java DeliveryDelayProducer topic1 5
Topic name is topic1
Created jms context successfully
Created topic successfully
Message Message 1 sent with delayed delivery time 10000 ms
Message Message 2 sent with delayed delivery time 20000 ms
Message Message 3 sent with delayed delivery time 30000 ms
Message Message 4 sent with delayed delivery time 40000 ms
Message Message 5 sent with delayed delivery time 50000 ms