Using an Entity to Join Messages from Two MDBs (original) (raw)
This section explains how to write, compile, package, deploy, and run an application that uses the JMS API with an entity. The application uses the following components:
- An application client that both sends and receives messages
- Two message-driven beans
- An entity class
You will find the source files for this section in the tut-install`/examples/jms/clientmdbentity/` directory. Path names in this section are relative to this directory.
The following topics are addressed here:
- Overview of the clientmdbentity Example Application
- Writing the Application Components for the clientmdbentity Example
- Running the clientmdbentity Example
Overview of the clientmdbentity Example Application
This application simulates, in a simplified way, the work flow of a company’s human resources (HR) department when it processes a new hire. This application also demonstrates how to use the Java EE platform to accomplish a task that many JMS applications need to perform.
A messaging client must often wait for several messages from various sources. It then uses the information in all these messages to assemble a message that it then sends to another destination. The common term for this design pattern (which is not specific to JMS) is joining messages. Such a task must be transactional, with all the receives and the send as a single transaction. If not all the messages are received successfully, the transaction can be rolled back. For an application client example that illustrates this task, see Using Local Transactions.
A message-driven bean can process only one message at a time in a transaction. To provide the ability to join messages, an application can have the message-driven bean store the interim information in a Java Persistence API entity. The entity can then determine whether all the information has been received; when it has, the entity can report this back to one of the message-driven beans, which then creates and sends the message to the other destination. After it has completed its task, the entity can be removed.
The basic steps of the application are as follows.
- The HR department’s application client generates an employee ID for each new hire and then publishes a message (M1) containing the new hire’s name, employee ID, and position. It publishes the message to a topic because the message needs to be consumed by two message-driven beans. The client then creates a temporary queue,
ReplyQueue
, with a message listener that waits for a reply to the message. (SeeCreating Temporary Destinations for more information.) - Two message-driven beans process each message: One bean,
OfficeMDB
, assigns the new hire’s office number, and the other bean,EquipmentMDB
, assigns the new hire’s equipment. The first bean to process the message creates and persists an entity namedSetupOffice
, then calls a business method of the entity to store the information it has generated. The second bean locates the existing entity and calls another business method to add its information. - When both the office and the equipment have been assigned, the entity business method returns a value of
true
to the message-driven bean that called the method. The message-driven bean then sends to the reply queue a message (M2) describing the assignments. Then it removes the entity. The application client’s message listener retrieves the information.
Figure 49-5 illustrates the structure of this application. Of course, an actual HR application would have more components; other beans could set up payroll and benefits records, schedule orientation, and so on.
Figure 49-5 assumes that OfficeMDB
is the first message-driven bean to consume the message from the client. OfficeMDB
then creates and persists the SetupOffice
entity and stores the office information. EquipmentMDB
then finds the entity, stores the equipment information, and learns that the entity has completed its work.EquipmentMDB
then sends the message to the reply queue and removes the entity.
Figure 49-5 An Enterprise Bean Application: Client to Message-Driven Beans to Entity
Writing the Application Components for the clientmdbentity Example
Writing the components of the application involves coding the application client, the message-driven beans, and the entity class.
The following topics are addressed here:
- Coding the Application Client: HumanResourceClient.java
- Coding the Message-Driven Beans for the clientmdbentity Example
- Coding the Entity Class for the clientmdbentity Example
Coding the Application Client: HumanResourceClient.java
The application client, HumanResourceClient.java
, found underclientmdbentity-app-client
, performs the following steps:
- Defines a topic for the application, using the
java:app
namespace because the topic is used in both the application client and the EJB module - Injects
ConnectionFactory
andTopic
resources - Creates a
TemporaryQueue
to receive notification of processing that occurs, based on new-hire events it has published - Creates a
JMSConsumer
for theTemporaryQueue
, sets the `JMSConsumer’s message listener, and starts the connection - Creates a
MapMessage
- Creates five new employees with randomly generated names, positions, and ID numbers (in sequence) and publishes five messages containing this information
The message listener, HRListener
, waits for messages that contain the assigned office and equipment for each employee. When a message arrives, the message listener displays the information received and determines whether all five messages have arrived. When they have, the message listener notifies the main
method, which then exits.
Coding the Message-Driven Beans for the clientmdbentity Example
This example uses two message-driven beans, both underclientmdbentity-ejb
:
EquipmentMDB.java
OfficeMDB.java
The beans take the following steps.
- They inject a
MessageDrivenContext
resource, anEntityManager
, and aJMSContext
. - The
onMessage
method retrieves the information in the message. TheEquipmentMDB’s `onMessage
method chooses equipment, based on the new hire’s position; theOfficeMDB’s `onMessage
method randomly generates an office number. - After a slight delay to simulate real world processing hitches, the
onMessage
method calls a helper method,compose
. - The
compose
method takes the following steps. - It either creates and persists the
SetupOffice
entity or finds it by primary key. - It uses the entity to store the equipment or the office information in the database, calling either the
doEquipmentList
or thedoOfficeNumber
business method. - If the business method returns
true
, meaning that all of the information has been stored, it retrieves the reply destination information from the message, creates aJMSProducer
, and sends a reply message that contains the information stored in the entity. - It removes the entity.
Coding the Entity Class for the clientmdbentity Example
The SetupOffice.java
class, also under clientmdbentity-ejb
, is an entity class. The entity and the message-driven beans are packaged together in an EJB JAR file. The entity class is declared as follows:
@Entity
public class SetupOffice implements Serializable {
The class contains a no-argument constructor and a constructor that takes two arguments, the employee ID and name. It also contains getter and setter methods for the employee ID, name, office number, and equipment list. The getter method for the employee ID has the @Id
annotation to indicate that this field is the primary key:
@Id
public String getEmployeeId() {
return id;
}
The class also implements the two business methods, doEquipmentList
and doOfficeNumber
, and their helper method, checkIfSetupComplete
.
The message-driven beans call the business methods and the getter methods.
The persistence.xml
file for the entity specifies the most basic settings:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<persistence version="2.1"
xmlns="http://xmlns.jcp.org/xml/ns/persistence"
xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
xsi:schemaLocation="http://xmlns.jcp.org/xml/ns/persistence
http://xmlns.jcp.org/xml/ns/persistence/persistence_2_1.xsd">
<persistence-unit name="clientmdbentity-ejbPU" transaction-type="JTA">
<provider>org.eclipse.persistence.jpa.PersistenceProvider</provider>
<jta-data-source>java:comp/DefaultDataSource</jta-data-source>
<properties>
<property name="eclipselink.ddl-generation"
value="drop-and-create-tables"/>
</properties>
</persistence-unit>
</persistence>
Running the clientmdbentity Example
You can use either NetBeans IDE or Maven to build, deploy, and run theclientmdbentity
example.
Because the example defines its own application-private topic and uses the preconfigured default connection factoryjava:comp/DefaultJMSConnectionFactory
and the preconfigured default JDBC resource java:comp/DefaultDataSource
, you do not need to create resources for it.
The following topics are addressed here:
- To Run clientmdbentity Using NetBeans IDE
- To Run clientmdbentity Using Maven
- Viewing the Application Output
To Run clientmdbentity Using NetBeans IDE
- Make sure that GlassFish Server has been started (seeStarting and Stopping GlassFish Server), as well as the database server (seeStarting and Stopping Apache Derby).
- From the File menu, choose Open Project.
- In the Open Project dialog box, navigate to:
tut-install/examples/jms/clientmdbentity
- Select the
clientmdbentity
folder. - Click Open Project.
- In the Projects tab, right-click the
clientmdbentity
project and select Build.
This command creates the following:- An application client JAR file that contains the client class and listener class files, along with a manifest file that specifies the main class
- An EJB JAR file that contains the message-driven beans and the entity class, along with the
persistence.xml
file - An application EAR file that contains the two JAR files along with an
application.xml
file
Theclientmdbentity.ear
file is created in theclientmdbentity-ear/target/
directory.
The command then deploys the EAR file, retrieves the client stubs, and runs the application client.
To Run clientmdbentity Using Maven
- Make sure that GlassFish Server has been started (seeStarting and Stopping GlassFish Server), as well as the database server (seeStarting and Stopping Apache Derby).
- Go to the following directory:
tut-install/examples/jms/clientmdbentity/
- To compile the source files and package, deploy, and run the application, enter the following command:
This command creates the following:- An application client JAR file that contains the client class and listener class files, along with a manifest file that specifies the main class
- An EJB JAR file that contains the message-driven beans and the entity class, along with the
persistence.xml
file - An application EAR file that contains the two JAR files along with an
application.xml
file
The command then deploys the application, retrieves the client stubs, and runs the application client.
Viewing the Application Output
The output in the NetBeans IDE output window or in the terminal window looks something like this (preceded by application client container output and Maven output):
SENDER: Setting hire ID to 50, name Bill Tudor, position Programmer
SENDER: Setting hire ID to 51, name Carol Jones, position Senior Programmer
SENDER: Setting hire ID to 52, name Mark Wilson, position Manager
SENDER: Setting hire ID to 53, name Polly Wren, position Senior Programmer
SENDER: Setting hire ID to 54, name Joe Lawrence, position Director
Waiting for 5 message(s)
New hire event processed:
Employee ID: 52
Name: Mark Wilson
Equipment: Tablet
Office number: 294
Waiting for 4 message(s)
New hire event processed:
Employee ID: 53
Name: Polly Wren
Equipment: Laptop
Office number: 186
Waiting for 3 message(s)
New hire event processed:
Employee ID: 54
Name: Joe Lawrence
Equipment: Mobile Phone
Office number: 135
Waiting for 2 message(s)
New hire event processed:
Employee ID: 50
Name: Bill Tudor
Equipment: Desktop System
Office number: 200
Waiting for 1 message(s)
New hire event processed:
Employee ID: 51
Name: Carol Jones
Equipment: Laptop
Office number: 262
The output from the message-driven beans and the entity class appears in the server log.
For each employee, the application first creates the entity and then finds it. You may see runtime errors in the server log, and transaction rollbacks may occur. The errors occur if both of the message-driven beans discover at the same time that the entity does not yet exist, so they both try to create it. The first attempt succeeds, but the second fails because the bean already exists. After the rollback, the second message-driven bean tries again and succeeds in finding the entity. Container-managed transactions allow the application to run correctly, in spite of these errors, with no special programming.
To undeploy the application after you have finished running it, use the Services tab or issue the mvn cargo:undeploy
command.