To D
Camel supports the Message Endpoint from the EIP patterns using the Endpoint interface.
How does an application connect to a messaging channel to send and receive messages?
Connect an application to a messaging channel using a Message Endpoint, a client of the messaging system that the application can then use to send or receive messages.
Options
The To D eip supports 7 options, which are listed below.
| Name | Description | Default | Type |
|---|---|---|---|
uri |
Required The uri of the endpoint to send to. The uri can be dynamic computed using the org.apache.camel.language.simple.SimpleLanguage expression. |
String |
|
pattern |
Sets the optional ExchangePattern used to invoke this endpoint. Enum values:
|
ExchangePattern |
|
cacheSize |
Sets the maximum size used by the org.apache.camel.spi.ProducerCache which is used to cache and reuse producers when using this recipient list, when uris are reused. Beware that when using dynamic endpoints then it affects how well the cache can be utilized. If each dynamic endpoint is unique then its best to turn off caching by setting this to -1, which allows Camel to not cache both the producers and endpoints; they are regarded as prototype scoped and will be stopped and discarded after use. This reduces memory usage as otherwise producers/endpoints are stored in memory in the caches. However if there are a high degree of dynamic endpoints that have been used before, then it can benefit to use the cache to reuse both producers and endpoints and therefore the cache size can be set accordingly or rely on the default size (1000). If there is a mix of unique and used before dynamic endpoints, then setting a reasonable cache size can help reduce memory usage to avoid storing too many non frequent used producers. |
Integer |
|
ignoreInvalidEndpoint |
Whether to ignore invalid endpoint URIs and skip sending the message. |
false |
Boolean |
allowOptimisedComponents |
Whether to allow components to optimise toD if they are org.apache.camel.spi.SendDynamicAware . |
true |
Boolean |
autoStartComponents |
Whether to auto startup components when toD is starting up. |
true |
Boolean |
disabled |
Whether to disable this EIP from the route during build time. Once an EIP has been disabled then it cannot be enabled later at runtime. |
false |
Boolean |
description |
Sets the description of this node. |
DescriptionDefinition |
Different between To and ToD
The to is used for sending
messages to a static endpoint.
In other words to sends message
only to the same endpoint.
The toD is used for sending
message to a dynamic endpoint.
The dynamic endpoint is evaluated on-demand
by an Expression.
By default, the Simple
expression is used to compute
the dynamic endpoint URI.
Using ToD
For example to send a message to an endpoint which is dynamic determined by a message header you can do as shown below:
-
Java
-
XML
from("direct:start")
.toD("${header.foo}");
<route>
<from uri="direct:start"/>
<toD uri="${header.foo}"/>
</route>
You can also prefix the uri with a value because the endpoint URI is evaluated using the Simple language:
-
Java
-
XML
from("direct:start")
.toD("mock:${header.foo}");
<route>
<from uri="direct:start"/>
<toD uri="mock:${header.foo}"/>
</route>
In the example above we compute the dynamic endpoint with a prefix "mock:" and then the header foo is appended. So for example if the header foo has value order, then the endpoint is computed as "mock:order".
Using other languages with toD
You can also use other languages such as XPath.
Doing this requires to start with language:
as shown below. If you do not
specify language: then the
endpoint is a component name. And in some
cases there is both a component and language
with the same name such as
xquery.
-
Java
-
XML
from("direct:start")
.toD("language:xpath:/order/@uri");
<route>
<from uri="direct:start"/>
<toD uri="language:xpath:/order/@uri"/>
</route>
Avoid creating endless dynamic endpoints which takes up resources
When using dynamic computed endpoints with
toD then you may compute a lot
of dynamic endpoints,
which results in an overhead of resources in
use, by each dynamic endpoint uri, and its
associated producer.
For example HTTP based endpoints where you may have dynamic values in URI parameters when calling the HTTP service, such as:
from("direct:login")
.toD("http:myloginserver:8080/login?userid=${header.userName}");
In the example above then the parameter
userid is dynamic computed, and
would result in one instance of endpoint and
producer
for each different userid. To avoid having
too many dynamic endpoints you can configure
toD to reduce its cache size,
for example
to use a cache size of 10:
-
Java
-
XML
from("direct:login")
.toD("http:myloginserver:8080/login?userid=${header.userName}", 10);
<route>
<from uri="direct:login"/>
<toD uri="http:myloginserver:8080/login?userid=${header.userName}" cacheSize="10"/>
</route>
this will only reduce the endpoint
cache of the toD that
has a chance
of being reused in case a message is
routed with the same
userName header.
Therefore, reducing the cache size
will not solve the endless
dynamic endpoint`s problem.
Instead, you should use static
endpoints with to and
provide the dynamic parts in Camel
message headers (if possible).
|
Using static endpoints to avoid endless dynamic endpoints
In the example above then the parameter
userid is dynamic computed,
and would result in one instance of
endpoint and producer
for each different userid. To avoid
having too dynamic endpoints you use a
single static endpoint and use headers
to provide the dynamic parts:
from("direct:login")
.setHeader(Exchange.HTTP_PATH, constant("/login"))
.setHeader(Exchange.HTTP_QUERY, simple("userid=${header.userName}"))
.toD("http:myloginserver:8080");
However, you can use optimised components
for toD that can
solve this out of the box,
as documented next.
Using optimised components with toD
A better solution would be if the HTTP
component could be optimised to handle the
variations of dynamic computed endpoint
uris.
This is with among the following components,
which have been optimised for
toD:
-
camel-http
-
camel-jetty
-
camel-netty-http
-
camel-undertow
-
camel-vertx-http
A number of non-HTTP components has been optimised as well:
-
camel-amqp
-
camel-file
-
camel-ftp
-
camel-jms
-
camel-kafka
-
camel-paho-mqtt5
-
camel-paho
-
camel-sjms
-
camel-sjms2
-
camel-spring-rabbitmq
For the optimisation to work, then:
-
The optimisation is detected and activated during startup of the Camel routes with
toD. -
The dynamic uri in
toDmust provide the component name as either static or resolved via property placeholders. -
The supported components must be on the classpath.
The HTTP based components will be optimised to use the same hostname:port for each endpoint, and the dynamic values for context-path and query parameters will be provided as headers:
For example this route:
from("direct:login")
.toD("http:myloginserver:8080/login?userid=${header.userName}");
Will essentially be optimised to (pseudo route):
from("direct:login")
.setHeader(Exchange.HTTP_PATH, expression("/login"))
.setHeader(Exchange.HTTP_QUERY, expression("userid=${header.userName}"))
.toD("http:myloginserver:8080")
.removeHeader(Exchange.HTTP_PATH)
.removeHeader(Exchange.HTTP_QUERY);
Where expression will be evaluated
dynamically. Notice how the uri in
toD is now static (http:myloginserver:8080).
This optimisation allows Camel to reuse the
same endpoint and its associated producer
for all dynamic variations.
This yields much lower resource overhead as
the same http producer will be used for all
the different variations of userid’s.
|
When the optimised component
is in use, then you cannot
use the headers |
In case of problems then you can turn on
DEBUG logging level on org.apache.camel.processor.SendDynamicProcessor
which will log
during startup if toD was
optimised, or if there was a failure loading
the optimised component, with a stacktrace
logged.
Detected SendDynamicAware component: http optimising toD: http:myloginserver:8080/login?userid=${header.userName}