On Mon, Oct 13, 2008 at 4:52 PM, ilango_g <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Actually I have refined my question further:
> There would be a queue that has messages
> sitting on it. This queue has a listener that listens for messages, picks up
> a certain message (FIFO perhaps), and sends it off to a different queue
> (channel) based on some information in a header field that identifies the
> destination queue the message is intended for. For now, I assume that I have
> one message in my source queue that is meant to be delivered to one of three
> queues, Q1, Q2, Q3, based on the information in the JMS header of the
> message.
>
> If a sample is available that would be great to start off.

As I said, creating a content-based router using Apache Camel is the
easiest way to achieve this task. Take a look at the default
configuration for ActiveMQ in conf/activemq.xml and you'll see a very
basic example of configuring a route using Camel to route messages
from a queue named example.A to a queue named example.B. You can
easily augment this simple example to add the necessary configuration
to implement the content-based router as shown on the Camel page
(http://activemq.apache.org/camel/content-based-router.html) under the
heading 'Using the Spring XML Extensions'. Bear in mind that that is
just one example as use of XPath is not required as Camel supports
many different languages for use of expressions
(http://activemq.apache.org/camel/languages.html).

 Bruce
-- 
perl -e 'print unpack("u30","D0G)[EMAIL 
PROTECTED]&5R\"F)R=6-E+G-N>61E<D\!G;6%I;\"YC;VT*"
);'

Apache ActiveMQ - http://activemq.org/
Apache Camel - http://activemq.org/camel/
Apache ServiceMix - http://servicemix.org/

Blog: http://bruceblog.org/

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