Splitter
The Splitter from the EIP patterns allows you split a message into a number of pieces and process them individually
As of Camel 2.0, you need to specify a Splitter as split(). In earlier versions of Camel, you need to use splitter().
Example
The following example shows how to take a request from the queue:a endpoint the split it into pieces using an _expression_, then forward each piece to queue:b
Using the Fluent Builders
RouteBuilder builder = new RouteBuilder() {
public void configure() {
from("seda:a").split(body(String.class).tokenize("\n")).to("seda:b");
}
};
The splitter can use any _expression_ language so you could use any of the Languages Supported such as XPath, XQuery, SQL or one of the Scripting Languages to perform the split. e.g.
from("activemq:my.queue").split(xpath(")).convertBodyTo(String.class).to("file://some/directory")
Using the Spring XML Extensions
<camelContext id="camel" xmlns="http://activemq.apache.org/camel/schema/spring">
<route>
<from uri="seda:a"/>
<split>
<xpath>/invoice/lineItems</xpath>
<to uri="seda:b"/>
</split>
</route>
</camelContext>
For further examples of this pattern in use you could look at one of the junit test case
Parallel execution of distinct 'parts'
If you want to execute all parts in parallel you can use special notation of split() with two arguments, where the second one is a boolean flag if processing should be parallel. e.g.
XPathBuilder xPathBuilder = new XPathBuilder(");
from("activemq:my.queue").split(xPathBuilder, true).to("activemq:my.parts");
Specifying a custom aggregation strategy
Available as of Camel 2.0
This is specified similar to the Aggregator.
Specifying a custom ThreadPoolExecutor
You can customize the underlying ThreadPoolExecutor used in the parallel splitter. In the Java DSL try something like this:
XPathBuilder xPathBuilder = new XPathBuilder(");
ThreadPoolExecutor threadPoolExecutor = new ThreadPoolExecutor(8, 16, 0L, TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS, new LinkedBlockingQueue());
from("activemq:my.queue").split(xPathBuilder, true, threadPoolExecutor).to("activemq:my.parts");
In the Spring DSL try this:
Available as of Camel 1.5.1
<camelContext id="camel" xmlns="http://activemq.apache.org/camel/schema/spring">
<route>
<from uri="direct:parallel-custom-pool"/>
<split threadPoolExecutorRef="threadPoolExecutor">
<xpath>/invoice/lineItems</xpath>
<to uri="mock:result"/>
</split>
</route>
</camelContext>
<!-- There's an easier way of specifying constructor args, just can't remember it
at the moment... old Spring syntax will do for now! -->
<bean id="threadPoolExecutor" class="java.util.concurrent.ThreadPoolExecutor">
<constructor-arg index="0"><value>8</value></constructor-arg>
<constructor-arg index="1"><value>16</value></constructor-arg>
<constructor-arg index="2"><value>0</value></constructor-arg>
<constructor-arg index="3"><value>MILLISECONDS</value></constructor-arg>
<constructor-arg index="4"><bean class="java.util.concurrent.LinkedBlockingQueue"/></constructor-arg>
</bean>
Using This Pattern
If you would like to use this EIP Pattern then please read the Getting Started, you may also find the Architecture useful particularly the description of Endpoint and URIs. Then you could try out some of the Examples first before trying this pattern out.