Frans,

The post here explains a simple walk-through of how to do it with Tibco EMS,
but ActiveMQ will be very similar:

http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/msg20494.html

Also notice the link to the official documentation at the top. The main
benefits of JMS are 1) reliable messaging (QoS guarantees) and 2) flexible
messaging--point-to-point or publish/subscribe, synchronous or asynchronous.

If you are very new to JMS, there are lots of good resources on the web,
like the following into article:
http://www.phptr.com/articles/article.asp?p=26137&rl=1

Be aware, too, that there are message-level protocols such as
WS-ReliableMessaging and WS-Notification (modules for which are being
developed in conjunction with Axis 2.0) that aim to fill some of the
functionality provided by JMS in a more transport-neutral way.




-----Original Message-----
From: Frans Thamura @ FB - Meruvian [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Monday, October 30, 2006 7:23 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: JMS Transport Best Practices

Hi All,

I just discuss with my friend that work in another country, and said 
that the good thing of SOAP implementation aka JMS Transpport is using 
ActiveMQ.

anyone have experience with Axis + JMS stuff.

what is benefit implement JMS inside SOAP?

i just thing that JMS is goood for the country where internet is worst, 
like my country

opinion welcome

Frans


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