Modified: websites/production/camel/content/atom.html
==============================================================================
--- websites/production/camel/content/atom.html (original)
+++ websites/production/camel/content/atom.html Fri Aug 25 10:20:13 2017
@@ -36,17 +36,6 @@
     <![endif]-->
 
 
-  <link href='//camel.apache.org/styles/highlighter/styles/shCoreCamel.css' 
rel='stylesheet' type='text/css' />
-  <link href='//camel.apache.org/styles/highlighter/styles/shThemeCamel.css' 
rel='stylesheet' type='text/css' />
-  <script src='//camel.apache.org/styles/highlighter/scripts/shCore.js' 
type='text/javascript'></script>
-  <script src='//camel.apache.org/styles/highlighter/scripts/shBrushJava.js' 
type='text/javascript'></script>
-  <script src='//camel.apache.org/styles/highlighter/scripts/shBrushXml.js' 
type='text/javascript'></script>
-  <script src='//camel.apache.org/styles/highlighter/scripts/shBrushPlain.js' 
type='text/javascript'></script>
-  
-  <script type="text/javascript">
-  SyntaxHighlighter.defaults['toolbar'] = false;
-  SyntaxHighlighter.all();
-  </script>
 
     <title>
     Apache Camel: Atom
@@ -86,124 +75,15 @@
        <tbody>
         <tr>
         <td valign="top" width="100%">
-<div class="wiki-content maincontent"><h2 id="Atom-AtomComponent">Atom 
Component</h2><p>The <strong>atom:</strong> component is used for polling Atom 
feeds.</p><p>Camel will poll the feed every 60 seconds by default.<br 
clear="none"> <strong>Note:</strong> The component currently only supports 
polling (consuming) feeds.</p><p>Maven users will need to add the following 
dependency to their <code>pom.xml</code> for this component:</p><div 
class="code panel pdl" style="border-width: 1px;"><div class="codeContent 
panelContent pdl">
-<script class="brush: xml; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
type="syntaxhighlighter"><![CDATA[&lt;dependency&gt;
+<div class="wiki-content maincontent"><h2 id="Atom-AtomComponent">Atom 
Component</h2><p>The <strong>atom:</strong> component is used for polling Atom 
feeds.</p><p>Camel will poll the feed every 60 seconds by default.<br 
clear="none"> <strong>Note:</strong> The component currently only supports 
polling (consuming) feeds.</p><p>Maven users will need to add the following 
dependency to their <code>pom.xml</code> for this component:</p><parameter 
ac:name="">xml</parameter><plain-text-body>&lt;dependency&gt;
     &lt;groupId&gt;org.apache.camel&lt;/groupId&gt;
     &lt;artifactId&gt;camel-atom&lt;/artifactId&gt;
     &lt;version&gt;x.x.x&lt;/version&gt;
     &lt;!-- use the same version as your Camel core version --&gt;
 &lt;/dependency&gt;
-]]></script>
-</div></div><h3 id="Atom-URIformat">URI format</h3><div class="code panel pdl" 
style="border-width: 1px;"><div class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
-<script class="brush: java; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
type="syntaxhighlighter"><![CDATA[atom://atomUri[?options]
-]]></script>
-</div></div><p>Where <strong>atomUri</strong> is the URI to the Atom feed to 
poll.</p><h3 id="Atom-Options">Options</h3><div 
class="confluenceTableSmall"><div class="table-wrap"><table 
class="confluenceTable"><tbody><tr><th colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTh"><p>Property</p></th><th colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTh"><p>Default</p></th><th colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTh"><p>Description</p></th></tr><tr><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>splitEntries</code></p></td><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>true</code></p></td><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p>If <code>true</code> Camel will 
poll the feed and for the subsequent polls return each entry poll by poll. If 
the feed contains 7 entries then Camel will return the first entry on the first 
poll, the 2nd entry on the next poll, until no more entries where as Camel will 
do a new update on the feed. If <code>false</code> then Camel will poll a
  fresh feed on every invocation.</p></td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p><code>filter</code></p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p><code>true</code></p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p>Is only used by the split entries to filter the entries 
to return. Camel will default use the <code>UpdateDateFilter</code> that only 
return new entries from the feed. So the client consuming from the feed never 
receives the same entry more than once. The filter will return the entries 
ordered by the newest last.</p></td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p><code>lastUpdate</code></p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>null</code></p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p>Is only used by the filter, as the starting 
timestamp for selection never entries (uses the <code>entry.updated</code> 
timestamp). Syntax format is: <code>yyyy-MM-ddTHH:MM:ss</code>. Example:
  <code>2007-12-24T17:45:59</code>.</p></td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>throttleEntries</code></p></td><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>true</code></p></td><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><strong>Camel 2.5:</strong> 
Sets whether all entries identified in a single feed poll should be delivered 
immediately. If <code>true</code>, only one entry is processed per 
<code>consumer.delay</code>. Only applicable when <code>splitEntries</code> is 
set to <code>true</code>.</p></td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p><code>feedHeader</code></p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>true</code></p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p>Sets whether to add the Abdera Feed object 
as a header.</p></td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p><code>sortEntries</code></p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>f
 alse</code></p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p>If 
<code>splitEntries</code> is <code>true</code>, this sets whether to sort those 
entries by updated date.</p></td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p><code>consumer.delay</code></p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>500</code></p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p>Delay in millis between each 
poll.</p></td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p><code>consumer.initialDelay</code></p></td><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>1000</code></p></td><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p>Millis before polling 
starts.</p></td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p><code>consumer.userFixedDelay</code></p></td><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>false</code></p></td><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p>If <code>true</code>, use fixed
  delay between pools, otherwise fixed rate is used. See <a shape="rect" 
class="external-link" 
href="http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.5.0/docs/api/java/util/concurrent/ScheduledExecutorService.html";
 rel="nofollow">ScheduledExecutorService</a> in JDK for 
details.</p></td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><code>username</code></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd">&#160;</td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><strong>Camel 2.16:</strong> For basic authentication when 
polling from a HTTP feed</td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><code>password</code></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd">&#160;</td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><strong>Camel 2.16:</strong><span> For basic 
authentication when polling from a HTTP 
feed</span></td></tr></tbody></table></div></div>
-
-
-<p>You can append query options to the URI in the following format, 
<code>?option=value&amp;option=value&amp;...</code></p><h3 
id="Atom-Exchangedataformat">Exchange data format</h3><p>Camel will set the In 
body on the returned <code>Exchange</code> with the entries. Depending on the 
<code>splitEntries</code> flag Camel will either return one <code>Entry</code> 
or a <code>List&lt;Entry&gt;</code>.</p><div class="confluenceTableSmall"><div 
class="table-wrap"><table class="confluenceTable"><tbody><tr><th colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTh"><p>Option</p></th><th colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTh"><p>Value</p></th><th colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTh"><p>Behavior</p></th></tr><tr><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p><code>splitEntries</code></p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>true</code></p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p>Only a single entry from the currently 
being processed feed is set:
  <code>exchange.in.body(Entry)</code></p></td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>splitEntries</code></p></td><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>false</code></p></td><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p>The entire list of entries from 
the feed is set: 
<code>exchange.in.body(List&lt;Entry&gt;)</code></p></td></tr></tbody></table></div></div>
-
-
-<p>Camel can set the <code>Feed</code> object on the In header (see 
<code>feedHeader</code> option to disable this):</p><h3 
id="Atom-MessageHeaders">Message Headers</h3><p>Camel atom uses these 
headers.</p><div class="confluenceTableSmall"><div class="table-wrap"><table 
class="confluenceTable"><tbody><tr><th colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTh"><p>Header</p></th><th colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTh"><p>Description</p></th></tr><tr><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>CamelAtomFeed</code></p></td><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p>When consuming the 
<code>org.apache.abdera.model.Feed</code> object is set to this 
header.</p></td></tr></tbody></table></div></div>
-
-
-<h3 id="Atom-Samples">Samples</h3><p>In this sample we poll James Strachan's 
blog.</p><div class="code panel pdl" style="border-width: 1px;"><div 
class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
-<script class="brush: java; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
type="syntaxhighlighter"><![CDATA[from(&quot;atom://http://macstrac.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default&quot;).to(&quot;seda:feeds&quot;);
-]]></script>
-</div></div><p>In this sample we want to filter only good blogs we like to a 
SEDA queue. The sample also shows how to setup Camel standalone, not running in 
any Container or using Spring.</p><div class="code panel pdl" 
style="border-width: 1px;"><div class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
-<script class="brush: java; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
type="syntaxhighlighter"><![CDATA[
-
-// This is the CamelContext that is the heart of Camel
-private CamelContext context;
-
-protected CamelContext createCamelContext() throws Exception {
-
-    // First we register a blog service in our bean registry
-    SimpleRegistry registry = new SimpleRegistry();
-    registry.put(&quot;blogService&quot;, new BlogService());
-
-    // Then we create the camel context with our bean registry
-    context = new DefaultCamelContext(registry);
-
-    // Then we add all the routes we need using the route builder DSL syntax
-    context.addRoutes(createMyRoutes());
-
-    return context;
-}
-
-/**
- * This is the route builder where we create our routes using the Camel DSL
- */
-protected RouteBuilder createMyRoutes() throws Exception {
-    return new RouteBuilder() {
-        public void configure() throws Exception {
-            // We pool the atom feeds from the source for further processing 
in the seda queue
-            // we set the delay to 1 second for each pool as this is a unit 
test also and we can
-            // not wait the default poll interval of 60 seconds.
-            // Using splitEntries=true will during polling only fetch one Atom 
Entry at any given time.
-            // As the feed.atom file contains 7 entries, using this will 
require 7 polls to fetch the entire
-            // content. When Camel have reach the end of entries it will 
refresh the atom feed from URI source
-            // and restart - but as Camel by default uses the 
UpdatedDateFilter it will only deliver new
-            // blog entries to &quot;seda:feeds&quot;. So only when James 
Straham updates his blog with a new entry
-            // Camel will create an exchange for the seda:feeds.
-            
from(&quot;atom:file:src/test/data/feed.atom?splitEntries=true&amp;consumer.delay=1000&quot;).to(&quot;seda:feeds&quot;);
-
-            // From the feeds we filter each blot entry by using our blog 
service class
-            
from(&quot;seda:feeds&quot;).filter().method(&quot;blogService&quot;, 
&quot;isGoodBlog&quot;).to(&quot;seda:goodBlogs&quot;);
-
-            // And the good blogs is moved to a mock queue as this sample is 
also used for unit testing
-            // this is one of the strengths in Camel that you can also use the 
mock endpoint for your
-            // unit tests
-            from(&quot;seda:goodBlogs&quot;).to(&quot;mock:result&quot;);
-        }
-    };
-}
-
-/**
- * This is the actual junit test method that does the assertion that our 
routes is working as expected
- */
-@Test
-public void testFiltering() throws Exception {
-    // create and start Camel
-    context = createCamelContext();
-    context.start();
-
-    // Get the mock endpoint
-    MockEndpoint mock = context.getEndpoint(&quot;mock:result&quot;, 
MockEndpoint.class);
-
-    // There should be at least two good blog entries from the feed
-    mock.expectedMinimumMessageCount(2);
-
-    // Asserts that the above expectations is true, will throw assertions 
exception if it failed
-    // Camel will default wait max 20 seconds for the assertions to be true, 
if the conditions
-    // is true sooner Camel will continue
-    mock.assertIsSatisfied();
-
-    // stop Camel after use
-    context.stop();
-}
-
-/**
- * Services for blogs
- */
-public class BlogService {
-
-    /**
-     * Tests the blogs if its a good blog entry or not
-     */
-    public boolean isGoodBlog(Exchange exchange) {
-        Entry entry = exchange.getIn().getBody(Entry.class);
-        String title = entry.getTitle();
-
-        // We like blogs about Camel
-        boolean good = title.toLowerCase().contains(&quot;camel&quot;);
-        return good;
-    }
-
-}
-
-]]></script>
-</div></div><h3 id="Atom-SeeAlso">See Also</h3>
-<ul><li><a shape="rect" href="configuring-camel.html">Configuring 
Camel</a></li><li><a shape="rect" 
href="component.html">Component</a></li><li><a shape="rect" 
href="endpoint.html">Endpoint</a></li><li><a shape="rect" 
href="getting-started.html">Getting Started</a></li></ul><ul 
class="alternate"><li><a shape="rect" href="rss.html">RSS</a></li></ul></div>
+</plain-text-body><h3 id="Atom-URIformat">URI 
format</h3><plain-text-body>atom://atomUri[?options]
+</plain-text-body><p>Where <strong>atomUri</strong> is the URI to the Atom 
feed to poll.</p><h3 id="Atom-Options">Options</h3><parameter 
ac:name="class">confluenceTableSmall</parameter><rich-text-body><div 
class="table-wrap"><table class="confluenceTable"><tbody><tr><th colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTh"><p>Property</p></th><th colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTh"><p>Default</p></th><th colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTh"><p>Description</p></th></tr><tr><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>splitEntries</code></p></td><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>true</code></p></td><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p>If <code>true</code> Camel will 
poll the feed and for the subsequent polls return each entry poll by poll. If 
the feed contains 7 entries then Camel will return the first entry on the first 
poll, the 2nd entry on the next poll, until no more entries where as Camel will 
do a new update on the fee
 d. If <code>false</code> then Camel will poll a fresh feed on every 
invocation.</p></td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p><code>filter</code></p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p><code>true</code></p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p>Is only used by the split entries to filter the entries 
to return. Camel will default use the <code>UpdateDateFilter</code> that only 
return new entries from the feed. So the client consuming from the feed never 
receives the same entry more than once. The filter will return the entries 
ordered by the newest last.</p></td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p><code>lastUpdate</code></p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>null</code></p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p>Is only used by the filter, as the starting 
timestamp for selection never entries (uses the <code>entry.updated</code> 
timestamp). Syntax format
  is: <code>yyyy-MM-ddTHH:MM:ss</code>. Example: 
<code>2007-12-24T17:45:59</code>.</p></td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p><code>throttleEntries</code></p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>true</code></p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><strong>Camel 2.5:</strong> Sets whether 
all entries identified in a single feed poll should be delivered immediately. 
If <code>true</code>, only one entry is processed per 
<code>consumer.delay</code>. Only applicable when <code>splitEntries</code> is 
set to <code>true</code>.</p></td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p><code>feedHeader</code></p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>true</code></p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p>Sets whether to add the Abdera Feed object 
as a header.</p></td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p><code>sortEntries</code></p></td><td colspan=
 "1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>false</code></p></td><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p>If <code>splitEntries</code> is 
<code>true</code>, this sets whether to sort those entries by updated 
date.</p></td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p><code>consumer.delay</code></p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>500</code></p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p>Delay in millis between each 
poll.</p></td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p><code>consumer.initialDelay</code></p></td><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>1000</code></p></td><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p>Millis before polling 
starts.</p></td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p><code>consumer.userFixedDelay</code></p></td><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>false</code></p></td><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="c
 onfluenceTd"><p>If <code>true</code>, use fixed delay between pools, otherwise 
fixed rate is used. See <a shape="rect" class="external-link" 
href="http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.5.0/docs/api/java/util/concurrent/ScheduledExecutorService.html";
 rel="nofollow">ScheduledExecutorService</a> in JDK for 
details.</p></td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><code>username</code></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd">&#160;</td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><strong>Camel 2.16:</strong> For basic authentication when 
polling from a HTTP feed</td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><code>password</code></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd">&#160;</td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><strong>Camel 2.16:</strong><span> For basic 
authentication when polling from a HTTP 
feed</span></td></tr></tbody></table></div></rich-text-body><p>You can append 
query options to the URI in the following format,
  <code>?option=value&amp;option=value&amp;...</code></p><h3 
id="Atom-Exchangedataformat">Exchange data format</h3><p>Camel will set the In 
body on the returned <code>Exchange</code> with the entries. Depending on the 
<code>splitEntries</code> flag Camel will either return one <code>Entry</code> 
or a <code>List&lt;Entry&gt;</code>.</p><parameter 
ac:name="class">confluenceTableSmall</parameter><rich-text-body><div 
class="table-wrap"><table class="confluenceTable"><tbody><tr><th colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTh"><p>Option</p></th><th colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTh"><p>Value</p></th><th colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTh"><p>Behavior</p></th></tr><tr><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p><code>splitEntries</code></p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>true</code></p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p>Only a single entry from the currently 
being processed feed is set: <code>exchange.in.body(En
 try)</code></p></td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p><code>splitEntries</code></p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>false</code></p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p>The entire list of entries from the feed is 
set: 
<code>exchange.in.body(List&lt;Entry&gt;)</code></p></td></tr></tbody></table></div></rich-text-body><p>Camel
 can set the <code>Feed</code> object on the In header (see 
<code>feedHeader</code> option to disable this):</p><h3 
id="Atom-MessageHeaders">Message Headers</h3><p>Camel atom uses these 
headers.</p><parameter 
ac:name="class">confluenceTableSmall</parameter><rich-text-body><div 
class="table-wrap"><table class="confluenceTable"><tbody><tr><th colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTh"><p>Header</p></th><th colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTh"><p>Description</p></th></tr><tr><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>CamelAtomFeed</code></p></td><td 
colspan="1" row
 span="1" class="confluenceTd"><p>When consuming the 
<code>org.apache.abdera.model.Feed</code> object is set to this 
header.</p></td></tr></tbody></table></div></rich-text-body><h3 
id="Atom-Samples">Samples</h3><p>In this sample we poll James Strachan's 
blog.</p><plain-text-body>from("atom://http://macstrac.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default";).to("seda:feeds");
+</plain-text-body><p>In this sample we want to filter only good blogs we like 
to a SEDA queue. The sample also shows how to setup Camel standalone, not 
running in any Container or using 
Spring.<plain-text-body>{snippet:id=e1|lang=java|url=camel/trunk/components/camel-atom/src/test/java/org/apache/camel/component/atom/AtomGoodBlogsTest.java}</plain-text-body><parameter
 ac:name=""><a shape="rect" href="endpoint-see-also.html">Endpoint See 
Also</a></parameter></p><ul class="alternate"><li><a shape="rect" 
href="rss.html">RSS</a></li></ul></div>
         </td>
         <td valign="top">
           <div class="navigation">

Modified: websites/production/camel/content/bean.html
==============================================================================
--- websites/production/camel/content/bean.html (original)
+++ websites/production/camel/content/bean.html Fri Aug 25 10:20:13 2017
@@ -36,17 +36,6 @@
     <![endif]-->
 
 
-  <link href='//camel.apache.org/styles/highlighter/styles/shCoreCamel.css' 
rel='stylesheet' type='text/css' />
-  <link href='//camel.apache.org/styles/highlighter/styles/shThemeCamel.css' 
rel='stylesheet' type='text/css' />
-  <script src='//camel.apache.org/styles/highlighter/scripts/shCore.js' 
type='text/javascript'></script>
-  <script src='//camel.apache.org/styles/highlighter/scripts/shBrushJava.js' 
type='text/javascript'></script>
-  <script src='//camel.apache.org/styles/highlighter/scripts/shBrushXml.js' 
type='text/javascript'></script>
-  <script src='//camel.apache.org/styles/highlighter/scripts/shBrushPlain.js' 
type='text/javascript'></script>
-  
-  <script type="text/javascript">
-  SyntaxHighlighter.defaults['toolbar'] = false;
-  SyntaxHighlighter.all();
-  </script>
 
     <title>
     Apache Camel: Bean
@@ -86,75 +75,27 @@
        <tbody>
         <tr>
         <td valign="top" width="100%">
-<div class="wiki-content maincontent"><h2 id="Bean-BeanComponent">Bean 
Component</h2><p>The <strong>bean:</strong> component binds beans to Camel 
message exchanges.</p><h3 id="Bean-URIformat">URI format</h3><div class="code 
panel pdl" style="border-width: 1px;"><div class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
-<script class="brush: java; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
type="syntaxhighlighter"><![CDATA[bean:beanID[?options]
-]]></script>
-</div></div><p>Where <strong>beanID</strong> can be any string which is used 
to look up the bean in the <a shape="rect" 
href="registry.html">Registry</a></p><h3 id="Bean-Options">Options</h3><div 
class="confluenceTableSmall"><div class="table-wrap"><table 
class="confluenceTable"><tbody><tr><th colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTh"><p>Name</p></th><th colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTh"><p>Type</p></th><th colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTh"><p>Default</p></th><th colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTh"><p>Description</p></th></tr><tr><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>method</code></p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>String</code></p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>null</code></p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p>The method name from the bean that will be 
invoked. If not provided, Camel will try to determine the method itself. In 
case of ambiguity 
 an exception will be thrown. See <a shape="rect" href="bean-binding.html">Bean 
Binding</a> for more details. From <strong>Camel 2.8</strong> onwards you can 
specify type qualifiers to pin-point the exact method to use for overloaded 
methods. From <strong>Camel 2.9</strong> onwards you can specify parameter 
values directly in the method syntax. See more details at <a shape="rect" 
href="bean-binding.html">Bean Binding</a>.</p></td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>cache</code></p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>boolean</code></p></td><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>false</code></p></td><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p>If enabled, Camel will cache 
the result of the first <a shape="rect" href="registry.html">Registry</a> 
look-up. Cache can be enabled if the bean in the <a shape="rect" 
href="registry.html">Registry</a> is defined as a singleton 
scope.</p></td></tr><tr><td colspan=
 "1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p><code>multiParameterArray</code></p></td><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p><code>boolean</code></p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>false</code></p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p>How to treat the parameters which are 
passed from the message body; if it is <code>true</code>, the In message body 
should be an array of parameters.</p></td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p>bean.xxx</p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd">&#160;</td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p>null</p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p><strong style="line-height: 1.42857;">Camel 
2.17:</strong>&#160;To configure additional options on the create bean instance 
from the class name. For example to configure a foo option on the bean, use 
bean.foo=123.</p></td></tr></tbody></table></div></div>
-
-
-<p>You can append query options to the URI in the following format, 
<code>?option=value&amp;option=value&amp;...</code></p><h3 
id="Bean-Using">Using</h3><p>The object instance that is used to consume 
messages must be explicitly registered with the <a shape="rect" 
href="registry.html">Registry</a>. For example, if you are using Spring you 
must define the bean in the Spring configuration, <code>spring.xml</code>; or 
if you don't use Spring, by registering the bean in JNDI.</p><div 
class="error"><span class="error">Error formatting macro: snippet: 
java.lang.IndexOutOfBoundsException: Index: 20, Size: 20</span> </div>Once an 
endpoint has been registered, you can build Camel routes that use it to process 
exchanges.<div class="code panel pdl" style="border-width: 1px;"><div 
class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
-<script class="brush: java; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
type="syntaxhighlighter"><![CDATA[
-// lets add simple route
-camelContext.addRoutes(new RouteBuilder() {
-    public void configure() {
-        from(&quot;direct:hello&quot;).transform().constant(&quot;Good 
Bye!&quot;);
-    }
-});
-]]></script>
-</div></div>A <strong>bean:</strong> endpoint cannot be defined as the input 
to the route; i.e. you cannot consume from it, you can only route from some 
inbound message <a shape="rect" href="endpoint.html">Endpoint</a> to the bean 
endpoint as output. So consider using a <strong>direct:</strong> or 
<strong>queue:</strong> endpoint as the input.<p>You can use the 
<code>createProxy()</code> methods on <a shape="rect" class="external-link" 
href="http://camel.apache.org/maven/current/camel-core/apidocs/org/apache/camel/component/bean/ProxyHelper.html";>ProxyHelper</a>
 to create a proxy that will generate BeanExchanges and send them to any 
endpoint:</p><div class="code panel pdl" style="border-width: 1px;"><div 
class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
-<script class="brush: java; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
type="syntaxhighlighter"><![CDATA[
-ISay proxy = new 
ProxyBuilder(camelContext).endpoint(&quot;direct:hello&quot;).build(ISay.class);
-String rc = proxy.say();
-assertEquals(&quot;Good Bye!&quot;, rc);
-]]></script>
-</div></div>And the same route using Spring DSL:<div class="code panel pdl" 
style="border-width: 1px;"><div class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
-<script class="brush: xml; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
type="syntaxhighlighter"><![CDATA[&lt;route&gt;
-   &lt;from uri=&quot;direct:hello&quot;&gt;
-   &lt;to uri=&quot;bean:bye&quot;/&gt;
+<div class="wiki-content maincontent"><h2 id="Bean-BeanComponent">Bean 
Component</h2><p>The <strong>bean:</strong> component binds beans to Camel 
message exchanges.</p><h3 id="Bean-URIformat">URI 
format</h3><plain-text-body>bean:beanID[?options]
+</plain-text-body><p>Where <strong>beanID</strong> can be any string which is 
used to look up the bean in the <a shape="rect" 
href="registry.html">Registry</a></p><h3 
id="Bean-Options">Options</h3><parameter 
ac:name="class">confluenceTableSmall</parameter><rich-text-body><div 
class="table-wrap"><table class="confluenceTable"><tbody><tr><th colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTh"><p>Name</p></th><th colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTh"><p>Type</p></th><th colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTh"><p>Default</p></th><th colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTh"><p>Description</p></th></tr><tr><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>method</code></p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>String</code></p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>null</code></p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p>The method name from the bean that will be 
invoked. If not provided, Camel will try to det
 ermine the method itself. In case of ambiguity an exception will be thrown. 
See <a shape="rect" href="bean-binding.html">Bean Binding</a> for more details. 
From <strong>Camel 2.8</strong> onwards you can specify type qualifiers to 
pin-point the exact method to use for overloaded methods. From <strong>Camel 
2.9</strong> onwards you can specify parameter values directly in the method 
syntax. See more details at <a shape="rect" href="bean-binding.html">Bean 
Binding</a>.</p></td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p><code>cache</code></p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p><code>boolean</code></p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>false</code></p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p>If enabled, Camel will cache the result of 
the first <a shape="rect" href="registry.html">Registry</a> look-up. Cache can 
be enabled if the bean in the <a shape="rect" href="registry.html">Registry</a> 
is defined as a
  singleton scope.</p></td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p><code>multiParameterArray</code></p></td><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p><code>boolean</code></p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p><code>false</code></p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p>How to treat the parameters which are 
passed from the message body; if it is <code>true</code>, the In message body 
should be an array of parameters.</p></td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p>bean.xxx</p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd">&#160;</td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p>null</p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p><strong style="line-height: 1.42857;">Camel 
2.17:</strong>&#160;To configure additional options on the create bean instance 
from the class name. For example to configure a foo option on the bean, use 
bean.foo=123.</p></td></tr></tbody></table><
 /div></rich-text-body><p>You can append query options to the URI in the 
following format, <code>?option=value&amp;option=value&amp;...</code></p><h3 
id="Bean-Using">Using</h3><p>The object instance that is used to consume 
messages must be explicitly registered with the <a shape="rect" 
href="registry.html">Registry</a>. For example, if you are using Spring you 
must define the bean in the Spring configuration, <code>spring.xml</code>; or 
if you don't use Spring, by registering the bean in 
JNDI.<plain-text-body>{snippet:id=register|lang=java|url=camel/trunk/camel-core/src/test/java/org/apache/camel/component/pojo/PojoRouteTest.java}</plain-text-body>Once
 an endpoint has been registered, you can build Camel routes that use it to 
process 
exchanges.<plain-text-body>{snippet:id=route|lang=java|url=camel/trunk/camel-core/src/test/java/org/apache/camel/component/pojo/PojoRouteTest.java}</plain-text-body>A
 <strong>bean:</strong> endpoint cannot be defined as the input to the route; 
i.e. you c
 annot consume from it, you can only route from some inbound message <a 
shape="rect" href="endpoint.html">Endpoint</a> to the bean endpoint as output. 
So consider using a <strong>direct:</strong> or <strong>queue:</strong> 
endpoint as the input.</p><p>You can use the <code>createProxy()</code> methods 
on <a shape="rect" class="external-link" 
href="http://camel.apache.org/maven/current/camel-core/apidocs/org/apache/camel/component/bean/ProxyHelper.html";>ProxyHelper</a>
 to create a proxy that will generate BeanExchanges and send them to any 
endpoint:<plain-text-body>{snippet:id=invoke|lang=java|url=camel/trunk/camel-core/src/test/java/org/apache/camel/component/pojo/PojoRouteTest.java}</plain-text-body>And
 the same route using Spring DSL:</p><parameter 
ac:name="">xml</parameter><plain-text-body>&lt;route&gt;
+   &lt;from uri="direct:hello"&gt;
+   &lt;to uri="bean:bye"/&gt;
 &lt;/route&gt;
-]]></script>
-</div></div><h3 id="Bean-Beanasendpoint">Bean as endpoint</h3><p>Camel also 
supports invoking <a shape="rect" href="bean.html">Bean</a> as an Endpoint. In 
the route below:</p><div class="code panel pdl" style="border-width: 1px;"><div 
class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
-<script class="brush: xml; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
type="syntaxhighlighter"><![CDATA[
-&lt;camelContext xmlns=&quot;http://camel.apache.org/schema/spring&quot;&gt;
-  &lt;route&gt;
-    &lt;from uri=&quot;direct:start&quot;/&gt;
-    &lt;to uri=&quot;myBean&quot;/&gt;
-    &lt;to uri=&quot;mock:results&quot;/&gt;
-  &lt;/route&gt;
-&lt;/camelContext&gt;
-
-&lt;bean id=&quot;myBean&quot; 
class=&quot;org.apache.camel.spring.bind.ExampleBean&quot;/&gt;
-]]></script>
-</div></div>What happens is that when the exchange is routed to the 
<code>myBean</code> Camel will use the <a shape="rect" 
href="bean-binding.html">Bean Binding</a> to invoke the bean.<br clear="none"> 
The source for the bean is just a plain POJO:<div class="code panel pdl" 
style="border-width: 1px;"><div class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
-<script class="brush: java; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
type="syntaxhighlighter"><![CDATA[
-public class ExampleBean {
-
-    public String sayHello(String name) {
-        return &quot;Hello &quot; + name + &quot;!&quot;;
-    }
-}
-]]></script>
-</div></div>Camel will use <a shape="rect" href="bean-binding.html">Bean 
Binding</a> to invoke the <code>sayHello</code> method, by converting the 
Exchange's In body to the <code>String</code> type and storing the output of 
the method on the Exchange Out body.<h3 id="Bean-JavaDSLbeansyntax">Java DSL 
bean syntax</h3><p>Java DSL comes with syntactic sugar for the <a shape="rect" 
href="bean.html">Bean</a> component. Instead of specifying the bean explicitly 
as the endpoint (i.e. <code>to("bean:beanName")</code>) you can use the 
following syntax:</p><div class="code panel pdl" style="border-width: 
1px;"><div class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
-<script class="brush: java; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
type="syntaxhighlighter"><![CDATA[// Send message to the bean endpoint
+</plain-text-body><h3 id="Bean-Beanasendpoint">Bean as endpoint</h3><p>Camel 
also supports invoking <a shape="rect" href="bean.html">Bean</a> as an 
Endpoint. In the route 
below:<plain-text-body>{snippet:id=e1|lang=xml|url=camel/trunk/components/camel-spring/src/test/resources/org/apache/camel/spring/bind/beanAsEndpoint.xml}</plain-text-body>What
 happens is that when the exchange is routed to the <code>myBean</code> Camel 
will use the <a shape="rect" href="bean-binding.html">Bean Binding</a> to 
invoke the bean.<br clear="none"> The source for the bean is just a plain 
POJO:<plain-text-body>{snippet:id=e1|lang=java|url=camel/trunk/components/camel-spring/src/test/java/org/apache/camel/spring/bind/ExampleBean.java}</plain-text-body>Camel
 will use <a shape="rect" href="bean-binding.html">Bean Binding</a> to invoke 
the <code>sayHello</code> method, by converting the Exchange's In body to the 
<code>String</code> type and storing the output of the method on the Exchange 
Out body.</p><h3 id=
 "Bean-JavaDSLbeansyntax">Java DSL bean syntax</h3><p>Java DSL comes with 
syntactic sugar for the <a shape="rect" href="bean.html">Bean</a> component. 
Instead of specifying the bean explicitly as the endpoint (i.e. 
<code>to("bean:beanName")</code>) you can use the following 
syntax:</p><parameter ac:name="">java</parameter><plain-text-body>// Send 
message to the bean endpoint
 // and invoke method resolved using Bean Binding.
-from(&quot;direct:start&quot;).beanRef(&quot;beanName&quot;);
+from("direct:start").beanRef("beanName");
 
 // Send message to the bean endpoint
 // and invoke given method.
-from(&quot;direct:start&quot;).beanRef(&quot;beanName&quot;, 
&quot;methodName&quot;);
-]]></script>
-</div></div><p>Instead of passing name of the reference to the bean (so that 
Camel will lookup for it in the registry), you can specify the bean 
itself:</p><div class="code panel pdl" style="border-width: 1px;"><div 
class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
-<script class="brush: java; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
type="syntaxhighlighter"><![CDATA[// Send message to the given bean instance.
-from(&quot;direct:start&quot;).bean(new ExampleBean());
+from("direct:start").beanRef("beanName", "methodName");
+</plain-text-body><p>Instead of passing name of the reference to the bean (so 
that Camel will lookup for it in the registry), you can specify the bean 
itself:</p><parameter ac:name="">java</parameter><plain-text-body>// Send 
message to the given bean instance.
+from("direct:start").bean(new ExampleBean());
 
 // Explicit selection of bean method to be invoked.
-from(&quot;direct:start&quot;).bean(new ExampleBean(), &quot;methodName&quot;);
+from("direct:start").bean(new ExampleBean(), "methodName");
 
 // Camel will create the instance of bean and cache it for you.
-from(&quot;direct:start&quot;).bean(ExampleBean.class);
-]]></script>
-</div></div><h3 id="Bean-BeanBinding">Bean Binding</h3><p>How bean methods to 
be invoked are chosen (if they are not specified explicitly through the 
<strong>method</strong> parameter) and how parameter values are constructed 
from the <a shape="rect" href="message.html">Message</a> are all defined by the 
<a shape="rect" href="bean-binding.html">Bean Binding</a> mechanism which is 
used throughout all of the various <a shape="rect" 
href="bean-integration.html">Bean Integration</a> mechanisms in 
Camel.</p><p></p><h3 id="Bean-SeeAlso">See Also</h3>
-<ul><li><a shape="rect" href="configuring-camel.html">Configuring 
Camel</a></li><li><a shape="rect" 
href="component.html">Component</a></li><li><a shape="rect" 
href="endpoint.html">Endpoint</a></li><li><a shape="rect" 
href="getting-started.html">Getting Started</a></li></ul><ul><li><a 
shape="rect" href="class.html">Class</a> component</li><li><a shape="rect" 
href="bean-binding.html">Bean Binding</a></li><li><a shape="rect" 
href="bean-integration.html">Bean Integration</a></li></ul></div>
+from("direct:start").bean(ExampleBean.class);
+</plain-text-body><h3 id="Bean-BeanBinding">Bean Binding</h3><p>How bean 
methods to be invoked are chosen (if they are not specified explicitly through 
the <strong>method</strong> parameter) and how parameter values are constructed 
from the <a shape="rect" href="message.html">Message</a> are all defined by the 
<a shape="rect" href="bean-binding.html">Bean Binding</a> mechanism which is 
used throughout all of the various <a shape="rect" 
href="bean-integration.html">Bean Integration</a> mechanisms in 
Camel.</p><p><parameter ac:name=""><a shape="rect" 
href="endpoint-see-also.html">Endpoint See Also</a></parameter></p><ul><li><a 
shape="rect" href="class.html">Class</a> component</li><li><a shape="rect" 
href="bean-binding.html">Bean Binding</a></li><li><a shape="rect" 
href="bean-integration.html">Bean Integration</a></li></ul></div>
         </td>
         <td valign="top">
           <div class="navigation">

Modified: websites/production/camel/content/book-in-one-page.html
==============================================================================
--- websites/production/camel/content/book-in-one-page.html (original)
+++ websites/production/camel/content/book-in-one-page.html Fri Aug 25 10:20:13 
2017
@@ -4368,11 +4368,11 @@ So we completed the last piece in the pi
 <p>This example has been removed from <strong>Camel 2.9</strong> onwards. 
Apache Axis 1.4 is a very old and unsupported framework. We encourage users to 
use <a shape="rect" href="cxf.html">CXF</a> instead of Axis.</p></div></div>
 
 <style type="text/css">/*<![CDATA[*/
-div.rbtoc1503652754455 {padding: 0px;}
-div.rbtoc1503652754455 ul {list-style: disc;margin-left: 0px;}
-div.rbtoc1503652754455 li {margin-left: 0px;padding-left: 0px;}
+div.rbtoc1503656331936 {padding: 0px;}
+div.rbtoc1503656331936 ul {list-style: disc;margin-left: 0px;}
+div.rbtoc1503656331936 li {margin-left: 0px;padding-left: 0px;}
 
-/*]]>*/</style><div class="toc-macro rbtoc1503652754455">
+/*]]>*/</style><div class="toc-macro rbtoc1503656331936">
 <ul class="toc-indentation"><li><a shape="rect" 
href="#BookInOnePage-TutorialusingAxis1.4withApacheCamel">Tutorial using Axis 
1.4 with Apache Camel</a>
 <ul class="toc-indentation"><li><a shape="rect" 
href="#BookInOnePage-Prerequisites">Prerequisites</a></li><li><a shape="rect" 
href="#BookInOnePage-Distribution">Distribution</a></li><li><a shape="rect" 
href="#BookInOnePage-Introduction">Introduction</a></li><li><a shape="rect" 
href="#BookInOnePage-SettinguptheprojecttorunAxis">Setting up the project to 
run Axis</a>
 <ul class="toc-indentation"><li><a shape="rect" 
href="#BookInOnePage-Maven2">Maven 2</a></li><li><a shape="rect" 
href="#BookInOnePage-wsdl">wsdl</a></li><li><a shape="rect" 
href="#BookInOnePage-ConfiguringAxis">Configuring Axis</a></li><li><a 
shape="rect" href="#BookInOnePage-RunningtheExample">Running the 
Example</a></li></ul>

Modified: websites/production/camel/content/cache/main.pageCache
==============================================================================
Binary files - no diff available.

Modified: websites/production/camel/content/cxf-bean-component.html
==============================================================================
--- websites/production/camel/content/cxf-bean-component.html (original)
+++ websites/production/camel/content/cxf-bean-component.html Fri Aug 25 
10:20:13 2017
@@ -36,17 +36,6 @@
     <![endif]-->
 
 
-  <link href='//camel.apache.org/styles/highlighter/styles/shCoreCamel.css' 
rel='stylesheet' type='text/css' />
-  <link href='//camel.apache.org/styles/highlighter/styles/shThemeCamel.css' 
rel='stylesheet' type='text/css' />
-  <script src='//camel.apache.org/styles/highlighter/scripts/shCore.js' 
type='text/javascript'></script>
-  <script src='//camel.apache.org/styles/highlighter/scripts/shBrushJava.js' 
type='text/javascript'></script>
-  <script src='//camel.apache.org/styles/highlighter/scripts/shBrushXml.js' 
type='text/javascript'></script>
-  <script src='//camel.apache.org/styles/highlighter/scripts/shBrushPlain.js' 
type='text/javascript'></script>
-  
-  <script type="text/javascript">
-  SyntaxHighlighter.defaults['toolbar'] = false;
-  SyntaxHighlighter.all();
-  </script>
 
     <title>
     Apache Camel: CXF Bean Component
@@ -86,45 +75,18 @@
        <tbody>
         <tr>
         <td valign="top" width="100%">
-<div class="wiki-content maincontent"><h2 
id="CXFBeanComponent-CXFBeanComponent">CXF Bean Component</h2><p>The 
<strong>cxfbean:</strong> component allows other Camel endpoints to send 
exchange and invoke Web service bean objects. <strong>Currently, it only 
supports JAX-RS and JAX-WS (new to Camel 2.1) annotated service 
beans.</strong></p><div class="confluence-information-macro 
confluence-information-macro-information"><span class="aui-icon aui-icon-small 
aui-iconfont-info confluence-information-macro-icon"></span><div 
class="confluence-information-macro-body"><p><code>CxfBeanEndpoint</code> is a 
<code>ProcessorEndpoint</code> so it has no consumers. It works similarly to a 
Bean component.</p></div></div><p><span style="color: rgb(0,0,0);">Maven users 
need to add the following dependency to their pom.xml to use the CXF Bean 
Component:</span></p><div class="code panel pdl" style="border-width: 
1px;"><div class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
-<script class="brush: xml; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
type="syntaxhighlighter"><![CDATA[&lt;dependency&gt;
+<div class="wiki-content maincontent"><h2 
id="CXFBeanComponent-CXFBeanComponent">CXF Bean Component</h2><p>The 
<strong>cxfbean:</strong> component allows other Camel endpoints to send 
exchange and invoke Web service bean objects. <strong>Currently, it only 
supports JAX-RS and JAX-WS (new to Camel 2.1) annotated service 
beans.</strong></p><rich-text-body><p><code>CxfBeanEndpoint</code> is a 
<code>ProcessorEndpoint</code> so it has no consumers. It works similarly to a 
Bean component.</p></rich-text-body><p><span style="color: rgb(0,0,0);">Maven 
users need to add the following dependency to their pom.xml to use the CXF Bean 
Component:</span></p><parameter 
ac:name="language">xml</parameter><plain-text-body>&lt;dependency&gt;
     &lt;groupId&gt;org.apache.camel&lt;/groupId&gt;
     &lt;artifactId&gt;camel-cxf&lt;/artifactId&gt;
     &lt;!-- use the same version as your Camel core version: --&gt;
     &lt;version&gt;x.x.x&lt;/version&gt;
-&lt;/dependency&gt;]]></script>
-</div></div><h3 id="CXFBeanComponent-URIformat">URI format</h3><div 
class="code panel pdl" style="border-width: 1px;"><div class="codeContent 
panelContent pdl">
-<script class="brush: java; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
type="syntaxhighlighter"><![CDATA[cxfbean:serviceBeanRef
-]]></script>
-</div></div><p>Where <strong>serviceBeanRef</strong> is a registry key to look 
up the service bean object. If <code>serviceBeanRef</code> references a 
<code>List</code> object, elements of the <code>List</code> are the service 
bean objects accepted by the endpoint.</p><h3 
id="CXFBeanComponent-Options">Options</h3><div class="confluenceTableSmall">
+&lt;/dependency&gt;</plain-text-body><h3 id="CXFBeanComponent-URIformat">URI 
format</h3><plain-text-body>cxfbean:serviceBeanRef
+</plain-text-body><p>Where <strong>serviceBeanRef</strong> is a registry key 
to look up the service bean object. If <code>serviceBeanRef</code> references a 
<code>List</code> object, elements of the <code>List</code> are the service 
bean objects accepted by the endpoint.</p><h3 
id="CXFBeanComponent-Options">Options</h3><parameter 
ac:name="class">confluenceTableSmall</parameter><rich-text-body>
 <div class="table-wrap"><table class="confluenceTable"><tbody><tr><th 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTh"><p> Name </p></th><th colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTh"><p> Description </p></th><th colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTh"><p> Example </p></th><th colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTh"><p> Required? </p></th><th colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTh"><p> Default Value </p></th></tr><tr><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> <code>bus</code> </p></td><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> CXF bus reference specified by 
the <code>#</code> notation. The referenced object must be an instance of 
<code>org.apache.cxf.Bus</code>. </p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p> <code>bus=#busName</code> </p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> No </p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p> Default bus created by CXF Bus Factory 
</p></td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" rowsp
 an="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> <code>cxfBeanBinding</code> </p></td><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> CXF bean binding specified by 
the <code>#</code> notation.  The referenced object must be an instance of 
<code>org.apache.camel.component.cxf.cxfbean.CxfBeanBinding</code>. 
</p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> 
<code>cxfBinding=#bindingName</code> </p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p> No </p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p> <code>DefaultCxfBeanBinding</code> 
</p></td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> 
<code>headerFilterStrategy</code> </p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p> Header filter strategy specified by the <code>#</code> 
notation.  The referenced object must be an instance of 
<code>org.apache.camel.spi.HeaderFilterStrategy</code>. </p></td><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> 
<code>headerFilterStrategy=#strategyName</cod
 e> </p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> No 
</p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> 
<code>CxfHeaderFilterStrategy</code> </p></td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> <code>populateFromClass</code><br 
clear="none" class="atl-forced-newline"> </p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p> Since 2.3, the wsdlLocation annotated in the POJO is 
ignored (by default) unless this option is set to&#160; <code>false.</code> 
Prior to 2.3, the wsdlLocation annotated in the POJO is always honored and it 
is not possible to ignore.<br clear="none" class="atl-forced-newline"> 
</p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> 
<code>true</code>, <code>false</code></p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p> No </p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p> <code>true</code> </p></td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> <code>providers</code> </p></
 td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> Since 2.5, setting the 
providers for the CXFRS endpoint. </p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p><code>providers=#providerRef1,#providerRef2</code></p></td><td
 colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> No </p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> <code>null</code></p></td></tr><tr><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> <code>setDefaultBus</code> 
</p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> Will set the 
default bus when CXF endpoint create a bus by itself. </p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> <code>true</code>, <code>false</code> 
</p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> No </p></td><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> <code>false</code> 
</p></td></tr></tbody></table></div>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3 id="CXFBeanComponent-Headers">Headers</h3><div 
class="confluenceTableSmall">
+</rich-text-body><h3 id="CXFBeanComponent-Headers">Headers</h3><parameter 
ac:name="class">confluenceTableSmall</parameter><rich-text-body>
 <div class="table-wrap"><table class="confluenceTable"><tbody><tr><th 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTh"><p> Name </p></th><th colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTh"><p> Description </p></th><th colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTh"><p> Type </p></th><th colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTh"><p> Required? </p></th><th colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTh"><p> Default Value </p></th><th colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTh"><p> In/Out </p></th><th colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTh"><p> Examples </p></th></tr><tr><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p> <code>CamelHttpCharacterEncoding</code> (before 
2.0-m2: <code>CamelCxfBeanCharacterEncoding</code>) </p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> Character encoding </p></td><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> <code>String</code> 
</p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> No </p></td><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="c
 onfluenceTd"><p> None </p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p> In </p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p> ISO-8859-1 </p></td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> <code>CamelContentType</code> (before 
2.0-m2: <code>CamelCxfBeanContentType</code>) </p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> Content type </p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> <code>String</code> </p></td><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> No </p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> *<strong>/</strong>* </p></td><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> In </p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> <code>text/xml</code> 
</p></td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> 
CamelHttpBaseUri <br clear="none" class="atl-forced-newline">
 (2.0-m3 and before: <code>CamelCxfBeanRequestBasePath</code>) </p></td><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> The value of this header will 
be set in the CXF message as the <code>Message.BASE_PATH</code> property.  It 
is needed by CXF JAX-RS processing.  Basically, it is the scheme, host and port 
portion of the request URI. </p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p> <code>String</code> </p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> Yes </p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p> The Endpoint URI of the source endpoint in the Camel 
exchange </p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> In 
</p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> <a shape="rect" 
class="external-link" href="http://localhost:9000"; 
rel="nofollow">http://localhost:9000</a> </p></td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> <code>CamelHttpPath</code> (before 2.0-m2: 
<code>CamelCxfBeanRequestPat</code>h
 ) </p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> Request URI's 
path </p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> 
<code>String</code> </p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p> Yes </p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p> None </p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p> In </p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p> <code>consumer/123</code> </p></td></tr><tr><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> <code>CamelHttpMethod</code> 
(before 2.0-m2: <code>CamelCxfBeanVerb</code>) </p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> RESTful request verb </p></td><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> <code>String</code> 
</p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> Yes </p></td><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> None </p></td><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> In </p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1"
  class="confluenceTd"><p> <code>GET</code>, <code>PUT</code>, 
<code>POST</code>, <code>DELETE</code> </p></td></tr><tr><td colspan="1" 
rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> <code>CamelHttpResponseCode</code> 
</p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> HTTP response 
code </p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> 
<code>Integer</code> </p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p> No <br clear="none" class="atl-forced-newline"> 
</p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> None </p></td><td 
colspan="1" rowspan="1" class="confluenceTd"><p> Out <br clear="none" 
class="atl-forced-newline"> </p></td><td colspan="1" rowspan="1" 
class="confluenceTd"><p> 200 <br clear="none" class="atl-forced-newline"> 
</p></td></tr></tbody></table></div>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="confluence-information-macro 
confluence-information-macro-note"><span class="aui-icon aui-icon-small 
aui-iconfont-warning confluence-information-macro-icon"></span><div 
class="confluence-information-macro-body"><p>Currently, the CXF Bean component 
has (only) been tested with the <a shape="rect" href="jetty.html">Jetty 
component</a>. It understands headers from <a shape="rect" 
href="jetty.html">Jetty component</a> without requiring 
conversion.</p></div></div><h3 id="CXFBeanComponent-AWorkingSample">A Working 
Sample</h3><p>This sample shows how to create a route that starts an embedded 
Jetty HTTP server. The route sends requests to a CXF Bean and invokes a JAX-RS 
annotated service.</p><p>First, create a route as follows: The 
<code>from</code> endpoint is a Jetty HTTP endpoint that is listening on port 
9000. Notice that the <code>matchOnUriPrefix</code> option must be set to 
<code>true</code> because the RESTful request URI will not exactly match the 
endpoint's URI http:&#1
 73;//localhost:9000.</p><div class="code panel pdl" style="border-width: 
1px;"><div class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
-<script class="brush: xml; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
type="syntaxhighlighter"><![CDATA[
-&lt;route&gt;
-       &lt;from ref=&quot;ep1&quot; /&gt;
-       &lt;to uri=&quot;cxfbean:customerServiceBean&quot; /&gt;
-       &lt;to uri=&quot;mock:endpointA&quot; /&gt;
-&lt;/route&gt;
-]]></script>
-</div></div><p>The <code>to</code> endpoint is a CXF Bean with bean name 
<code>customerServiceBean</code>. The name will be looked up from the registry. 
Next, we make sure our service bean is available in Spring registry. We create 
a bean definition in the Spring configuration. In this example, we create a 
List of service beans (of one element). We could have created just a single 
bean without a List.</p><div class="code panel pdl" style="border-width: 
1px;"><div class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
-<script class="brush: xml; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
type="syntaxhighlighter"><![CDATA[
-&lt;util:list id=&quot;customerServiceBean&quot;&gt;
-       &lt;bean 
class=&quot;org.apache.camel.component.cxf.jaxrs.testbean.CustomerService&quot; 
/&gt;
-&lt;/util:list&gt;
-
-&lt;bean class=&quot;org.apache.camel.wsdl_first.PersonImpl&quot; 
id=&quot;jaxwsBean&quot; /&gt;
-
-]]></script>
-</div></div><p>That's it. Once the route is started, the web service is ready 
for business. A HTTP client can make a request and receive response.</p></div>
+</rich-text-body><rich-text-body><p>Currently, the CXF Bean component has 
(only) been tested with the <a shape="rect" href="jetty.html">Jetty 
component</a>. It understands headers from <a shape="rect" 
href="jetty.html">Jetty component</a> without requiring 
conversion.</p></rich-text-body><h3 id="CXFBeanComponent-AWorkingSample">A 
Working Sample</h3><p>This sample shows how to create a route that starts an 
embedded Jetty HTTP server. The route sends requests to a CXF Bean and invokes 
a JAX-RS annotated service.</p><p>First, create a route as follows: The 
<code>from</code> endpoint is a Jetty HTTP endpoint that is listening on port 
9000. Notice that the <code>matchOnUriPrefix</code> option must be set to 
<code>true</code> because the RESTful request URI will not exactly match the 
endpoint's URI 
http:&#173;//localhost:9000.</p><plain-text-body>{snippet:id=routeDefinition|lang=xml|url=camel/trunk/components/camel-cxf/src/test/resources/org/apache/camel/component/cxf/cxfbean/CxfBeanTest-
 context.xml}</plain-text-body><p>The <code>to</code> endpoint is a CXF Bean 
with bean name <code>customerServiceBean</code>. The name will be looked up 
from the registry. Next, we make sure our service bean is available in Spring 
registry. We create a bean definition in the Spring configuration. In this 
example, we create a List of service beans (of one element). We could have 
created just a single bean without a 
List.</p><plain-text-body>{snippet:id=beanDefinition|lang=xml|url=camel/trunk/components/camel-cxf/src/test/resources/org/apache/camel/component/cxf/cxfbean/CxfBeanTest-context.xml}</plain-text-body><p>That's
 it. Once the route is started, the web service is ready for business. A HTTP 
client can make a request and receive response.</p></div>
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