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+<div class="docbook"><div class="navheader"><table summary="Navigation header" 
width="100%"><tr><th align="center" colspan="3">1.4.&#160;Broker 
Federation</th></tr><tr><td align="left" width="20%"><a accesskey="p" 
href="ch01s03.html">Prev</a>&#160;</td><th align="center" 
width="60%">Chapter&#160;1.&#160;
+      Running the AMQP Messaging Broker
+    </th><td align="right" width="20%">&#160;<a accesskey="n" 
href="chap-Messaging_User_Guide-Security.html">Next</a></td></tr></table><hr 
/></div><div class="section"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h2 
class="title"><a 
id="chap-Messaging_User_Guide-Broker_Federation"></a>1.4.&#160;Broker 
Federation</h2></div></div></div><p>
+    <em class="firstterm">Broker Federation</em> allows messaging networks to 
be defined by creating <em class="firstterm">message routes</em>, in which 
messages in one broker (the <em class="firstterm">source broker</em>) are 
automatically routed to another broker (the <em class="firstterm">destination 
broker</em>). These routes may be defined between exchanges in the two brokers 
(the <em class="firstterm">source exchange</em> and the <em 
class="firstterm">destination exchange</em>), or from a queue in the source 
broker (the <em class="firstterm">source queue</em>) to an exchange in the 
destination broker. Message routes are unidirectional; when bidirectional flow 
is needed, one route is created in each direction. Routes can be durable or 
transient. A durable route survives broker restarts, restoring a route as soon 
as both the source broker and the destination are available. If the connection 
to a destination is lost, messages associated with a durable route continue to 
accumulate
  on the source, so they can be retrieved when the connection is reestablished.
+  </p><p>
+    Broker Federation can be used to build large messaging networks, with many 
brokers, one route at a time. If network connectivity permits, an entire 
distributed messaging network can be configured from a single location. The 
rules used for routing can be changed dynamically as servers change, 
responsibilities change, at different times of day, or to reflect other 
changing conditions.
+  </p><p>
+    Broker Federation is useful in a wide variety of scenarios. Some of these 
have to do with functional organization; for instance, brokers may be organized 
by geography, service type, or priority. Here are some use cases for federation:
+    </p><div class="itemizedlist"><ul class="itemizedlist" type="disc"><li 
class="listitem"><p>
+         Geography: Customer requests may be routed to a processing location 
close to the customer.
+       </p></li><li class="listitem"><p>
+         Service Type: High value customers may be routed to more responsive 
servers.
+       </p></li><li class="listitem"><p>
+         Load balancing: Routing among brokers may be changed dynamically to 
account for changes in actual or anticipated load.
+       </p></li><li class="listitem"><p>
+         High Availability: Routing may be changed to a new broker if an 
existing broker becomes unavailable.
+       </p></li><li class="listitem"><p>
+         WAN Connectivity: Federated routes may connect disparate locations 
across a wide area network, while clients connect to brokers on their own local 
area network. Each broker can provide persistent queues that can hold messages 
even if there are gaps in WAN connectivity.
+       </p></li><li class="listitem"><p>
+         Functional Organization: The flow of messages among software 
subsystems can be configured to mirror the logical structure of a distributed 
application.
+       </p></li><li class="listitem"><p>
+         Replicated Exchanges: High-function exchanges like the XML exchange 
can be replicated to scale performance.
+       </p></li><li class="listitem"><p>
+         Interdepartmental Workflow: The flow of messages among brokers can be 
configured to mirror interdepartmental workflow at an organization.
+       </p></li></ul></div><p>
+
+  </p><div class="section"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 
class="title"><a 
id="sect-Messaging_User_Guide-Broker_Federation-Message_Routes"></a>1.4.1.&#160;Message
 Routes</h3></div></div></div><p>
+      Broker Federation is done by creating message routes. The destination 
for a route is always an exchange on the destination broker. By default, a 
message route is created by configuring the destination broker, which then 
contacts the source broker to subscribe to the source queue. This is called a 
<em class="firstterm">pull route</em>. It is also possible to create a route by 
configuring the source broker, which then contacts the destination broker in 
order to send messages. This is called a <em class="firstterm">push route</em>, 
and is particularly useful when the destination broker may not be available at 
the time the messaging route is configured, or when a large number of routes 
are created with the same destination exchange.
+    </p><p>
+      The source for a route can be either an exchange or a queue on the 
source broker. If a route is between two exchanges, the routing criteria can be 
given explicitly, or the bindings of the destination exchange can be used to 
determine the routing criteria. To support this functionality, there are three 
kinds of message routes: queue routes, exchange routes, and dynamic exchange 
routes.
+    </p><div class="section"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h4 
class="title"><a 
id="sect-Messaging_User_Guide-Message_Routes-Queue_Routes"></a>1.4.1.1.&#160;Queue
 Routes</h4></div></div></div><p>
+       <em class="firstterm">Queue Routes</em> route all messages from a 
source queue to a destination exchange. If message acknowledgement is enabled, 
messages are removed from the queue when they have been received by the 
destination exchange; if message acknowledgement is off, messages are removed 
from the queue when sent.
+      </p></div><div class="section"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h4 
class="title"><a 
id="sect-Messaging_User_Guide-Message_Routes-Exchange_Routes"></a>1.4.1.2.&#160;Exchange
 Routes</h4></div></div></div><p>
+       <em class="firstterm">Exchange routes</em> route messages from a source 
exchange to a destination exchange, using a binding key (which is optional for 
a fanout exchange).
+      </p><p>
+       Internally, creating an exchange route creates a private queue 
(auto-delete, exclusive) on the source broker to hold messages that are to be 
routed to the destination broker, binds this private queue to the source broker 
exchange, and subscribes the destination broker to the queue.
+      </p></div><div class="section"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h4 
class="title"><a 
id="sect-Messaging_User_Guide-Message_Routes-Dynamic_Exchange_Routes"></a>1.4.1.3.&#160;Dynamic
 Exchange Routes</h4></div></div></div><p>
+       Dynamic exchange routes allow a client to create bindings to an 
exchange on one broker, and receive messages that satisfy the conditions of 
these bindings not only from the exchange to which the client created the 
binding, but also from other exchanges that are connected to it using dynamic 
exchange routes. If the client modifies the bindings for a given exchange, they 
are also modified for dynamic exchange routes associated with that exchange.
+      </p><p>
+       <em class="firstterm">Dynamic exchange routes</em> apply all the 
bindings of a destination exchange to a source exchange, so that any message 
that would match one of these bindings is routed to the destination exchange. 
If bindings are added or removed from the destination exchange, these changes 
are reflected in the dynamic exchange route -- when the destination broker 
creates a binding with a given binding key, this is reflected in the route, and 
when the destination broker drops a binding with a binding key, the route no 
longer incurs the overhead of transferring messages that match the binding key 
among brokers. If two exchanges have dynamic exchange routes to each other, 
then all bindings in each exchange are reflected in the dynamic exchange route 
of the other. In a dynamic exchange route, the source and destination exchanges 
must have the same exchange type, and they must have the same name; for 
instance, if the source exchange is a direct exchange, the destination exchange 
 must also be a direct exchange, and the names must match.
+      </p><p>
+       Internally, dynamic exchange routes are implemented in the same way as 
exchange routes, except that the bindings used to implement dynamic exchange 
routes are modified if the bindings in the destination exchange change.
+      </p><p>
+       A dynamic exchange route is always a pull route. It can never be a push 
route.
+      </p></div></div><div class="section"><div 
class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a 
id="sect-Messaging_User_Guide-Broker_Federation-Federation_Topologies"></a>1.4.2.&#160;Federation
 Topologies</h3></div></div></div><p>
+      A federated network is generally a tree, star, or line, using 
bidirectional links (implemented as a pair of unidirectional links) between any 
two brokers. A ring topology is also possible, if only unidirectional links are 
used.
+    </p><p>
+      Every message transfer takes time. For better performance, you should 
minimize the number of brokers between the message origin and final 
destination. In most cases, tree or star topologies do this best.
+    </p><p>
+      For any pair of nodes A,B in a federated network, there should be only 
one path from A to B. If there is more than one path, message loops can cause 
duplicate message transmission and flood the federated network. The topologies 
discussed above do not have message loops. A ring topology with bidirectional 
links is one example of a topology that does cause this problem, because a 
given broker can receive the same message from two different brokers. Mesh 
topologies can also cause this problem.
+    </p></div><div class="section"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 
class="title"><a 
id="sect-Messaging_User_Guide-Broker_Federation-Federation_among_High_Availability_Message_Clusters"></a>1.4.3.&#160;Federation
 among High Availability Message Clusters</h3></div></div></div><p>
+      Federation is generally used together with High Availability Message 
Clusters, using clusters to provide high availability on each LAN, and 
federation to route messages among the clusters. Because message state is 
replicated within a cluster, it makes little sense to define message routes 
between brokers in the same cluster.
+    </p><p>
+      To create a message route between two clusters, simply create a route 
between any one broker in the first cluster and any one broker in the second 
cluster. Each broker in a given cluster can use message routes defined for 
another broker in the same cluster. If the broker for which a message route is 
defined should fail, another broker in the same cluster can restore the message 
route.
+    </p></div><div class="section"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 
class="title"><a 
id="sect-Messaging_User_Guide-Broker_Federation-The_qpid_route_Utility"></a>1.4.4.&#160;The
 qpid-route Utility</h3></div></div></div><p>
+      <span class="command"><strong>qpid-route</strong></span> is a command 
line utility used to configure federated networks of brokers and to view the 
status and topology of networks. It can be used to configure routes among any 
brokers that <span class="command"><strong>qpid-route</strong></span> can 
connect to.
+    </p><p>
+      The syntax of <span class="command"><strong>qpid-route</strong></span> 
is as follows:
+    </p><pre class="screen">
+      qpid-route [OPTIONS] dynamic add &lt;dest-broker&gt; &lt;src-broker&gt; 
&lt;exchange&gt;
+      qpid-route [OPTIONS] dynamic del &lt;dest-broker&gt; &lt;src-broker&gt; 
&lt;exchange&gt;
+
+      qpid-route [OPTIONS] route add &lt;dest-broker&gt; &lt;src-broker&gt; 
&lt;exchange&gt; &lt;routing-key&gt;
+      qpid-route [OPTIONS] route del &lt;dest-broker&gt; &lt;src-broker&gt; 
&lt;exchange&gt; &lt;routing-key&gt;
+
+      qpid-route [OPTIONS] queue add &lt;dest-broker&gt; &lt;src-broker&gt; 
&lt;dest-exchange&gt;  &lt;src-queue&gt;
+      qpid-route [OPTIONS] queue del &lt;dest-broker&gt; &lt;src-broker&gt; 
&lt;dest-exchange&gt;  &lt;src-queue&gt;
+
+      qpid-route [OPTIONS] list  [&lt;broker&gt;]
+      qpid-route [OPTIONS] flush [&lt;broker&gt;]
+      qpid-route [OPTIONS] map   [&lt;broker&gt;]
+
+      
+      qpid-route [OPTIONS] list connections [&lt;broker&gt;]
+    </pre><p>
+      The syntax for <span class="command"><strong>broker</strong></span>, 
<span class="command"><strong>dest-broker</strong></span>, and <span 
class="command"><strong>src-broker</strong></span> is as follows:
+    </p><pre class="screen">
+      [username/password@] hostname | ip-address [:&lt;port&gt;]
+    </pre><p>
+      The following are all valid examples of the above syntax: <span 
class="command"><strong>localhost</strong></span>, <span 
class="command"><strong>10.1.1.7:10000</strong></span>, <span 
class="command"><strong>broker-host:10000</strong></span>, <span 
class="command"><strong>guest/guest@localhost</strong></span>.
+    </p><p>
+      These are the options for <span 
class="command"><strong>qpid-route</strong></span>:
+    </p><div class="table"><a 
id="tabl-Messaging_User_Guide-The_qpid_route_Utility-qpid_route_options"></a><p 
class="title"><strong>Table&#160;1.9.&#160;<span 
class="command">qpid-route</span> options</strong></p><div 
class="table-contents"><table border="1" class="table" summary="qpid-route 
options"><colgroup><col align="left" class="c1" /><col align="left" class="c2" 
/></colgroup><tbody><tr><td align="left">
+             <span class="command"><strong>-v</strong></span>
+           </td><td align="left">
+             Verbose output.
+           </td></tr><tr><td align="left">
+             <span class="command"><strong>-q</strong></span>
+           </td><td align="left">
+             Quiet output, will not print duplicate warnings.
+           </td></tr><tr><td align="left">
+             <span class="command"><strong>-d</strong></span>
+           </td><td align="left">
+             Make the route durable.
+           </td></tr><tr><td align="left">
+             <span class="command"><strong> --timeout N</strong></span>
+           </td><td align="left">
+             Maximum time to wait when qpid-route connects to a broker, in 
seconds. Default is 10 seconds.
+           </td></tr><tr><td align="left">
+             <span class="command"><strong>--ack N</strong></span>
+           </td><td align="left">
+             Acknowledge transfers of routed messages in batches of N. Default 
is 0 (no acknowledgements). Setting to 1 or greater enables acknowledgements; 
when using acknowledgements, values of N greater than 1 can significnantly 
improve performance, especially if there is significant network latency between 
the two brokers.
+           </td></tr><tr><td align="left">
+             <span class="command"><strong>-s [ --src-local ]</strong></span>
+           </td><td align="left">
+             Configure the route in the source broker (create a push route).
+           </td></tr><tr><td align="left">
+             <span class="command"><strong>-t &lt;transport&gt; [ --transport 
&lt;transport&gt;]</strong></span>
+           </td><td align="left">
+             Transport protocol to be used for the route.
+             <div class="itemizedlist"><ul class="itemizedlist" 
type="disc"><li class="listitem"><p>
+                   tcp (default)
+                 </p></li><li class="listitem"><p>
+                   ssl
+                 </p></li><li class="listitem"><p>
+                   rdma
+                 </p></li></ul></div>
+
+           </td></tr></tbody></table></div></div><br class="table-break" 
/><div class="section"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h4 class="title"><a 
id="sect-Messaging_User_Guide-The_qpid_route_Utility-Creating_and_Deleting_Queue_Routes"></a>1.4.4.1.&#160;Creating
 and Deleting Queue Routes</h4></div></div></div><p>
+       The syntax for creating and deleting queue routes is as follows:
+      </p><pre class="screen">
+       qpid-route [OPTIONS] queue add &lt;dest-broker&gt; &lt;src-broker&gt; 
&lt;dest-exchange&gt; &lt;src-queue&gt;
+       qpid-route [OPTIONS] queue del &lt;dest-broker&gt; &lt;src-broker&gt; 
&lt;dest-exchange&gt; &lt;src-queue&gt;
+      </pre><p>
+       For instance, the following creates a queue route that routes all 
messages from the queue named <span 
class="command"><strong>public</strong></span> on the source broker <span 
class="command"><strong>localhost:10002</strong></span> to the <span 
class="command"><strong>amq.fanout</strong></span> exchange on the destination 
broker <span class="command"><strong>localhost:10001</strong></span>:
+      </p><pre class="screen">
+       $ qpid-route queue add localhost:10001 localhost:10002 amq.fanout public
+      </pre><p>
+       If the <span class="command"><strong>-d</strong></span> option is 
specified, this queue route is persistent, and will be restored if one or both 
of the brokers is restarted:
+      </p><pre class="screen">
+       $ qpid-route -d queue add localhost:10001 localhost:10002 amq.fanout 
public
+      </pre><p>
+       The <span class="command"><strong>del</strong></span> command takes the 
same arguments as the <span class="command"><strong>add</strong></span> 
command. The following command deletes the queue route described above:
+      </p><pre class="screen">
+       $ qpid-route queue del localhost:10001 localhost:10002 amq.fanout public
+      </pre></div><div class="section"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h4 
class="title"><a 
id="sect-Messaging_User_Guide-The_qpid_route_Utility-Creating_and_Deleting_Exchange_Routes"></a>1.4.4.2.&#160;Creating
 and Deleting Exchange Routes</h4></div></div></div><p>
+       The syntax for creating and deleting exchange routes is as follows:
+      </p><pre class="screen">
+       qpid-route [OPTIONS] route add &lt;dest-broker&gt; &lt;src-broker&gt; 
&lt;exchange&gt; &lt;routing-key&gt;
+       qpid-route [OPTIONS] route del &lt;dest-broker&gt; &lt;src-broker&gt; 
&lt;exchange&gt; &lt;routing-key&gt;
+       qpid-route [OPTIONS] flush [&lt;broker&gt;]
+      </pre><p>
+       For instance, the following creates an exchange route that routes 
messages that match the binding key <span 
class="command"><strong>global.#</strong></span> from the <span 
class="command"><strong>amq.topic</strong></span> exchange on the source broker 
<span class="command"><strong>localhost:10002</strong></span> to the <span 
class="command"><strong>amq.topic</strong></span> exchange on the destination 
broker <span class="command"><strong>localhost:10001</strong></span>:
+      </p><pre class="screen">
+       $ qpid-route route add localhost:10001 localhost:10002 amq.topic 
global.#
+      </pre><p>
+       In many applications, messages published to the destination exchange 
should also be routed to the source exchange. This is accomplished by creating 
a second exchange route, reversing the roles of the two exchanges:
+      </p><pre class="screen">
+       $ qpid-route route add localhost:10002 localhost:10001 amq.topic 
global.#
+      </pre><p>
+       If the <span class="command"><strong>-d</strong></span> option is 
specified, the exchange route is persistent, and will be restored if one or 
both of the brokers is restarted:
+      </p><pre class="screen">
+       $ qpid-route -d route add localhost:10001 localhost:10002 amq.fanout 
public
+      </pre><p>
+       The <span class="command"><strong>del</strong></span> command takes the 
same arguments as the <span class="command"><strong>add</strong></span> 
command. The following command deletes the first exchange route described above:
+      </p><pre class="screen">
+       $ qpid-route route del localhost:10001 localhost:10002 amq.topic 
global.#
+      </pre></div><div class="section"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h4 
class="title"><a 
id="sect-Messaging_User_Guide-The_qpid_route_Utility-Deleting_all_routes_for_a_broker"></a>1.4.4.3.&#160;Deleting
 all routes for a broker</h4></div></div></div><p>
+       Use the <span class="command"><strong>flush</strong></span> command to 
delete all routes for a given broker:
+      </p><pre class="screen">
+       qpid-route [OPTIONS] flush [&lt;broker&gt;]
+      </pre><p>
+       For instance, the following command deletes all routes for the broker 
<span class="command"><strong>localhost:10001</strong></span>:
+      </p><pre class="screen">
+       $ qpid-route flush localhost:10001
+      </pre></div><div class="section"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h4 
class="title"><a 
id="sect-Messaging_User_Guide-The_qpid_route_Utility-Creating_and_Deleting_Dynamic_Exchange_Routes"></a>1.4.4.4.&#160;Creating
 and Deleting Dynamic Exchange Routes</h4></div></div></div><p>
+       The syntax for creating and deleting dynamic exchange routes is as 
follows:
+      </p><pre class="screen">
+       qpid-route [OPTIONS] dynamic add &lt;dest-broker&gt; &lt;src-broker&gt; 
&lt;exchange&gt;
+       qpid-route [OPTIONS] dynamic del &lt;dest-broker&gt; &lt;src-broker&gt; 
&lt;exchange&gt;
+      </pre><p>
+       In the following examples, we will route messages from a topic 
exchange. We will create a new topic exchange and federate it so that we are 
not affected by other all clients that use the built-in <span 
class="command"><strong>amq.topic</strong></span> exchange. The following 
commands create a new topic exchange on each of two brokers:
+      </p><pre class="screen">
+       $ qpid-config -a localhost:10003 add exchange topic fed.topic
+       $ qpid-config -a localhost:10004 add exchange topic fed.topic
+      </pre><p>
+       Now let's create a dynamic exchange route that routes messages from the 
<span class="command"><strong>fed.topic</strong></span> exchange on the source 
broker <span class="command"><strong>localhost:10004</strong></span> to the 
<span class="command"><strong>fed.topic</strong></span> exchange on the 
destination broker <span 
class="command"><strong>localhost:10003</strong></span> if they match any 
binding on the destination broker's <span 
class="command"><strong>fed.topic</strong></span> exchange:
+      </p><pre class="screen">
+       $ qpid-route dynamic add localhost:10003 localhost:10004 fed.topic
+      </pre><p>
+       Internally, this creates a private autodelete queue on the source 
broker, and binds that queue to the <span 
class="command"><strong>fed.topic</strong></span> exchange on the source 
broker, using each binding associated with the <span 
class="command"><strong>fed.topic</strong></span> exchange on the destination 
broker.
+      </p><p>
+       In many applications, messages published to the destination exchange 
should also be routed to the source exchange. This is accomplished by creating 
a second dynamic exchange route, reversing the roles of the two exchanges:
+      </p><pre class="screen">
+       $ qpid-route dynamic add localhost:10004 localhost:10003 fed.topic
+      </pre><p>
+       If the <span class="command"><strong>-d</strong></span> option is 
specified, the exchange route is persistent, and will be restored if one or 
both of the brokers is restarted:
+      </p><pre class="screen">
+       $ qpid-route -d dynamic add localhost:10004 localhost:10003 fed.topic
+      </pre><p>
+       When an exchange route is durable, the private queue used to store 
messages for the route on the source exchange is also durable. If the 
connection between the brokers is lost, messages for the destination exchange 
continue to accumulate until it can be restored.
+      </p><p>
+       The <span class="command"><strong>del</strong></span> command takes the 
same arguments as the <span class="command"><strong>add</strong></span> 
command. The following command deletes the first exchange route described above:
+      </p><pre class="screen">
+       $ qpid-route dynamic del localhost:10004 localhost:10003 fed.topic
+      </pre><p>
+       Internally, this deletes the bindings on the source exchange for the 
the private queues associated with the message route.
+      </p></div><div class="section"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h4 
class="title"><a 
id="sect-Messaging_User_Guide-The_qpid_route_Utility-Viewing_Routes"></a>1.4.4.5.&#160;Viewing
 Routes</h4></div></div></div><p>
+       The <span class="command"><strong>route list</strong></span> command 
shows the routes associated with an individual broker. For instance, suppose we 
have created the following two routes:
+      </p><pre class="screen">
+       $ qpid-route dynamic add localhost:10003 localhost:10004 fed.topic
+       $ qpid-route dynamic add localhost:10004 localhost:10003 fed.topic
+      </pre><p>
+       We can now use <span class="command"><strong>route list</strong></span> 
to show all routes for the broker <span 
class="command"><strong>localhost:10003</strong></span>:
+      </p><pre class="screen">
+       $ qpid-route route list localhost:10003
+       localhost:10003 localhost:10004 fed.topic &lt;dynamic&gt;
+      </pre><p>
+       Note that this shows only one of the two routes we created, the route 
for which <span class="command"><strong>localhost:10003</strong></span> is a 
destination. If we want to see the route for which <span 
class="command"><strong>localhost:10004</strong></span> is a destination, we 
need to do another route list:
+      </p><pre class="screen">
+       $ qpid-route route list localhost:10004
+       localhost:10004 localhost:10003 fed.topic &lt;dynamic&gt;
+      </pre><p>
+       The <span class="command"><strong>route map</strong></span> command 
shows all routes associated with a broker, and recursively displays all routes 
for brokers involved in federation relationships with the given broker. For 
instance, here is the output for the two brokers configured above:
+      </p><pre class="screen">
+       $ qpid-route route map localhost:10003
+
+       Finding Linked Brokers:
+       localhost:10003... Ok
+       localhost:10004... Ok
+
+       Dynamic Routes:
+
+       Exchange fed.topic:
+       localhost:10004 &lt;=&gt; localhost:10003
+
+       Static Routes:
+       none found
+      </pre><p>
+       Note that the two dynamic exchange links are displayed as though they 
were one bidirectional link. The <span class="command"><strong>route 
map</strong></span> command is particularly helpful for larger, more complex 
networks. Let's configure a somewhat more complex network with 16 dynamic 
exchange routes:
+      </p><pre class="screen">
+       qpid-route dynamic add localhost:10001 localhost:10002 fed.topic
+       qpid-route dynamic add localhost:10002 localhost:10001 fed.topic
+
+       qpid-route dynamic add localhost:10003 localhost:10002 fed.topic
+       qpid-route dynamic add localhost:10002 localhost:10003 fed.topic
+
+       qpid-route dynamic add localhost:10004 localhost:10002 fed.topic
+       qpid-route dynamic add localhost:10002 localhost:10004 fed.topic
+
+       qpid-route dynamic add localhost:10002 localhost:10005 fed.topic
+       qpid-route dynamic add localhost:10005 localhost:10002 fed.topic
+
+       qpid-route dynamic add localhost:10005 localhost:10006 fed.topic
+       qpid-route dynamic add localhost:10006 localhost:10005 fed.topic
+
+       qpid-route dynamic add localhost:10006 localhost:10007 fed.topic
+       qpid-route dynamic add localhost:10007 localhost:10006 fed.topic
+
+       qpid-route dynamic add localhost:10006 localhost:10008 fed.topic
+       qpid-route dynamic add localhost:10008 localhost:10006 fed.topic
+      </pre><p>
+       Now we can use <span class="command"><strong>route map</strong></span> 
starting with any one broker, and see the entire network:
+      </p><pre class="screen">
+       $ ./qpid-route route map localhost:10001
+
+       Finding Linked Brokers:
+       localhost:10001... Ok
+       localhost:10002... Ok
+       localhost:10003... Ok
+       localhost:10004... Ok
+       localhost:10005... Ok
+       localhost:10006... Ok
+       localhost:10007... Ok
+       localhost:10008... Ok
+
+       Dynamic Routes:
+
+       Exchange fed.topic:
+       localhost:10002 &lt;=&gt; localhost:10001
+       localhost:10003 &lt;=&gt; localhost:10002
+       localhost:10004 &lt;=&gt; localhost:10002
+       localhost:10005 &lt;=&gt; localhost:10002
+       localhost:10006 &lt;=&gt; localhost:10005
+       localhost:10007 &lt;=&gt; localhost:10006
+       localhost:10008 &lt;=&gt; localhost:10006
+
+       Static Routes:
+       none found
+      </pre></div><div class="section"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h4 
class="title"><a 
id="sect-Messaging_User_Guide-The_qpid_route_Utility-Resilient_Connections"></a>1.4.4.6.&#160;Resilient
 Connections</h4></div></div></div><p>
+       When a broker route is created, or when a durable broker route is 
restored after broker restart, a connection is created between the source 
broker and the destination broker. The connections used between brokers are 
called <em class="firstterm">resilient connections</em>; if the connection 
fails due to a communication error, it attempts to reconnect. The retry 
interval begins at 2 seconds and, as more attempts are made, grows to 64 
seconds, and continues to retry every 64 seconds thereafter. If the connection 
fails due to an authentication problem, it will not continue to retry.
+      </p><p>
+       The command <span class="command"><strong>list 
connections</strong></span> can be used to show the resilient connections for a 
broker:
+      </p><pre class="screen">
+       $ qpid-route list connections localhost:10001
+
+       Host            Port    Transport Durable  State             Last Error
+       
=============================================================================
+       localhost       10002   tcp          N     Operational
+       localhost       10003   tcp          N     Operational
+       localhost       10009   tcp          N     Waiting           Connection 
refused
+      </pre><p>
+       In the above output, <span class="command"><strong>Last 
Error</strong></span> contains the string representation of the last connection 
error received for the connection. <span 
class="command"><strong>State</strong></span> represents the state of the 
connection, and may be one of the following values:
+      </p><div class="table"><a 
id="tabl-Messaging_User_Guide-Resilient_Connections-State_values_in_qpid_route_list_connections"></a><p
 class="title"><strong>Table&#160;1.10.&#160;State values in <span 
class="command">$ qpid-route list connections</span></strong></p><div 
class="table-contents"><table border="1" class="table" summary="State values in 
$ qpid-route list connections"><colgroup><col /><col 
/></colgroup><tbody><tr><td align="left">
+               Waiting
+             </td><td align="left">
+               Waiting before attempting to reconnect.
+             </td></tr><tr><td align="left">
+               Connecting
+             </td><td align="left">
+               Attempting to establish the connection.
+             </td></tr><tr><td align="left">
+               Operational
+             </td><td align="left">
+               The connection has been established and can be used.
+             </td></tr><tr><td align="left">
+               Failed
+             </td><td align="left">
+               The connection failed and will not retry (usually because 
authentication failed).
+             </td></tr><tr><td align="left">
+               Closed
+             </td><td align="left">
+               The connection has been closed and will soon be deleted.
+             </td></tr><tr><td align="left">
+               Passive
+             </td><td align="left">
+               If a cluster is federated to another cluster, only one of the 
nodes has an actual connection to remote node. Other nodes in the cluster have 
a passive connection.
+             </td></tr></tbody></table></div></div><br class="table-break" 
/></div></div><div class="section"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 
class="title"><a id="federation-broker-options"></a>1.4.5.&#160;Broker options 
affecting federation</h3></div></div></div><p>
+      The following broker options affect federation:
+      </p><div class="table"><a id="federation-broker-options-table"></a><p 
class="title"><strong>Table&#160;1.11.&#160;Broker Options for 
Federation</strong></p><div class="table-contents"><table border="1" 
class="table" summary="Broker Options for Federation"><colgroup><col 
align="left" class="c1" /><col align="left" class="c2" 
/></colgroup><thead><tr><th align="center" colspan="2">
+               Options for Federation
+             </th></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td align="left">
+               <code class="literal">federation-tag <em 
class="replaceable"><code>NAME</code></em></code>
+             </td><td align="left">
+               A unique name to identify this broker in federation network.
+               If not specified, the broker will generate a unique identifier.
+             </td></tr><tr><td align="left">
+               <code class="literal">link-maintenance-interval <em 
class="replaceable"><code>SECONDS</code></em></code>
+               <a class="footnoteref" 
href="chapter-ha.html#ftn.ha-seconds-spec"><sup 
class="footnoteref">[b]</sup></a>
+             </td><td align="left">
+               <p>
+                 Interval to check if links need to be re-connected.  Default 2
+                 seconds. Can be a sub-second interval for faster failover,
+                 e.g. 0.1 seconds.
+               </p>
+             </td></tr><tr><td align="left">
+               <code class="literal">link-heartbeat-interval <em 
class="replaceable"><code>SECONDS</code></em></code>
+               <a class="footnoteref" 
href="chapter-ha.html#ftn.ha-seconds-spec"><sup 
class="footnoteref">[b]</sup></a>
+             </td><td align="left">
+               <p>
+                 Heart-beat interval for federation links. If no heart-beat is
+                 received for twice the interval the link is considered dead.
+                 Default 120 seconds.
+               </p>
+             </td></tr></tbody></table></div></div><p><br class="table-break" 
/>
+    </p></div></div><div class="navfooter"><hr /><table summary="Navigation 
footer" width="100%"><tr><td align="left" width="40%"><a accesskey="p" 
href="ch01s03.html">Prev</a>&#160;</td><td align="center" width="20%"><a 
accesskey="u" href="ch01.html">Up</a></td><td align="right" 
width="40%">&#160;<a accesskey="n" 
href="chap-Messaging_User_Guide-Security.html">Next</a></td></tr><tr><td 
align="left" valign="top" width="40%">1.3.&#160;
+    Cheat Sheet for configuring Exchange Options
+  &#160;</td><td align="center" width="20%"><a accesskey="h" 
href="index.html">Home</a></td><td align="right" valign="top" 
width="40%">&#160;1.5.&#160;Security</td></tr></table></div></div>
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