> > Yes. SwiftMQ routers are building a network where each router can be an > > entry point to the network which authenticates the access to all > > resources > > of the network. > > In case that "Small Company" is totally untrusted I would recommend to use > the JMS bridge instead of routing. The bridge connects as JMS client, > therefore you can create a group/user on the gateway router of "Big > Company" with the specific rights on the bridging resources (queues, > topics). "Small Company" then has a JMS Bridge Extension Swiftlet on his > gateway router that connects to the "Big Company" gateway and bridges the > resources you have defined. Bridging can take place also via SSL; just > connect to a defined JSSE listener on the "Big Company" gateway router. Yes, that's the answer ! I think it's a very smart solution from viewpoint of extensibility to other JMS implementations, too. Thank you very much ! -- Kazutoshi ------------------------------------------------------ SwiftMQ developers mailing list * http://www.swiftmq.com To unsubscribe from this list, send an eMail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] and write in the body of your message: UNSUBSCRIBE developers <your-email-address> Archive: http://www.mail-archive.com/developers@mail.iit.de/

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