Hi, you can use http(s) protocol with ActiveMQ scenario you described
http://activemq.apache.org/http-and-https-transports-reference.html Basically, it starts a web contained with a servlet on a server side and uses http-client on the client side. All messages are passed as xml payloads over http. Cheers -- Dejan Bosanac - http://twitter.com/dejanb Open Source Integration - http://fusesource.com/ ActiveMQ in Action - http://www.manning.com/snyder/ Blog - http://www.nighttale.net On Tue, Nov 3, 2009 at 3:09 PM, nkhan00 <[email protected]> wrote: > > Hello, > > I have a newbie question. First some background: > > We have an application that sits in an environment where only outgoing HTTP > connections are allowed. This application needs to do two things: (1) send > data to a remote server over the internet (2) receive commands from the > same > remote server. The occurence of (1) and (2) is completely independent of > each other. In other words, function (1) is invoked at random times, and > function (2) is also invoked at random times. > > My question: can we use JMS tunneled through HTTPS to implement the above > two functions? HTTP is a request-response protocol, and the remote server > is > not allowed to make HTTP requests to our application. So how does it send a > message using JMS-over-HTTPS? In other words I do not understand how > function (2) above will be realized. > > Your help will be highly appreciated. > > Regards > Nadeem > -- > View this message in context: > http://old.nabble.com/Newbie-question-about-JMS-tunneling-through-HTTPS-tp26160146p26160146.html > Sent from the ActiveMQ - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com. > >
