Hi Willem,

I look at the code and your unit test NettyConsumerClientModeTest but still 
don't quite follow why clientMode can help with the case that Carl described. 
How can the consumer-server connects to the "client-device" in the first place? 
Can you explain the magic there?

Thanks,
-Quoc



-----Original Message-----
From: Willem Jiang [mailto:willem.ji...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2015 3:00 AM
To: users@camel.apache.org
Subject: Re: Bi-directional comms on TCP connection

We implement CAMEL-1077[1] in camel-2.15.x recently, so the ESB can talk to the 
device as a client to receive the events. But now the miss part is how can we 
share the channel between netty consumer and the netty producer. 

[1]https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CAMEL-1077

--
Willem Jiang

Red Hat, Inc.
Web: http://www.redhat.com
Blog: http://willemjiang.blogspot.com (English) http://jnn.iteye.com (Chinese)
Twitter: willemjiang
Weibo: 姜宁willem



On April 14, 2015 at 11:33:13 PM, Carl Nygard (cjnyg...@gmail.com) wrote:
> I have a question about the Mina/Netty TCP connector in Camel. Can 
> Mina/Netty handle bi-directional comms through Camel, or do we need to 
> handle this type of interface externally? We have embedded devices 
> (button/light combo) that will consume TCP messages to light a device 
> and initiate messages to indicate button press events. In other words, 
> the device is the server, but will also spontaneously generate event 
> messages back to the client/ESB. Both sides (server/device,client/ESB) 
> expect ACKs for messages. So in essence, it is a 2-way communication 
> using 1 TCP connection, initiated by ESB.
>  
>  
>  
> Unfortunately, Camel Netty and Mina doesn’t have the capability to 
> support 2-way asynchronous 
> (https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CAMEL-2624 - It’s still open 
> ticket rom 2010, 2012 + this is the duplicated ticket with some more 
> context: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CAMEL-1075 )
>  
>  
>  
> What we have tried so far:
>  
>  
>  
> 1. synchronous channel (before realize the limitation above): This 
> will always require our ESB-EndPoint to initiate the conversation, 
> good to receive ACK, but not allowing device to send Event message at will.
>  
>  
>  
> 2. asynchronous channel: (http://camel.apache.org/async.html ) With 
> async model, we can send request, do something else and let the async 
> callback to process the reply. However, we still have a 1-1 
> relationship between request and reply, and so in order to allow 
> device to “initiate” the Event message, ESB-Endpoint will need to send 
> more “no-op requests” to device-Endpoint, to catch for ACK and Event message.
>  
>  
>  
> This solution is not beautiful (quite hacking), and will not work if 
> there’s no “no-op operation” (e.g. device will ACK on all messages sent).
>  
>  
>  
> 3. Look at examples in these 2 books: “Camel in Actions” ( 
> https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/3786274/Camel%20In%20Action.pdf ) 
> and “Apache Camel Developer’s Cookbook” ( 
> https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/3786274/Apache%20Camel%20Developer
> %20Cookbook.pdf
> )
> but not much light on the issue we are facing.
>  
>  
> Any help?
>  
>  
> --carl
>  

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