On 08/02/2016 05:02 AM, Adel Boutros wrote:
Hello again,

If the address is configured with "balanced", I am unable to exchange messages. When 
using "multicast" it worked.
Is this expected?

No, both distributions work, albeit with different behavior when there are multiple consumers.

When you have direct consumers attached to the router, the address appears in the list from "qdstat -a". What does your setup look like?

-Ted


Regards,
Adel

From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [Qpid dispatch router] Do we need a broker to send/receive 
messages?
Date: Thu, 28 Jul 2016 16:51:50 +0200

Thank you Ted and Paolo,
Actually I tried to have only a publisher connected and it was hanging. Now I 
understand why: It is because I need a consumer connected to get credits.
Regards,Adel

Subject: Re: [Qpid dispatch router] Do we need a broker to send/receive 
messages?
To: [email protected]
From: [email protected]
Date: Thu, 28 Jul 2016 10:47:43 -0400


On 07/28/2016 10:17 AM, Adel Boutros wrote:
Hello,

Out of curiosity, Can I send/receive messages with a queue defined directly on 
the dispatch router or do I need to have a real instance of a broker connected 
to that dispatcher?

Like Paolo said, you only need a broker if you want to store the message
in a queue.

You can use the router(s) to communicate directly by having the senders
and receivers use the same address.  In this case, the exchange of
messages (acknowledgement, settlement, etc.) are routed directly between
the senders and the receivers.

To do this, you don't need a route-container connection and you don't
need auto-links or link-routes.  You only need to configure the address
prefix to control whether the deliveries are multicast (all receivers
for the address) or anycast (one receiver for the address).  Addresses
that don't match any configured prefix default to balanced-anycast.

You can use a hybrid approach as well, with some addresses defined as
"waypoint" with autolinks and other addresses that are not "waypoint"
that are used for direct producer-to-consumer communication.


I am asking because it seems that the dispatch router has by default some "Addresses" 
used for internal communication and I was wondering if I could create an "address" of a 
type queue and use it directly without adding connectors.

Router Addresses
  class   addr                   phs  distrib  in-proc  local  remote  cntnr  
in  out  thru  to-proc  from-proc
  
===============================================================================================================
  local   $_management_internal       closest  1        0      0       0      0 
  0    0     0        0
  local   $displayname                closest  1        0      0       0      0 
  0    0     0        0
  mobile  $management            0    closest  1        0      0       0      3 
  0    0     3        0
  local   $management                 closest  1        0      0       0      0 
  0    0     0        0
  local   temp.9yqNIIHanFkSZbe        closest  0        1      0       0      0 
  0    0     0        0


Regards,
Adel
                                        


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