Thanks for clearing that up. That explaination definitely simplifies things.

On Fri, Dec 2, 2016 at 9:39 AM, Gordon Sim <g...@redhat.com> wrote:

> On 02/12/16 00:53, James Franco wrote:
>
>> My question is how can I access a default exchnage , say if I wanted to do
>> something like this
>>
>> ./spout ' '/test_queue SOME_TEST_CONTENT
>>>>
>>>   File "./spout", line 101, in <module>
>>     snd = ssn.sender(addr)
>>   File "<string>", line 6, in sender
>>   File "/usr/lib/python2.6/site-packages/qpid/messaging/endpoints.py",
>> line
>> 600, in sender
>>     raise e
>> qpid.messaging.exceptions.MalformedAddress: unexpected token SLASH(/)
>> line:1,1: /test_queue
>>
>> How can I reference the default exchange as it has a queue called
>> test_queue bound to it by the id test_queue ?
>>
>
> You can just do ./spout test_queue SOME_TEST_CONTENT and that will send
> messages directly to that queue. You can't at present reference the default
> exchange through the qpid messaging API.
>
>
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
> To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@qpid.apache.org
> For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@qpid.apache.org
>
>

Reply via email to