Ron, I am not sure wether you even need this property or not. I would say it is not needed at all. If you still want to somehow fill this information I would suggest you to put 2 variables in your class:
private QName senderService; private String senderEndpoint; Then adding the public getters and setters for this variables will enable you to inject values to this variables by configuring them in the beans xbean.xml as properties of the bean. But I would suggest first left them away and try without this property. Btw. I am still not sure what this transformer will do exactly. I mean it will transform a incoming exchange into another one or filling the out if other then InOnly and RobustInOnly. But don't we already have something like this? If not then better do a Transformer SE which has a customizable Marshaler. Regards Lars rgavlin wrote: > > Hi Lars, > > I am in the process of trying to port the functionality offered by the > deprecated lw-container TransformComponentSupport.java base class to a > servicemix-bean base class (see JIRA > https://issues.apache.org/activemq/browse/SM-1305). The line of code in > question is > > outExchange.setProperty(JbiConstants.SENDER_ENDPOINT, getService() + ":" + > getEndpoint()); > > (see > http://www.koders.com/java/fid258A2E5D6391E440CF23016392548C199B5C31BF.aspx#L62) > > The old lw-container components had a constructor which supplied the > service QName and the endpoint name. This is not the case for a > servicemix-bean Pojo. Is this information available to the Pojo via the > ComponentContext or is it guaranteed to be present somewhere in the > MessageExchange parameter supplied to the > onMessageExchange(MessageExchange) method? Is there another mechanism to > capture this information? > > Thanks in advance for your assistance. > > - Ron > > > > lhe77 wrote: >> >> As you have a bean only which implements the listener interface, there >> are no properties telling you what's the name of the endpoint / service >> of this bean. (at least I do not know any) >> Maybe the channel or the component context can tell you something, but I >> am wondering why do you need that information. Much more interesting >> values are the targetService and targetEndpoint properties. If you want >> such things, then create these properties inside your bean as private >> variables and put the corresponding getters and setters in the code as >> well. Then you should have access to these values from within your code. >> >> Lars >> >> >> >> >> >> rgavlin schrieb: >>> Within my code, I want to know the service QName and the endpoint name >>> that >>> was "configured" for my endpoint. In other words, I want to know the >>> information from the xbean.xml file that was used to configure my >>> ServiceEndpoint instance. Does that make sense? >>> >>> - Ron >>> >>> >>> lhe77 wrote: >>> >>>> I think you can't "calculate" it. The service or endpoint is a thing of >>>> your configuration. What you can do of course is routing a message to a >>>> specific service depending on the content of the message. >>>> Otherwise you have to set your targetService / targetEndpoint to suit >>>> your >>>> needs. >>>> >>>> Regards >>>> Lars >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> rgavlin schrieb: >>>> >>>>> Greetings, >>>>> >>>>> I have a servicemix-bean similar to the example ListenerBean >>>>> (http://incubator.apache.org/servicemix/dist/servicemix-3.1-incubating/site/deployables/serviceengines/servicemix-bean/xref-test/org/apache/servicemix/bean/beans/ListenerBean.html). >>>>> Within onMessageExchange(), how can I calculate the relevant service & >>>>> endpoint values? >>>>> >>>>> Thanks in advance. >>>>> >>>>> - Ron >>>>> >>>>> >>>> >>> >>> >> >> > > -- View this message in context: http://www.nabble.com/Calculating-service---endpoint-from-within-servicemix-bean.onMessageExchange%28%29-tp16533225p16540908.html Sent from the ServiceMix - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
