These sections explain how to configure JMS application modules for deployment, including JMS application modules packaged with a Java EE enterprise application and globally-available, standalone application modules.
All JMS resources that can be configured in a JMS system module can also be configured and managed as deployable application modules, similar to standard Java EE modules. Deployed JMS application modules are owned by the developer who created and packaged the module, rather than the administrator who deploys the module; therefore, the administrator has more limited control over deployed resources.
For example, administrators can only modify (override) certain properties of the resources specified in the module using the deployment plan (JSR-88) at the time of deployment, but they cannot dynamically add or delete resources. As with other Java EE modules, configuration changes for an application module are stored in a deployment plan for the module, leaving the original module untouched.
Application developers can use these tools to create and deploy (target) system resources
Create a JMS system module, as described in JMS System Module Configuration and then copy the resulting XML file to another directory and rename it, using
-jms.xml
as the file suffix.
Create application modules in an enterprise-level IDE or another development tool that supports editing of XML files, then package the JMS modules with an application and pass the application to a WebLogic Administrator to deploy.
In support of the modular deployment model for JMS resources in WebLogic Server 9.x or higher, Oracle provides a schema for defining WebLogic JMS resources: weblogic-jms.xsd
. When you create JMS modules (descriptors), the modules must conform to this schema. IDEs and other tools can validate JMS modules based on the schema.
The weblogic-jms.xsd
schema is available online at http://xmlns.oracle.com/weblogic/weblogic-jms/1.0/weblogic-jms.xsd
.
For an explanation of the JMS resource definitions in the schema, see the corresponding system module beans in the "System Module MBeans" folder of the Oracle WebLogic Server MBean Reference. The root bean in the JMS module that represents an entire JMS module is named "JMSBean"
.
JMS application modules can be packaged as part of an Enterprise Application Archive (EAR), as a packaged module. Packaged modules are bundled with an EAR or exploded EAR directory, and are referenced in the weblogic-application.xml
descriptor.
The packaged JMS module is deployed along with the Enterprise Application, and the resources defined in this module can optionally be made available only to the enclosing application (i.e., as an application-scoped resource). Such modules are particularly useful when packaged with EJBs (especially MDBs) or Web Applications that use JMS resources. Using packaged modules ensures that an application always has required resources and simplifies the process of moving the application into new environments.
You create packaged JMS modules using an enterprise-level IDE or another development tool that supports editing of XML descriptor files. You then deploy and manage standalone modules using JSR 88-based tools, such as the weblogic.Deployer
utility or the WebLogic Administration Console.
Note:
You can create a packaged JMS module using the Administration Console, then copy the resulting XML file to another directory and rename it, using-jms.xml
as the file suffix.Inside the EAR file, a JMS module must meet the following criteria:
Conforms to the http://xmlns.oracle.com/weblogic/weblogic-jms/1.0/weblogic-jms.xsd
schema
Uses -jms.xml
as the file suffix (for example, MyJMSDescriptor
-jms.xml
)
Uses a name that is unique within the WebLogic domain and a path that is relative to the root of the Java EE application
Follow these steps to configure a packaged JMS module:
If necessary, create a JMS server to target the JMS module to, as explained in "Configure JMS Servers" in the Oracle WebLogic Server Administration Console Help.
Create a JMS system module and configure the necessary resources, such as queues or topics, as described in "Configure JMS system modules and add JMS resources" in the Oracle WebLogic Server Administration Console Help.
The system module is saved in config\jms
subdirectory of the domain directory, with a "-jms.xml
" suffix.
Copy the system module to a new location, and then:
Give the module a unique name within the domain namespace.
Delete the JNDI-Name
attribute to make the module application-scoped to only the application.
Add references to the JMS resources in the module to all applicable Java EE application component's descriptor files, as described in "Referencing a Packaged JMS Application Module In Deployment Descriptor Files" in Programming JMS for Oracle WebLogic Server.
Package all application modules in an EAR, as described in Packaging an Enterprise Application With a JMS Application Module.
Deploy the EAR, as described in Deploying a Packaged JMS Application Module.
The following code snippet is an example of the packaged JMS module, appscopedejbs-jms.xml
, referenced by the descriptor files in Figure 5-1 below.
<weblogic-jms xmlns="http://xmlns.oracle.com/weblogic/weblogic-jms"> <connection-factory name="ACF"> </connection-factory> <queue name="AppscopeQueue"> </queue> </weblogic-jms>
Figure 5-1 illustrates how a JMS connection factory and queue resources in a packaged JMS module are referenced in an EJB EAR file.
Figure 5-1 Relationship Between a JMS Application Module and Descriptors In an EJB Application
When including JMS modules in an enterprise application, you must list each JMS module as a module element of type JMS in the weblogic-application.xml
descriptor file packaged with the application, and a path that is relative to the root of the application. For example:
<module> <name>AppScopedEJBs</name> <type>JMS</type> <path>jms/appscopedejbs-jms.xml</path> </module>
If EJBs in your application use connection factories through a JMS module packaged with the application, you must list the JMS module as a res-ref
element and include the res-ref-name
and res-type
parameters in the ejb-jar.xml
descriptor file packaged with the EJB. This way, the EJB can lookup the JMS Connection Factory in the application's local context. For example:
<resource-ref> <res-ref-name>jms/QueueFactory</res-ref-name> <res-type>javax.jms.QueueConnectionFactory</res-type> </resource-ref>
The res-ref-name
element maps the resource name (used by java:comp/env
) to a module referenced by an EJB. The res-type
element specifies the module type, which in this case, is javax.jms.QueueConnectionFactory
.
If EJBs in your application use Queues or Topics through a JMS module packaged with the application, you must list the JMS module as a resource-env-ref
element and include the resource-env-ref-name
and resource-env-ref-type
parameters in the ejb-jar.xml
descriptor file packaged with the EJB. This way, the EJB can lookup the JMS Queue or Topic in the application's the local context. For example:
<resource-env-ref> <resource-env-ref-name>jms/Queue</resource-env-ref-name> <resource-env-ref-type>javax.jms.Queue</resource-env-ref-type> </resource-env-ref>
The resource-env-ref-name
element maps the destination name to a module referenced by an EJB. The res-type
element specifies the name of the Queue, which in this case, is javax.jms.Queue
.
You must list the referenced JMS module as a res-ref-name
element and include the resource-link
parameter in the weblogic-ejb-jar.xml
descriptor file packaged with the EJB.
<resource-description> <res-ref-name>jms/QueueFactory</res-ref-name> <resource-link>AppScopedEJBs#ACF</resource-link> </resource-description>
The res-ref-name
element maps the connection factory name to a module referenced by an EJB. In the resource-link
element, the JMS module name is followed by a pound (#) separator character, which is followed by the name of the resource inside the module. So for this example, the JMS module AppScopedEJBs containing the connection factory ACF, would have a name AppScopedEJBs#ACF.
Continuing the example above, the res-ref-name
element also maps the Queue name to a module referenced by an EJB. And in the resource-link
element, the queue AppScopedQueue, would have a name AppScopedEJBs#AppScopedQueue, as follows:
<resource-env-description> <resource-env-ref-name>jms/Queue</resource-env-ref-name> <resource-link>AppScopedEJBs#AppScopedQueue</resource-link> </resource-env-description>
You package an application with a JDBC module as you would any other enterprise application. See "Packaging Applications Using wlpackage" in Developing Applications for Oracle WebLogic Server.
The deployment of packaged JMS modules follows the same model as all other components of an application: individual modules can be deployed to a single server, a cluster, or individual members of a cluster.
A recommended best practice for other application components is to use the java:comp/env
JNDI environment in order to retrieve references to JMS entities, as described in "Referencing a Packaged JMS Application Module In Deployment Descriptor Files" in Programming JMS for Oracle WebLogic Server. (However, this practice is not required.)
By definition, packaged JMS modules are included in an enterprise application, and therefore are deployed when you deploy the enterprise application. For more information about deploying applications with packaged JMS modules, see "Deploying Applications Using wldeploy" in Developing Applications with WebLogic Server.
This section presents the following topics:
A JMS application module can be deployed by itself as a standalone module, in which case the module is available to the server or cluster targeted during the deployment process. JMS modules deployed in this manner can be reconfigured using the weblogic.Deployer
utility or the Administration Console, but are not available through JMX or WLST.
However, standalone JMS modules are available using the basic JSR-88 deployment tool provided with WebLogic Server plug-ins (without using WebLogic Server extensions to the API) to configure, deploy, and redeploy Java EE applications and modules to WebLogic Server. For information about WebLogic Server deployment, see "Understanding WebLogic Server Deployment" in Deploying Applications to Oracle WebLogic Server.
JMS modules deployed in this manner are called standalone modules. Depending on how they are targeted, the resources inside standalone JMS modules are globally available in a cluster or locally on a server instance. Standalone JMS modules promote sharing and portability of JMS resources. You can create a JMS module and distribute it to other developers. Standalone JMS modules can also be used to move JMS information between domains, such as between the development domain and the production domain, without extensive manual JMS reconfiguration.
You can create JMS standalone modules using an enterprise-level IDE or another development tool that supports editing XML descriptor files. You then deploy and manage standalone modules using WebLogic Server tools, such as the weblogic.Deployer
utility or the WebLogic Administration Console.
Note:
You can create a JMS application module using the Administration Console, then copy the module as a template for use in your applications, using-jms.xml
as the file suffix. You must also change the Name and JNDI-Name
elements of the module before deploying it with your application to avoid a naming conflict in the namespace.A standalone JMS module must meet the following criteria:
Conforms to the http://xmlns.oracle.com/weblogic/weblogic-jms/1.0/weblogic-jms.xsd
schema
Uses "-jms.xml
" as the file suffix (for example, MyJMSDescriptor
-jms.xml
)
Uses a name that is unique within the WebLogic domain (cannot conflict with JMS system modules)
Follow these steps to configure a standalone JMS module:
If necessary, create a JMS server to target the JMS module to, as explained in "Configure JMS servers" in the Oracle WebLogic Server Administration Console Help.
Create a JMS system module and configure the necessary resources, such as queues or topics, as described in "Configure JMS system modules and add JMS resources" in the Oracle WebLogic Server Administration Console Help.
The system module is saved in config\jms
subdirectory of the domain directory, with a -jms.xml
suffix.
Copy the system module to a new location and then:
Give the module a unique name within the domain namespace.
To make the module globally available, uniquely rename the JNDI-Name
attributes of the resources in the module.
If necessary, modify any other tunable values, such as destination thresholds or connection factory flow control parameters.
Deploy the module, as described in Deploying Standalone JMS Application Modules.
The following code snippet is an example of simple standalone JMS module.
<weblogic-jms xmlns="http://xmlns.oracle.com/weblogic/weblogic-jms"> <connection-factory name="exampleStandAloneCF"> <jndi-name>exampleStandAloneCF</jndi-name> </connection-factory> <queue name="ExampleStandAloneQueue"> <jndi-name>exampleStandAloneQueue</jndi-name> </queue> </weblogic-jms>
The command-line for using the weblogic.Deployer
utility to deploy a standalone JMS module (using the example above) would be:
java weblogic.Deployer -adminurl http://localhost:7001 -user weblogic -password weblogic \ -name ExampleStandAloneJMS \ -targets examplesServer \ -submoduletargets ExampleStandaloneQueue@examplesJMSServer,ExampleStandaloneCF@examplesServer \ -deploy ExampleStandAloneJMSModule-jms.xml
For information about deploying standalone JMS modules, see "Deploying JDBC, JMS, and WLDF Application Modules" in Deploying Applications to Oracle WebLogic Server.
When you deploy a standalone JMS module, an app-deployment
entry is added to the config.xml
file for the domain. For example:
<app-deployment> <name>standalone-examples-jms</name> <target>MedRecServer</target> <module-type>jms</module-type> <source-path>C:\modules\standalone-examples-jms.xml</source-path> <sub-deployment> ... </sub-deployment> <sub-deployment> ... </sub-deployment> </app-deployment>
Note that the source-path
for the module can be an absolute path or it can be a relative path from the domain
directory. This differs from the descriptor-file-name
path for a system resource module, which is relative to the domain
\config
directory.
JMS resources deployed within standalone modules can be reconfigured using the using the weblogic.Deployer
utility or the Administration Console, as long as the resources are considered bindable (such as JNDI names), or tunable (such as destination thresholds). However, standalone resources are not available through WebLogic JMX APIs or the WebLogic Scripting Tool (WLST).
However, standalone JMS modules are available using the basic JSR-88 deployment tool provided with WebLogic Server plug-ins (without using WebLogic Server extensions to the API) to configure, deploy, and redeploy Java EE applications and modules to WebLogic Server. For information about WebLogic Server deployment, see "Understanding WebLogic Server Deployment" in Deploying Applications to Oracle WebLogic Server.
Additionally, standalone resources cannot be dynamically added or deleted with any WebLogic Server utility and must be redeployed.
JMS resources, such as connection factories and destinations, are configured with a JNDI name. The runtime implementations of these resources are then bound into JNDI using the given names. In some cases, it is impossible or inconvenient to provide a static JNDI name for these resources.
An example of such a situation is when JMS resources are defined in a JMS module within an application library. In this case, the library can be referenced from multiple applications, each of which receive a copy of the application library (and the JMS module it contains) when they are deployed. If you were to use static JNDI names for the JMS resources in this case, all applications that refer to the library would attempt to bind the same set of JNDI resources at the same static JNDI name.
Therefore, the first application to deploy would successfully bind the JMS resources into JNDI, but subsequent application deployments would fail with exceptions indicating that the JNDI names are already bound.
To avoid this problem, WebLogic Server provides a facility to dynamically generate a JNDI name for the following types of JMS resources:
Connection factory
Destination (queue and topic)
Weighted distributed destination
Weighted distributed destination members
Uniform distributed destination
The facility to generate unique names is based on placing a special character sequence called ${APPNAME} in the JNDI name of the above mentioned JMS resources. If you include ${APPNAME} in the JNDI name element of a JMS resource (either in the JMS module descriptor, or the weblogic-ejb-jar.xml
descriptor), the actual JNDI name used at runtime will have the ${APPNAME} string replaced with the effective application ID (name and possibly version) of the application hosting the JMS resource.
Note:
The ${APPNAME} facility does not imply that you can define your own variables and substitute their values into the JNDI name at runtime. The string${APPNAME}
is treated specially by the JMS implementation, and no other strings of the form ${<some name>}
have any special meaning.In the case of JMS modules in a local application, at runtime ${APPNAME} becomes the name/ID of the application. For example:
<jndi-name>${APPNAME}/jms/MyConnectionFactory</jndi-name>
When deployed within an application called MyApp
, it would result in a runtime JNDI name of:
MyApp/jms/MyConnectionFactory
In the case of JMS modules in an application library, at runtime ${APPNAME} becomes the name/ID of the application which refers to the library (not the name of the library). For example:
<jndi-name>${APPNAME}/jms/MyConnectionFactory</jndi-name>
When deployed within an application library called MyAppLib
, and referenced from an application called MyApp
, it would result in a runtime JNDI name of:
MyApp/jms/MyConnectionFactory
In the case of JMS modules deployed as stand-alone modules, at runtime ${APPNAME} becomes the name/ID of the stand-alone module. For example:
<jndi-name>${APPNAME}/jms/MyConnectionFactory</jndi-name>
When deployed within a stand-alone JMS module MyJMSModule
, it would result in a runtime JNDI name of:
MyJMSModule/jms/MyConnectionFactory
The ${APPNAME} string can be used anywhere you refer to the JNDI name of a JMS resource. For example, in the:
jndi-name
or local-jndi-name
element of connection-factory
elements in the JMS module descriptor.
jndi-name
or local-jndi-name
element of queue
or topic
elements in the JMS module descriptor.
jndi-name
element of distributed-queue
or distributed-topic
elements in the JMS module descriptor.
jndi-name
element of uniform-distributed-queue
or uniform-distributed-topic
elements in the JMS module descriptor.
destination-jndi-name
element of message-destination-descriptor
elements in the weblogic-ejb-jar.xml
descriptor.
Note:
WebLogic EJB also supports the use of the ${APPNAME} string.jndi-name
element of weblogic-enterprise-bean
elements in the weblogic-ejb-jar.xml
descriptor.
In a single-server environment, Weblogic Integration Worklist uses application-scoped JMS resources (e.g., queues and connection factories) to support its modular deployment goals. Application-scoped JMS allows Weblogic Integration to have an application library define the EJBs, JMS resources, etc., needed by Worklist, and then have users simply include Worklist into their application by adding a library-ref
to their application. However, this prevents Worklist user from scaling those destinations to the cluster from an application library.
In a clustered environment, users can now substitute the ${APPNAME} string for the queue's JNDI name at runtime to make the global JNDI names for the queues unique. This way, the JMS ${APPNAME} parameter is replaced at runtime with the application name of the host application being merged to the application library.