These tutorials will get you up to speed and sending messages with Solace technology as quickly as possible. There are two ways you can get started:
- If your company has Solace message routers deployed, contact your middleware team to obtain the host name or IP address of a Solace message router to test against, a username and password to access it, and a VPN in which you can produce and consume messages.
- If you do not have access to a Solace message router, you will need to go through the โSet up a VMRโ tutorial to download and install the software.
This repository contains code and matching tutorial walk throughs for five different basic Solace messaging patterns. For a nice introduction to the Solace API and associated tutorials, check out the tutorials landing page.
See the individual tutorials for details:
- Publish/Subscribe: Learn how to set up pub/sub messaging on a Solace VMR.
- Persistence: Learn how to set up persistence for guaranteed delivery.
- Request/Reply: Learn how to set up request/reply messaging.
- Confirmed Delivery: Learn how to confirm that your messages are received by a Solace message router.
- Topic to Queue Mapping: Learn how to map existing topics to Solace queues.
This tutorial requires the Solace Java API library. Download the Java API library to your computer from here.
Copy the contents of the sol-jcsmp-VERSION/lib
directory from the Java API library to a libs
sub-directory in your solace-samples-java
project.
In the following command line replace VERSION
with the Solace Java API version you downloaded. For example:
- clone this GitHub repository
cd solace-samples-java
mkdir libs
cp ../sol-jcsmp-VERSION/lib/* libs
./gradlew assemble
To try individual samples, build the project from source and then run samples like the following:
./build/staged/bin/topicPublisher <msg_backbone_ip:port>
The individual tutorials linked above provide full details which can walk you through the samples, what they do, and how to correctly run them to explore Solace messaging.
Using a modern Java IDE provides cool productivity features like auto-completion, on-the-fly compilation, assisted refactoring and debugging which can be useful when you're exploring the samples and even modifying the samples. Follow the steps below for your preferred IDE.
To generate Eclipse metadata (.classpath and .project files), do the following:
./gradlew eclipse
Once complete, you may then import the projects into Eclipse as usual:
File -> Import -> Existing projects into workspace
Browse to the 'solace-samples-java' root directory. All projects should import free of errors.
To generate IDEA metadata (.iml and .ipr files), do the following:
./gradlew idea
Please read CONTRIBUTING.md for details on our code of conduct, and the process for submitting pull requests to us.
See the list of contributors who participated in this project.
This project is licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0. - See the LICENSE file for details.
For more information try these resources:
- The Solace Developer Portal website at: http://dev.solacesystems.com
- Get a better understanding of Solace technology.
- Check out the Solace blog for other interesting discussions around Solace technology
- Ask the Solace community.