This page describes the general case of creating a custom task. See also: Writing Tasks Sample.
The main steps while writing a task are as follows:
- Write the Task class
- Customize the task
- Compile and bundle the task
- Add the task to the WSO2 ESB class path
- Configure and schedule the task in ESB Console
Step 1. Write the Task Class
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| Writing the Task class |
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| Writing the Task class |
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See Writing Tasks Sample to learn more information on how to write tasks in Java. You can also use JavaScript, Ruby, Groovy or other Apache BSF scripting languages for this purpose.
The custom Task class should implement org.apache.synapse.startup.Task
. Each task should therefore implement the Task
interface. This interface has a single execute()
method. This method contains the code that is to be run at the specified intervals.
The execute()
method contains following actions:
- Check whether the file exists at the desired location.
- If it does, then read the file line by line composing place order messages for each line in the text file.
- Individual messages are then injected to the synapse environment with the given
To
endpoint reference. - Set each message as
OUT_ONLY
since it is not expected any response for messages.
In addition to the execute()
method, it is also possible to make the class implement a JavaBean
interface. The WSO2 ESB console can then be used to configure the properties of this JavaBean
.
Step 2. Customize the Task
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| Customizing a task |
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| Customizing a task |
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It is possible to pass values to a task at run time using property elements. When creating a Task
object, WSO2 ESB will initialize the properties with the given values in the configuration file. For those properties given as XML elements, properties need to be defined within the Task
class using the following format:
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public void setMessage(_property_ elem) {
message = elem;}
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It can be initialized with an XML element as follows:
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<property name="message">
<m0:getQuote xmlns:m0="http://services.samples/xsd">
<m0:request>
<m0:symbol>IBM</m0:symbol>
</m0:request>
</m0:getQuote>
</property>
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{Anchor:Compile and bundle the task} |
Step 3. Compile and bundle the task
Assemble the compiled class Task
as a JAR file.
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| Packaging the Custom Mediator |
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| Packaging the Custom Mediator |
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After compiling and bundling the Task
class, you need to add it to the WSO2 ESB class path. Place the JAR file to the repository/components/lib
directory of the ESB.
The Task
class will be available for use from the next time you start WSO2 ESB.
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It is required to restart the ESB for the JAR containing the task implementation to be picked up by the server runtime. An OSGi bundle containing the task implementation will be created automatically and it will be deployed in the server. |
See Adding and Scheduling Tasks.
For more information see http://wso2.org/library/2900.
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Instructions on how to write a custom task for WSO2 ESB. |