Network Deployment (Distributed operating systems), v8.0 > Develop and deploying applications > Develop Messaging resources > Program to use asynchronous messaging > Program to use message-driven beans


Develop message-driven beans

We can develop a bean implementation class for a message-driven bean as introduced by the Enterprise JavaBeans specification. A message-driven bean (MDB) is a message consumer that implements business logic and runs on the server. Determine the messaging model you want for the application regarding use of topics, queues, producers and consumers, publish or subscribe, and so on. We can refer to the message-driven bean component contract described in the Enterprise JavaBeans™ specification. A message-driven bean (MDB) is a consumer of messages from a JMS provider. An MDB is invoked on arrival of a message at the destination or endpoint that the MDB services. MDB instances are anonymous, and therefore, all instances are equivalent when not actively servicing a client message. The container controls the life cycle of bean instances, which hold no state that is visible to a client.

The following example is a basic message-driven bean:

@MessageDriven(activationConfig={
                @ActivationConfigProperty(propertyName="destination",     propertyValue="myDestination"),                 @ActivationConfigProperty(propertyName="destinationType", propertyValue="javax.jms.Queue")
})
public class MsgBean implements javax.jms.MessageListener {

  public void onMessage(javax.jms.Message msg) {

      String receivedMsg = ((TextMessage) msg).getText();
      .println("Received message: " + receivedMsg);



}

As with other enterprise bean types, you can also declare metadata for message-driven beans in the deployment descriptor rather than using annotations, for example:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>

<ejb-jar id="EJBJar_1060639024453" version="3.0"
      xmlns="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee"
      xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
      xsi:schemaLocation="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee/ejb-jar_3_0.xsd"
      metadata-complete="false">
<enterprise-beans>

<message-driven>

<ejb-name>MsgBean
</ejb-name>
<ejb-class>com.acme.ejb.MsgBean
</ejb-class>
<activation-config>   
<activation-config-property>      
<activation-config-property-name>destination
</activation-config-property-name>      
<activation-config-property-value>myDestination
</activation-config-property-value>   
</activation-config-property>   
<activation-config-property>     
<activation-config-property-name>destinationType
</activation-config-property-name>     
<activation-config-property-value>javax.jms.Queue
</activation-config-property-value>  
</activation-config-property>
</activation-config>

</message-driven>

</enterprise-beans>
</ejb-jar>


Procedure


Results

You developed a simple message-driven bean, along with some deployment and packaging options.


What to do next

Read related information about designing an enterprise application that uses message-driven beans.
Design an enterprise application to use message-driven beans


Related


EJB 3.0 and EJB 3.1 application bindings overview
Prepare for application installation binding settings

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