1

I have a Camel route which looks like this:

<routeContext id="rollover-route" xmlns="http://camel.apache.org/schema/spring">
    <route id="pickUpEntries">
        <from uri="jpa://cameltest.model.CamelTest?consumer.namedQuery=unconsumedEntries&amp;?consumeDelete=false&amp;persistenceUnit=persistenceProvider&amp;consumeLockEntity=true"/>
        <split executorServiceRef="rolloverProfile">
            <simple>${body}</simple>
            <setProperty propertyName="taskId">
                <simple>${body.taskId}</simple>
            </setProperty>
            <setProperty propertyName="providerId">
                <simple>${body.providerId}</simple>
            </setProperty>
            <setProperty propertyName="intakeId">
                <simple>${body.intakeId}</simple>
            </setProperty>
            <setProperty propertyName="consumed">
                <simple>${body.consumed}</simple>
            </setProperty>
            <to uri="jpa://cameltest.model.CamelTest?persistenceUnit=persistenceProvider"/>
            <process ref="JPAToMCS"/> 
            <process ref="MCSRequest"/> 
            <process ref="MCSToJPA"/> 
            <to uri="jpa://cameltest.model.CamelTest?persistenceUnit=persistenceProvider"/>
        </split>
    </route>
</routeContext>

The CamelTest JPA Entity is:

package cameltest.model;

import java.io.Serializable;

import javax.persistence.Entity;
import javax.persistence.Id;
import javax.persistence.NamedQuery;
import javax.persistence.Table;

import org.apache.camel.component.jpa.Consumed;
import org.springframework.transaction.annotation.Transactional;

@Entity
@Table(name="CamelTestTable")
@NamedQuery(name = "unconsumedEntries", query = "select c from CamelTest c where c.consumed = 0")
public class CamelTest implements Serializable {


    private static final long serialVersionUID = 5608716486854758950L;
    @Id
    private Integer taskId;
    private Integer providerId;
    private Integer intakeId;
    private Integer consumed;
    private Integer complete;


    public CamelTest()
    {}

    public CamelTest(Integer taskId, Integer providerId, Integer intakeId,
            Integer consumed, Integer complete) {
        super();
        this.taskId = taskId;
        this.providerId = providerId;
        this.intakeId = intakeId;
        this.consumed = consumed;
        this.complete = complete;
    }

    public Integer getComplete() {
        return complete;
    }

    public void setComplete(Integer complete) {
        this.complete = complete;
    }

    public Integer getConsumed() {
        return consumed;
    }

    public void setConsumed(Integer consumed) {
        this.consumed = consumed;
    }

    public Integer getTaskId() {
        return taskId;
    }

    public void setTaskId(Integer taskId) {
        this.taskId = taskId;
    }

    public Integer getProviderId() {
        return providerId;
    }

    public void setProviderId(Integer providerId) {
        this.providerId = providerId;
    }

    public Integer getIntakeId() {
        return intakeId;
    }

    public void setIntakeId(Integer intakeId) {
        this.intakeId = intakeId;
    }

    @Override
    public String toString() {
        return "CamelTest [taskId=" + taskId + ", providerId=" + providerId
                + ", intakeId=" + intakeId + "]";
    }

    @Consumed
    public void markAsConsumed()
    {
        setConsumed(getConsumed() + 1);
    }

}

How can I force the Camel route to commit the status of the consume column before the end? The middle processor takes a lot of time and I want the fact that it has been consumed committed to the database before it has been completed (and that marked).

1 Answer 1

1

One way I found of doing this is to route the JPA object to a separate thread to persist it, whilst the other thread does the processing:

        <route id="pickUpEntries">
        <from
            uri="jpa:/batchprocessor.model.BatchProcess?consumer.namedQuery=unconsumedEntries&amp;?consumeDelete=false&amp;persistenceUnit=persistenceProvider&amp;consumeLockEntity=true" />
        <process ref="Consume" />
        <multicast parallelProcessing="true">
            <to
                uri="jpa://batchprocessor.model.BatchProcess?persistenceUnit=persistenceProvider" />
            <to uri="direct:process" />
        </multicast>
    </route>

Not entirely satisfactory, but does the job in this case. I also had to remove the @Consumed. Confusingly it processes AFTER the routes are finished, rather that as the item is processed.

1

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.