Not sure if I understand correctly, but if you're trying to simply do declarative transaction managment using Spring and the @Transactional annotation for JUST JMS, then simply use the <tx:annotation-driven transaction-manager = "myTransactionManager" /> and then - for the "myTranactionManager," register a bean of type JmsTransactionManager, e.g.,
@Bean public PlatformTransactionManager myTranactionManager (){
return new JmsTransactionManager( this.connectionFactory());
}
Now, you can use the annotation as normal and the JMS interactions will be wrapped in a transaction
@Transactional
public void doSomethingWithJms(){
jmsTemplate.send(...);
jmsTemplate.convertAndSend(...)
}
If your goal is to work with MULTIPLE resources, e.g., JMS and JDBC, then you need to use JTA. To see how to setup JTA (for JPA and JMS), check out this blog post http://blog.springsource.com/2011/08/15/configuring-spring-and-jta-without-full-java-ee/