LevelDB
Since Camel 2.10
Leveldb is a very lightweight and embeddable key value database. It allows, together with Camel, providing persistent support for various Camel features such as Aggregator.
Current features it provides:
-
LevelDBAggregationRepository
Using LevelDBAggregationRepository
LevelDBAggregationRepository
is an AggregationRepository
which on the fly persists the aggregated messages. This ensures that you will not lose messages, as the default aggregator will use an in-memory only AggregationRepository
.
It has the following options:
Option | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
| String | A mandatory repository name. Allows you to use a shared |
| String | Filename for the persistent storage. If no file exists on startup, a new file is created. |
| LevelDBFile | Use an existing configured |
| boolean | Whether the LevelDBFile should sync on writing or not. Default is false. By sync on writing ensures that it’s always waiting for all writes to be spooled to disk and thus will not lose updates. See LevelDB docs for more details about async vs. sync writes. |
| boolean | Whether the get operation should return the old existing Exchange if any existed. By default, this option is |
| boolean | Whether recovery is enabled. This option is by default |
| long | If recovery is enabled, then a background task is run every x’th time to scan for failed exchanges to recover and resubmit. By default, this interval is 5000 milliseconds. |
| int | Allows you to limit the maximum number of redelivery attempts for a recovered exchange. If enabled, then the Exchange will be moved to the dead letter channel if all redelivery attempts failed. By default, this option is disabled. If this option is used then the |
| String | An endpoint uri for a Dead Letter Channel where exhausted recovered Exchanges will be moved. If this option is used then the |
The repositoryName
option must be provided. Then either the persistentFileName
or the levelDBFile
must be provided.
What is preserved when persisting
LevelDBAggregationRepository
will only preserve any Serializable
compatible message body data types. Message headers must be primitive / string / numbers / etc. If a data type is not such a type its dropped and a WARN
is logged. And it only persists the Message
body and the Message
headers. The Exchange
properties are not persisted.
Recovery
The LevelDBAggregationRepository
will by default recover any failed Exchange. It does this by having a background task that scans for failed Exchanges in the persistent store. You can use the checkInterval
option to set how often this task runs. The recovery works as transactional which ensures that Camel will try to recover and redeliver the failed Exchange. Any Exchange found to be recovered will be restored from the persistent store and resubmitted and send out again.
The following headers are set when an Exchange is being recovered/redelivered:
Header | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
| Boolean | It is set to true to indicate the Exchange is being redelivered. |
| Integer | The redelivery attempt, starting from 1. |
Only when an Exchange has been successfully processed it will be marked as complete which happens when the confirm
method is invoked on the AggregationRepository
. This means if the same Exchange fails again, it will be kept retried until it succeeds.
You can use option maximumRedeliveries
to limit the maximum number of redelivery attempts for a given recovered Exchange. You must also set the deadLetterUri
option so Camel knows where to send the Exchange when the maximumRedeliveries
was hit.
You can see some examples in the unit tests of camel-leveldb, for example, this test.
Serialization mechanism
Component serializes by using Java serialization mechanism by default.
You can use serialization via Jackson (using json). Jackson’s serialization brings better performance, but also several limitations.
Example of jackson serialization:
LevelDBAggregationRepository repo = ...; //initialization of repository
repo.setSerializer(new JacksonLevelDBSerializer());
Limitation of jackson serializer is caused by binary data:
-
If payload is a raw data (byte[]), it is saved into DB without using Jackson
-
If payload contains objects with binary fields. Those fields won’t be serialized/deserialized correctly. Customized serializer can be used to solve this problem. Please use custom serializer with Jackson by providing own Module:
SimpleModule simpleModule = new SimpleModule();
simpleModule.addSerializer(ObjectWithBinaryField.class, new ObjectWithBinaryFieldSerializer()); //custom serializer
simpleModule.addDeserializer(ObjectWithBinaryField.class, new ObjectWithBinaryFieldDeserializer()); //custom deserializer
repo.setSerializer(new JacksonLevelDBSerializer(simpleModule));
Using LevelDBAggregationRepository in Java DSL
In this example we want to persist aggregated messages in the target/data/leveldb.dat
file.
Dependencies
To use LevelDB in your Camel routes, you need to add a dependency on camel-leveldb.
If you use Maven, you could add the following to your pom.xml, substituting the version number for the latest & greatest release.
<dependency>
<groupId>org.apache.camel</groupId>
<artifactId>camel-leveldb</artifactId>
<version>x.y.z</version>
</dependency>
Spring Boot Auto-Configuration
When using leveldb with Spring Boot make sure to use the following Maven dependency to have support for auto configuration:
<dependency>
<groupId>org.apache.camel.springboot</groupId>
<artifactId>camel-leveldb-starter</artifactId>
<version>x.x.x</version>
<!-- use the same version as your Camel core version -->
</dependency>
The component has no Spring Boot auto configuration options.