Thanks to visit codestin.com
Credit goes to www.java2s.com
Home
Java
2D Graphics GUI
3D
Advanced Graphics
Ant
Apache Common
Chart
Class
Collections Data Structure
Data Type
Database SQL JDBC
Design Pattern
Development Class
EJB3
Email
Event
File Input Output
Game
Generics
GWT
Hibernate
I18N
J2EE
J2ME
JavaFX
JDK 6
JDK 7
JNDI LDAP
JPA
JSP
JSTL
Language Basics
Network Protocol
PDF RTF
Reflection
Regular Expressions
Scripting
Security
Servlets
Spring
Swing Components
Swing JFC
SWT JFace Eclipse
Threads
Tiny Application
Velocity
Web Services SOA
XML
Java Message Service JMS « J2EE « Java
Java
J2EE
Java Message Service JMS
1.
The mqping utility is similar to the Unix ping utility in some regards
2.
This example illustrates how JMS (Java Message Service) API can be used in a Java applet
3.
This example illustrates how JMS can be used to create a simple chat application
4.
The UniversalClient example is a basic 'client' application that uses the JMS 1.1 APIs
5.
How to write a GUI application that uses a JMS QueueBrowser to browse the contents of a queue
6.
This example is a simple JMS client application
7.
Demonstrates a simple end-to-end "Hello World" JMS example that can be compiled and run with the Sun Java(tm) System Message Queue product
8.
The BrokerMetrics example is a JMS application that monitors the Sun Java(tm) System Message Queue broker
9.
The DestListMetrics example is a JMS application that monitors the destinations on a Sun Java(tm) System Message Queue broker
10.
The DestMetrics example is a JMS application that monitors a destination on a Sun Java(tm) System Message Queue broker
11.
The VMMetrics example is a JMS application that monitors the Java VM used by the Sun Java(tm) System Message Queue broker
12.
MQ Cluster Monitor
13.
The TopicSelectors class demonstrates the use of multiple subscribers and message selectors
14.
A message will not be acknowledged until processing of it is complete
15.
Reads a textfile, creates a BytesMessage from it, then reads the message
16.
A durable subscription is active even when the subscriber is not active
17.
Creates and then reads a StreamMessage and a BytesMessage
18.
Creates and reads messages in all supported JMS message formats: BytesMessage, TextMessage, MapMessage, StreamMessage, and ObjectMessage
19.
The use of message header fields
20.
Demonstrates that mutable objects are copied, not passed by reference, when you use them to create message objects
21.
A simple implementation of a request/reply message exchange
22.
Sends several messages to a queue
23.
Fetches one or more messages from a queue using synchronous message delivery
24.
The simplest form of the publish/subscribe model: the producer publishes a message, and the consumer reads it using a synchronous receive
25.
Demonstrates the use of transactions in a JMS application
26.
Creates a Producer and a Consumer objects (Producer and Consumer classes are defined in this file)
27.
Fetches one or more messages from a queue using asynchronous message delivery
28.
The use of a message listener in the publish/subscribe model. The producer publishes several messages, and the consumer reads them asynchronously