removed ServerSessionMessageListenerContainer coverage

master
Juergen Hoeller 15 years ago
parent ff4f749adb
commit 7f24edc3d5
  1. 43
      spring-framework-reference/src/jms.xml

@ -275,19 +275,21 @@
receiving a message (and possibly responding to it), and delegates
boilerplate JMS infrastructure concerns to the framework.</para>
<para>There are three standard JMS message listener containers packaged
<para>There are two standard JMS message listener containers packaged
with Spring, each with its specialised feature set.</para>
<section id="jms-mdp-simple">
<title>SimpleMessageListenerContainer</title>
<para>This message listener container is the simplest of the three
standard flavors. It simply creates a fixed number of JMS sessions at
startup and uses them throughout the lifespan of the container. This
container doesn't allow for dynamic adaption to runtime demands or
participate in externally managed transactions. However, it does have
the fewest requirements on the JMS provider: This listener container
only requires simple JMS API compliance.</para>
<para>This message listener container is the simpler of the two
standard flavors. It creates a fixed number of JMS sessions and
consumers at startup, registers the listener using the standard JMS
<methodname>MessageConsumer.setMessageListener</methodname> method,
and leaves it up the JMS provider to perform listener callbacks.
This variant does not allow for dynamic adaption to runtime demands or
for participation in externally managed transactions. Compatibility-wise,
it stays very close to the spirit of the standalone JMS specification
- but is generally not compatible with Java EE's JMS restrictions.</para>
</section>
<section id="jms-mdp-default">
@ -297,25 +299,12 @@
In contrast to <classname>SimpleMessageListenerContainer</classname>,
this container variant does allow for dynamic adaption to runtime
demands and is able to participate in externally managed transactions.
Each received message is registered with an XA transaction (when
configured with a <classname>JtaTransactionManager</classname>);
processing can take advantage of XA transation semantics. This
listener container strikes a good balance between low requirements on
the JMS provider and good functionality including transaction
participation.</para>
</section>
<section id="jms-mdp-server-session">
<title>ServerSessionMessageListenerContainer</title>
<para>This listener container leverages the JMS ServerSessionPool SPI
to allow for dynamic management of JMS sessions. The use of this
variety of message listener container enables the provider to perform
dynamic runtime tuning but, at the expense of requiring the JMS
provider to support the ServerSessionPool SPI. If there is no need for
provider-driven runtime tuning, look at the
<classname>DefaultMessageListenerContainer</classname> or the
<classname>SimpleMessageListenerContainer</classname> instead.</para>
Each received message is registered with an XA transaction when
configured with a <classname>JtaTransactionManager</classname>;
so processing may take advantage of XA transation semantics. This
listener container strikes a good balance between low requirements
on the JMS provider, advanced functionality such as transaction
participation, and compatibility with Java EE environments.</para>
</section>
</section>

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