Does anyone have experience using the NATS Streaming Server combined with a Java client? Specifically I can't figure out how to retrieve messages using the Java Client that are sent when a subscriber is offline.
I can see using the Go client that I can publish a message and later add a subscription to retrieve all published messages. This is in the NATS Streaming Getting Started documentation and it works as advertised.
Publish several messages. For each publication you should get a result.
$ cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/nats-io/go-nats-streaming/examples
go run stan-pub.go foo "msg one"
Published [foo] : 'msg one'
$ go run stan-pub.go foo "msg two"
Published [foo] : 'msg two'
$ go run stan-pub.go foo "msg three"
Published [foo] : 'msg three'
Run the subscriber client. Use the --all flag to receive all published messages.
$ go run stan-sub.go --all -c test-cluster -id myID foo
Connected to nats://localhost:4222 clusterID: [test-cluster] clientID: [myID]
subscribing with DeliverAllAvailable
Listening on [foo], clientID=[myID], qgroup=[] durable=[]
[#1] Received on [foo]: 'sequence:1 subject:"foo" data:"msg one" timestamp:1465962202884478817 '
[#2] Received on [foo]: 'sequence:2 subject:"foo" data:"msg two" timestamp:1465962208545003897 '
[#3] Received on [foo]: 'sequence:3 subject:"foo" data:"msg three" timestamp:1465962215567601196
I'm trying to do this using the NATS Java client. I can't figure out if it's just that I'm not finding the analogous method calls or if the feature doesn't exist in the Java client.
Here's what I've tried
import io.nats.client.Connection;
import io.nats.client.ConnectionFactory;
import io.nats.client.Constants;
import io.nats.client.Message;
import io.nats.client.SyncSubscription;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.security.SecureRandom;
import java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit;
import java.util.concurrent.TimeoutException;
public class NatsTest2 {
private static final SecureRandom random = new SecureRandom();
public static void main(String... args) throws Exception {
final ConnectionFactory factory = new ConnectionFactory(Constants.DEFAULT_URL);
try (final Connection conn = factory.createConnection()) {
// Simple Async Subscriber
final String expectMessage = "Yum, cookies " + System.currentTimeMillis();
works(conn, expectMessage);
broken(conn, expectMessage);
}
}
private static void works(Connection conn, String expectMessage) throws IOException, TimeoutException {
final String queue = Long.toString(random.nextLong());
System.out.print(queue + "=>");
try (final SyncSubscription subscription = conn.subscribeSync(queue)) {
conn.publish(queue, expectMessage.getBytes());
subscribe(subscription);
}
}
private static void broken(Connection conn, String expectMessage) throws IOException, TimeoutException {
final String queue = Long.toString(random.nextLong());
System.out.print(queue + "=>");
conn.publish(queue, expectMessage.getBytes());
try (final SyncSubscription subscription = conn.subscribeSync(queue)) {
subscribe(subscription);
}
}
private static void subscribe(SyncSubscription subscription) throws IOException, TimeoutException {
final Message message = subscription.nextMessage(1, TimeUnit.SECONDS);
System.out.println(new String(message.getData()));
}
}
This gives output
-8522002637987832314=>Yum, cookies 1473462495040
-3024385525006291780=>Exception in thread "main" java.util.concurrent.TimeoutException: Channel timed out waiting for items