When a consumer attaches to a queue, the normal behaviour is that messages are sent to that consumer are acquired exclusively by that consumer, and when the consumer acknowledges them, the messages are removed from the queue.
Another common pattern is to have queue “browsers” which send all messages to the browser, but do not prevent other consumers from receiving the messages, and do not remove them from the queue when the browser is done with them. Such a browser is an instance of a “non-destructive” consumer.
If every consumer on a queue is non destructive then we can obtain some interesting behaviours. In the case of a last value queue then the queue will always contain the most up to date value for every key.
A queue can be created to enforce all consumers are non-destructive using the following queue configuration:
<address name="foo.bar">
<multicast>
<queue name="orders1" non-destructive="true" />
</multicast>
</address>
Or on auto-create when using the JMS client by using address parameters when creating the destination used by the consumer.
Queue queue = session.createQueue("my.destination.name?non-destructive=true");
Topic topic = session.createTopic("my.destination.name?non-destructive=true");
Also the default for all queues under and address can be defaulted using the address-setting
configuration:
<address-setting match="nonDestructiveQueue">
<default-non-destructive>true</default-non-destructive>
</address-setting>
By default, default-non-destructive
is false
.
1. Limiting the Size of the Queue
For queues other than last-value queues, having only non-destructive consumers could mean that messages would never get deleted, leaving the queue to grow without constraint. To prevent this you can use the ability to set a default expiry-delay
. See expiry-delay for more details on this. You could also use a ring queue.