We bSph ere Message B roker
Message Fl ows
Vers ion 6 Re le ase 1
We bSph ere Message B roker
Message Fl ows
Vers ion 6 Re le ase 1
Note
Before you use this information and the product that it supports, read the information in the Notices appendix.
This edition applies to version 6, release 1, modification 0, fix pack 8 of IBM WebSphere Message Broker and to all
subsequent releases and modifications until otherwise indicated in new editions.
© Copyright IBM Corporation 2000, 2010.
US Government Users Restricted Rights – Use, duplication or disclosure restricted by GSA ADP Schedule Contract
with IBM Corp.
Contents
About this topic collection.......v
Part 1. Developing message flows . . 1
Developing message flows ......3
Message flows overview ..........4
Getting started with Quick Start wizards ....168
Designing a message flow .........177
Managing message flows .........256
Defining message flow content .......268
Developing message flow applications that use
WebSphere Adapters ...........286
Developing ESQL ............302
Using PHP ..............455
Using XPath ..............476
Using TCP/IP in message flows .......485
Sending e-mails ............512
Developing Java ............521
Developing message mappings .......546
Defining a promoted property........643
Accessing and managing stored events .....652
Collecting message flow accounting and statistics
data ................656
Developing a user exit ..........663
Configuring aggregation flows .......665
Creating message collections ........684
Configuring timeout flows .........696
Configuring flows to handle WebSphere MQ
message groups ............706
HTTP proxy servlet overview ........709
Part 2. Working with Web services 733
Working with Web services .....735
WebSphere Message Broker and Web services . . 735
Web services: when to use SOAP or HTTP nodes 737
What is SOAP? .............737
What is WSDL? ............744
What is SOAP MTOM? ..........748
WS-Addressing.............749
WS-Security ..............759
WebSphere Service Registry and Repository . . . 781
External standards............807
Message flows for Web services .......815
Part 3. Working with files .....843
Working with files .........845
How the broker processes files .......845
How multiple file nodes share access to files in the
same directory .............848
Using local environment variables with file nodes 849
File name patterns............851
Archiving ..............854
Reading a file .............854
Writing a file .............862
Transferring files securely by using SFTP ....870
Part 4. Reference .........873
Message flows ...........875
Message flow preferences .........875
Built-in nodes .............875
Description properties for a message flow . . . 1321
Configurable message flow properties .....1324
WebSphere Adapters properties .......1326
Validation properties ..........1445
Parsing on demand ...........1449
User-defined nodes ...........1450
Supported code pages ..........1450
WebSphere MQ connections ........1478
Listing database connections that the broker holds 1478
Quiescing a database ..........1478
Support for Unicode and DBCS data in databases 1479
Data integrity in message flows .......1482
Exception list structure ..........1482
Message flow porting ..........1490
Monitoring message flows.........1490
Message flow accounting and statistics data . . . 1500
Coordinated message flows ........1516
Element definitions for message parsers ....1517
Message mappings ...........1530
XML constructs ............1567
Data sources on z/OS ..........1583
Message mappings ........1585
Message Mapping editor .........1585
Mapping node ............1597
Migrating message mappings from Version 5.0 1617
Restrictions on migrating message mappings . . 1618
Part 5. Appendixes .......1623
Appendix. Notices for WebSphere
Message Broker..........1625
Trademarks in the WebSphere Message Broker
Information Center ...........1627
Index ..............1629
© Copyright IBM Corp. 2000, 2010 iii
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