Sergey, 

Thanks for the component.
I am really looking forward to the Azure Queue component.

Cheers, Thomas.

-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
Von: Sergey Beryozkin [mailto:sberyoz...@gmail.com] 
Gesendet: Donnerstag, 9. Februar 2017 18:42
An: dev@camel.apache.org
Betreff: Re: Camel Azure component

Hi

I've finally attached a patch for the experts to have a glance, I know I can 
commit and look forward to doing my first Camel commit, but it is my first 
Camel component, so if something obvious is missing - let me know please.

It is hard to create a complete functional component from a start but I hope it 
will be incrementally enhanced and improved.
At the moment it covers an Azure Blob Service (with some tweaks likely needed 
later on once we experiment more with it), I'll have a look at adding a Queue 
service support later on.

The most obvious thing which proved hard to solve is to have the tests not 
ignored - I run all the tests which are there against the live 30-day free 
account called 'camelazure' but it is a private account nonetheless.

I spent a lot of time on trying to mock the clients but the Azure SDK creators 
made all of the clients final, so after messing with PowerMock I thought it was 
not worth it as it looks it can add some instability in the running tests. The 
idea of running the integration tests is also on the hold given that they do 
not have a Maven plugin for starting the emulator (and no emulator for Linux 
yet).

So I'd like to go ahead with having these tests disabled and let those who are 
interested start playing with this component and provide the feedback until we 
figure out how to test it in Jenkins...

Claus, what do you think, would you be OK for the commit to go to 
2.19.0-SNAPSHOT in the current form ?

Cheers, Sergey


On 05/02/17 17:06, Sergey Beryozkin wrote:
> Hi Guys,
>
> I've looked a bit more carefully at the Azure Emulator docs:
>
> https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/storage/storage-use-emulator#st
> art-and-initialize-the-storage-emulator
>
>
> and I do not see now how it can be dynamically prepared to get the 
> integration tests running, my apologies I did not check it initially, 
> though if my earlier email would contribute to a Camel Windows build 
> be set up then it would be good :-). I believe Francesco managed to do 
> it quite easily for Syncope.
>
> I guess as far as this component is concerned I'd need to start with 
> the basic mock client to get some coverage done.
>
> Cheers, Sergey
>
> On 05/02/17 12:39, Jean-Baptiste Onofré wrote:
>> +1 for Windows build.
>>
>> Regards
>> JB
>>
>> On Feb 3, 2017, 21:27, at 21:27, Willem Jiang 
>> <willem.ji...@gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>>> +1 for setting up a Camel Windows build.
>>> As some of our users are still using windows box.
>>>
>>>
>>> Willem Jiang
>>>
>>> Blog: http://willemjiang.blogspot.com (English)
>>>          http://jnn.iteye.com  (Chinese)
>>> Twitter: willemjiang
>>> Weibo: 姜宁willem
>>>
>>> On Fri, Feb 3, 2017 at 11:22 PM, Sergey Beryozkin 
>>> <sberyoz...@gmail.com>
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>> Hi
>>>>
>>>> I've started prototyping a Camel Azure component [1].
>>>>
>>>> Azure has a number of services, Blob, Queue, Table and File, a lot 
>>>> of commands, etc.
>>>> I'm starting with supporting a Blob Service. Queue service will
>>> follow,
>>>> and I guess the component will keep evolving to support other
>>> services too.
>>>>
>>>> At the moment I have most of the Blob Service commands covered at 
>>>> the Producer side. I'm not sure Consumer will need to be there 
>>>> given that
>>> Azure
>>>> Java API only offers an option to download the blobs to an output
>>> stream
>>>> (file most likely). May be only for getting the attributes if 
>>>> really
>>> needed.
>>>>
>>>> I guess Queue Service will though require a Consumer but that is a
>>> stage 2.
>>>>
>>>> I'm using camel-aws component as a source of ideas.
>>>>
>>>> The biggest issue it how to test it. I have several basic 'live'
>>> in-only
>>>> tests based on the copy from camel-aws/s3 which depend on a live
>>> security
>>>> key and the connection. Microsoft Azure offers an emulator which 
>>>> can
>>> only
>>>> be run on Windows. And I'm not keen using a mock client which can
>>> become
>>>> stale and won't really prove the blob has been uploaded.
>>>>
>>>> I'd like to start with having these tests disabled on the master 
>>>> for
>>> those
>>>> who are interested to experiment with them using their own live 
>>>> keys
>>> and in
>>>> meantime I reckon we can either try to encourage the Microsoft 
>>>> Azure
>>> team
>>>> to release their service emulator for the Linux platform asap or 
>>>> set
>>> up a
>>>> Camel Windows build and run the emulator integration test on 
>>>> Windows
>>> only.
>>>>
>>>> Thanks, Sergey
>>>>
>>>> [1] https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CAMEL-10786
>>>>
>>
>

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