RE: AMQ production status

2006-07-06 Thread Mittler, Nathan
Hi Naveen,
Comments inline ...

 -Original Message-
 From: Naveen Rawat [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 Sent: Thursday, July 06, 2006 7:48 AM
 To: activemq-dev@geronimo.apache.org
 Subject: AMQ production status
 
 
 Hi James 
 
 
 We have our servers in C/C++. We are trying out available 
 open source MQ services for maintaining persistent 
 communication with our servers through our C++ and web clients. 
 
 We tried the tests available for both Stomp and Openwire and 
 got very little success with Stomp C++ (caught up with the 
 persistency issue) and considerable with openwire C++ (I have 
 an issue regarding this mailed to the mailing list on 06-July-2006). 

Just out of curiosity, which Stomp C++ client did you try?  The reason I
ask is that we just submitted a replacement for the CMS client in
activemq-cpp. This API does appear to have support for persistence,
although I'm not sure that we have a unit test that verifies it yet.

 
 1) Are both these C++ APIs (Stomp and Openwire) worth 
 implementation and usage right now, or they are being made 
 more ROBUST? 
 

The activemq-cpp is new and will be the beginning of creating a single
C++ client that will support both stomp and openwire (you will be able
to choose which protocol in the url).  So, there is definitely activity
in this area and they should continue to improve.

 2) When can we see a PRODUCTION-able AMQ along with its full 
 throttled APIs? 
 

I would try activemq-cpp, if you haven't already - it's leaps and bounds
above the old CMS code!

  
 
 
 Hearty Regards
 Naveen Rawat
 

Regards,
Nate


RE: AMQ production status

2006-07-06 Thread Naveen Rawat


Hi Nate 

Thanks for the information. 




Just out of curiosity, which Stomp C++ client did you try?  The reason I
ask is that we just submitted a replacement for the CMS client in
activemq-cpp. This API does appear to have support for persistence,
although I'm not sure that we have a unit test that verifies it yet.


We are using the main.cpp file that comes in /test along with the Stomp C++ 
APIs from svn : 
https://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/incubator/activemq/trunk/cms. We have 
segregated the main.cpp into a sender and a receiver. 

1) From where can I get the fresh CMS replacement as told by you. Can you 
provide the specific location? 




I would try activemq-cpp, if you haven't already - it's leaps and bounds
above the old CMS code!


2) I am using ActiveMQ 4.0.x java version. Is activemq-cpp a C++ MQ server? 
If, then what's its capacity against Java, .Net clients. 





Hearty Regards
Naveen Rawat


RE: AMQ production status

2006-07-06 Thread Bish, Tim
Comments inline:

 
 Just out of curiosity, which Stomp C++ client did you try?  The
reason I
 ask is that we just submitted a replacement for the CMS client in
 activemq-cpp. This API does appear to have support for persistence,
 although I'm not sure that we have a unit test that verifies it yet.
 
 We are using the main.cpp file that comes in /test along with the
Stomp
 C++
 APIs from svn :
 https://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/incubator/activemq/trunk/cms. We have
 segregated the main.cpp into a sender and a receiver.
 
 1) From where can I get the fresh CMS replacement as told by you. Can
you
 provide the specific location?

The CMS replacement is called activemq-cpp and its located here:
https://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/incubator/activemq/trunk/activemq-cpp

It is still under active development by Nathan and me.

 
 
 I would try activemq-cpp, if you haven't already - it's leaps and
bounds
 above the old CMS code!
 
 2) I am using ActiveMQ 4.0.x java version. Is activemq-cpp a C++ MQ
 server?
 If, then what's its capacity against Java, .Net clients.

Activemq-cpp is a c++ implementation of the JMS Client API, currently it
only speaks the stomp protocol, but in time it should also gain the
ability to use the openwire protocol as well.  You still need to run an
AMQ broker just as you did before.

The tests in the test-integration folder show example usage, which is
now very much like using the Java based JMS client API.


-
Timothy A. Bish
Sensis Corporation
-