package camelinaction; import org.apache.camel.builder.RouteBuilder; import org.apache.camel.component.mock.MockEndpoint; import org.apache.camel.test.junit4.CamelTestSupport; import org.junit.Test; /** * Demonstrates how to use the Load Balancer EIP pattern. * <p/> * This example sends 4 messages to a Camel route which then sends * the message to external services (A and B). We use a load balancer * in between to spread the load evenly, using the round robin algorithm. */ public class LoadBalancerTest extends CamelTestSupport { @Test public void testLoadBalancer() throws Exception { // A should get the 1st and 3rd message MockEndpoint a = getMockEndpoint("mock:a"); a.expectedBodiesReceived("Hello", "Cool"); // B should get the 2nd and 4th message MockEndpoint b = getMockEndpoint("mock:b"); b.expectedBodiesReceived("Camel rocks", "Bye"); // send in 4 messages template.sendBody("direct:start", "Hello"); template.sendBody("direct:start", "Camel rocks"); template.sendBody("direct:start", "Cool"); template.sendBody("direct:start", "Bye"); assertMockEndpointsSatisfied(); } @Override protected RouteBuilder createRouteBuilder() throws Exception { return new RouteBuilder() { @Override public void configure() throws Exception { from("direct:start") // use load balancer with round robin strategy .loadBalance().roundRobin() // this is the 2 processors which we will balance across .to("seda:a").to("seda:b") .end(); // service A from("seda:a") .log("A received: ${body}") .to("mock:a"); // service B from("seda:b") .log("B received: ${body}") .to("mock:b"); } }; } }