NAME
Tibco::Rv::Cm::Listener - Tibco Certified Messaging Listener event object
SYNOPSIS
my ( $cmt ) = $rv->createCmTransport( ... );
my ( $listener ) =
$rv->createCmListener( transport => $cmt, subject => 'ABC',
callback => sub
{
my ( $msg ) = @_;
print "Listener got a message: $msg, from sender: ", $msg->CMSender,
', sequence: ', $msg->CMSequence, "\n";
} );
DESCRIPTION
A Tibco::Rv::Cm::Listener
monitors a subject for incoming messages and passes those messages along to a callback. It is a subclass of Tibco::Rv::Event, so Event methods are available to Listeners (documentation on Event methods are reproduced here for convenience).
Certified Messaging ensures that messages will be recieved exactly once and in sequence. See your TIB/Rendevous documentation for more information.
CONSTRUCTOR
- $listener = new Tibco::Rv::Cm::Listener( %args )
-
%args: queue => $queue, transport => $transport, subject => $subject, callback => sub { ... }
Creates a
Tibco::Rv::Cm::Listener
. transport must be a Tibco::Rv::Cm::Transport. If not specified, queue defaults to the Default Queue, subject defaults to the empty string, and callback defaults to:sub { print "cmListener received: @_\n" }
A program registers interest in
$subject
by creating a Listener. Messages coming in on$subject
via$transport
are placed on the$queue
. When$queue
dispatches such an event, it triggers the given callback.
METHODS
- $transport = $listener->transport
-
Returns the transport via which Listener events are arriving.
- $subject = $listener->subject
-
Returns the subject this Listener is listening on.
- $queue = $listener->queue
-
Returns the queue on which this Listener's events will be dispatched.
- $callback = $listener->callback
-
Returns the callback code reference.
- $listener->onEvent( $msg )
-
Trigger an event directly by passing
$msg
to the Listener. The$msg
will be processed as if it was triggered via the event queue. - $listener->DESTROY( $cancelAgreements )
-
Cancels interest in this event. Called automatically when
$listener
goes out of scope. Calling DESTROY more than once has no effect.$cancelAgreements
defaults to PERSIST.If
$cancelAgreements
is PERSIST, certified delivery agreements are left in effect, so senders will store messages. If$cancelAgreements
is CANCEL, certified delivery agreements are cancelled, causing senders to delete all messages sent to this listener. - $listener->setExplicitConfirm
-
By default, certified listeners automatically confirm delivery when the callback returns. By calling setExplicitConfirm, this behaviour is overridden. Instead, you must explicitly confirm delivery by calling confirmMsg.
- $listener->confirmMsg( $msg )
-
Explicitly confirm delivery of
$msg
(see setExplicitConfirm).
CONSTANTS
- Tibco::Rv::Cm::Listener::CANCEL => 1
- Tibco::Rv::Cm::Listener::PERSIST => 0
-
See DESTROY for usage of these constants.
OVERRIDING EVENT CALLBACK
As an alternative to passing in a callback function to the constructor, there is another way to handle events. You can subclass Tibco::Rv::Cm::Listener
and override the onEvent method, as follows:
package MyListener;
use base qw/ Tibco::Rv::Cm::Listener /;
sub new
{
my ( $proto, %args ) = @_;
my ( $self ) = $proto->SUPER::new( %args );
# your initialization code
return $self;
}
sub onEvent
{
my ( $self, $msg ) = @_;
# process $msg here
# $self->queue, $self->transport, $self->subject are available
}
# any other implementation code for your class
1;
The Tibco::Rv::Event
onEvent method simply passes the $msg
on to the callback, so overriding onEvent allows you to process the $msg
however you want, and you can just not use the callback.
The advantages of this method of handling events are: it is more object-oriented; you have access to the transport, queue, and subject via the $self
accessor methods; and, you can have more elaborate processing of incoming messages without having to shove it all into one callback.
You can use your subclassed Listener as follows:
use Tibco::Rv;
use MyListener;
my ( $rv ) = new Tibco::Rv;
my ( $transport ) = new Tibco::Rv::Cm::Transport( ... );
my ( $myListener ) =
new MyListener( transport => $transport, subject => 'ABC' );
$rv->start;
AUTHOR
Paul Sturm <sturm@branewave.com>