Using the Server
This chapter will familiarise you with how to use the Apache ActiveMQ Artemis server.
We'll show where it is, how to start and stop it, and we'll describe the directory layout and what all the files are and what they do.
For the remainder of this chapter when we talk about the Apache ActiveMQ Artemis server we mean the Apache ActiveMQ Artemis standalone server, in its default configuration with a JMS Service enabled.
This document will refer to the full path of the directory where the ActiveMQ
distribution has been extracted to as ${ARTEMIS_HOME}
directory.
Installation
After downloading the distribution, the following highlights some important folders on the distribution:
|___ bin
|
|___ examples
| |___ common
| |___ features
| |___ perf
| |___ protocols
|
|___ lib
| |___ client
|
|___ schema
|
|___ web
|___ api
|___ hacking-guide
|___ migration-guide
|___ user-manual
bin
- binaries and scripts needed to run ActiveMQ Artemis.examples
- All manner of examples. Please refer to the examples chapter for details on how to run them.lib
- jars and libraries needed to run ActiveMQ Artemisschema
- XML Schemas used to validate ActiveMQ Artemis configuration filesweb
- The folder where the web context is loaded when the broker runs.api
- The api documentation is placed under the web folder.user-manual
- The user manual is placed under the web folder.
Creating a Broker Instance
A broker instance is the directory containing all the configuration and runtime
data, such as logs and data files, associated with a broker process. It is
recommended that you do not create the instance directory under
${ARTEMIS_HOME}
. This separation is encouraged so that you can more easily
upgrade when the next version of ActiveMQ Artemis is released.
On Unix systems, it is a common convention to store this kind of runtime data
under the /var/lib
directory. For example, to create an instance at
'/var/lib/mybroker', run the following commands in your command line shell:
cd /var/lib
${ARTEMIS_HOME}/bin/artemis create mybroker
A broker instance directory will contain the following sub directories:
bin
: holds execution scripts associated with this instance.etc
: hold the instance configuration filesdata
: holds the data files used for storing persistent messageslog
: holds rotating log filestmp
: holds temporary files that are safe to delete between broker runs
At this point you may want to adjust the default configuration located in the
etc
directory.
Options
There are several options you can use when creating an instance.
For a full list of updated properties always use:
$./artemis help create
NAME
artemis create - creates a new broker instance
SYNOPSIS
artemis create [--addresses <addresses>] [--aio] [--allow-anonymous]
[--autocreate] [--blocking] [--cluster-password <clusterPassword>]
[--cluster-user <clusterUser>] [--clustered] [--data <data>]
[--default-port <defaultPort>] [--disable-persistence]
[--encoding <encoding>] [--etc <etc>] [--failover-on-shutdown] [--force]
[--global-max-size <globalMaxSize>] [--home <home>] [--host <host>]
[--http-host <httpHost>] [--http-port <httpPort>]
[--java-options <javaOptions>] [--mapped] [--max-hops <maxHops>]
[--message-load-balancing <messageLoadBalancing>] [--name <name>]
[--nio] [--no-amqp-acceptor] [--no-autocreate] [--no-autotune]
[--no-fsync] [--no-hornetq-acceptor] [--no-mqtt-acceptor]
[--no-stomp-acceptor] [--no-web] [--paging] [--password <password>]
[--ping <ping>] [--port-offset <portOffset>] [--queues <queues>]
[--replicated] [--require-login] [--role <role>] [--shared-store]
[--silent] [--slave] [--ssl-key <sslKey>]
[--ssl-key-password <sslKeyPassword>] [--ssl-trust <sslTrust>]
[--ssl-trust-password <sslTrustPassword>] [--use-client-auth]
[--user <user>] [--verbose] [--] <directory>
OPTIONS
--addresses <addresses>
Comma separated list of addresses
--aio
Sets the journal as asyncio.
--allow-anonymous
Enables anonymous configuration on security, opposite of
--require-login (Default: input)
--autocreate
Auto create addresses. (default: true)
--blocking
Block producers when address becomes full, opposite of --paging
(Default: false)
--cluster-password <clusterPassword>
The cluster password to use for clustering. (Default: input)
--cluster-user <clusterUser>
The cluster user to use for clustering. (Default: input)
--clustered
Enable clustering
--data <data>
Directory where ActiveMQ data are stored. Paths can be absolute or
relative to artemis.instance directory ('data' by default)
--default-port <defaultPort>
The port number to use for the main 'artemis' acceptor (Default:
61616)
--disable-persistence
Disable message persistence to the journal
--encoding <encoding>
The encoding that text files should use
--etc <etc>
Directory where ActiveMQ configuration is located. Paths can be absolute or
relative to artemis.instance directory ('etc' by default)
--failover-on-shutdown
Valid for shared store: will shutdown trigger a failover? (Default:
false)
--force
Overwrite configuration at destination directory
--global-max-size <globalMaxSize>
Maximum amount of memory which message data may consume (Default:
Undefined, half of the system's memory)
--home <home>
Directory where ActiveMQ Artemis is installed
--host <host>
The host name of the broker (Default: 0.0.0.0 or input if clustered)
--http-host <httpHost>
The host name to use for embedded web server (Default: localhost)
--http-port <httpPort>
The port number to use for embedded web server (Default: 8161)
--java-options <javaOptions>
Extra java options to be passed to the profile
--mapped
Sets the journal as mapped.
--max-hops <maxHops>
Number of hops on the cluster configuration
--message-load-balancing <messageLoadBalancing>
Load balancing policy on cluster. [ON_DEMAND (default) | STRICT |
OFF]
--name <name>
The name of the broker (Default: same as host)
--nio
Sets the journal as nio.
--no-amqp-acceptor
Disable the AMQP specific acceptor.
--no-autocreate
Disable Auto create addresses.
--no-autotune
Disable auto tuning on the journal.
--no-fsync
Disable usage of fdatasync (channel.force(false) from java nio) on
the journal
--no-hornetq-acceptor
Disable the HornetQ specific acceptor.
--no-mqtt-acceptor
Disable the MQTT specific acceptor.
--no-stomp-acceptor
Disable the STOMP specific acceptor.
--no-web
Remove the web-server definition from bootstrap.xml
--paging
Page messages to disk when address becomes full, opposite of
--blocking (Default: true)
--password <password>
The user's password (Default: input)
--ping <ping>
A comma separated string to be passed on to the broker config as
network-check-list. The broker will shutdown when all these
addresses are unreachable.
--port-offset <portOffset>
Off sets the ports of every acceptor
--queues <queues>
Comma separated list of queues.
--replicated
Enable broker replication
--require-login
This will configure security to require user / password, opposite of
--allow-anonymous
--role <role>
The name for the role created (Default: amq)
--shared-store
Enable broker shared store
--silent
It will disable all the inputs, and it would make a best guess for
any required input
--slave
Valid for shared store or replication: this is a slave server?
--ssl-key <sslKey>
The key store path for embedded web server
--ssl-key-password <sslKeyPassword>
The key store password
--ssl-trust <sslTrust>
The trust store path in case of client authentication
--ssl-trust-password <sslTrustPassword>
The trust store password
--use-client-auth
If the embedded server requires client authentication
--user <user>
The username (Default: input)
--verbose
Adds more information on the execution
--
This option can be used to separate command-line options from the
list of argument, (useful when arguments might be mistaken for
command-line options
<directory>
The instance directory to hold the broker's configuration and data.
Path must be writable.
Some of these properties may be mandatory in certain configurations and the system may ask you for additional input.
./artemis create /usr/server
Creating ActiveMQ Artemis instance at: /user/server
--user: is a mandatory property!
Please provide the default username:
admin
--password: is mandatory with this configuration:
Please provide the default password:
--allow-anonymous | --require-login: is a mandatory property!
Allow anonymous access?, valid values are Y,N,True,False
y
Auto tuning journal ...
done! Your system can make 0.34 writes per millisecond, your journal-buffer-timeout will be 2956000
You can now start the broker by executing:
"/user/server/bin/artemis" run
Or you can run the broker in the background using:
"/user/server/bin/artemis-service" start
Starting and Stopping a Broker Instance
Assuming you created the broker instance under /var/lib/mybroker
all you need
to do start running the broker instance is execute:
/var/lib/mybroker/bin/artemis run
Now that the broker is running, you can optionally run some of the included examples to verify the the broker is running properly.
To stop the Apache ActiveMQ Artemis instance you will use the same artemis
script, but with the stop
argument. Example:
/var/lib/mybroker/bin/artemis stop
Please note that Apache ActiveMQ Artemis requires a Java 7 or later runtime to run.
By default the etc/bootstrap.xml
configuration is used. The configuration can
be changed e.g. by running ./artemis run -- xml:path/to/bootstrap.xml
or
another config of your choosing.
Environment variables are used to provide ease of changing ports, hosts and
data directories used and can be found in etc/artemis.profile
on linux and
etc\artemis.profile.cmd
on Windows.
Server JVM settings
The run scripts set some JVM settings for tuning the garbage collection policy and heap size. We recommend using a parallel garbage collection algorithm to smooth out latency and minimise large GC pauses.
By default Apache ActiveMQ Artemis runs in a maximum of 1GiB of RAM. To
increase the memory settings change the -Xms
and -Xmx
memory settings as
you would for any Java program.
If you wish to add any more JVM arguments or tune the existing ones, the run scripts are the place to do it.
Library Path
If you're using the Asynchronous IO Journal on Linux, you need to
specify java.library.path
as a property on your Java options. This is done
automatically in the scripts.
If you don't specify java.library.path
at your Java options then the JVM will
use the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH
.
You will need to make sure libaio is installed on Linux. For more information refer to the libaio chapter.
System properties
Apache ActiveMQ Artemis can take a system property on the command line for configuring logging.
For more information on configuring logging, please see the section on Logging.
Configuration files
The configuration file used to bootstrap the server (e.g. bootstrap.xml
by
default) references the specific broker configuration files.
broker.xml
. This is the main ActiveMQ configuration file. All the parameters in this file are described here
It is also possible to use system property substitution in all the configuration files. by replacing a value with the name of a system property. Here is an example of this with a connector configuration:
<connector name="netty">tcp://${activemq.remoting.netty.host:localhost}:${activemq.remoting.netty.port:61616}</connector>
Here you can see we have replaced 2 values with system properties
activemq.remoting.netty.host
and activemq.remoting.netty.port
. These values
will be replaced by the value found in the system property if there is one, if
not they default back to localhost or 61616 respectively. It is also possible
to not supply a default. i.e. ${activemq.remoting.netty.host}
, however the
system property must be supplied in that case.
Bootstrap configuration file
The stand-alone server is basically a set of POJOs which are instantiated by Airline commands.
The bootstrap file is very simple. Let's take a look at an example:
<broker xmlns="http://activemq.org/schema">
<jaas-security domain="activemq"/>
<server configuration="file:/path/to/broker.xml"/>
<web bind="http://localhost:8161" path="web">
<app url="activemq-branding" war="activemq-branding.war"/>
<app url="artemis-plugin" war="artemis-plugin.war"/>
<app url="console" war="console.war"/>
</web>
</broker>
server
- Instantiates a core server using the configuration file from theconfiguration
attribute. This is the main broker POJO necessary to do all the real messaging work.jaas-security
- Configures JAAS-based security for the server. Thedomain
attribute refers to the relevant login module entry inlogin.config
. If different behavior is needed then a custom security manager can be configured by replacingjaas-security
withsecurity-manager
. See the "Custom Security Manager" section in the security chapter for more details.web
- Configures an embedded Jetty instance to serve web applications like the admin console.
Broker configuration file
The configuration for the Apache ActiveMQ Artemis core server is contained in
broker.xml
. This is what the FileConfiguration bean uses to configure the
messaging server.
There are many attributes which you can configure Apache ActiveMQ Artemis. In
most cases the defaults will do fine, in fact every attribute can be defaulted
which means a file with a single empty configuration
element is a valid
configuration file. The different configuration will be explained throughout
the manual or you can refer to the configuration reference
here.
Windows Server
On windows you will have the option to run ActiveMQ Artemis as a service. Just use the following command to install it:
$ ./artemis-service.exe install
The create process should give you a hint of the available commands available for the artemis-service.exe
Adding Bootstrap Dependencies
Bootstrap dependencies like logging handlers must be accessible by the log
manager at boot time. Package the dependency in a jar and put it on the boot
classpath before of log manager jar. This can be done appending the jar at the
variable JAVA_ARGS
, defined in artemis.profile
, with the option -Xbootclasspath/a
.
Adding Runtime Dependencies
Runtime dependencies like diverts, transformers, broker plugins, JDBC drivers,
password decoders, etc. must be accessible by the broker at runtime. Package
the dependency in a jar, and put it on the broker's classpath. This can be done
by placing the jar file in the lib
directory of the broker distribution
itself or in the lib
directory of the broker instance. A broker instance does
not have a lib
directory by default so it may need to be created. It should
be on the "top" level with the bin
, data
, log
, etc. directories.