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Notifications

Spring’s JMX offering includes comprehensive support for JMX notifications.

Registering Listeners for Notifications

Spring’s JMX support makes it easy to register any number of NotificationListeners with any number of MBeans (this includes MBeans exported by Spring’s MBeanExporter and MBeans registered through some other mechanism). For example, consider the scenario where one would like to be informed (through a Notification) each and every time an attribute of a target MBean changes. The following example writes notifications to the console:

package com.example;

import javax.management.AttributeChangeNotification;
import javax.management.Notification;
import javax.management.NotificationFilter;
import javax.management.NotificationListener;

public class ConsoleLoggingNotificationListener
		implements NotificationListener, NotificationFilter {

	public void handleNotification(Notification notification, Object handback) {
		System.out.println(notification);
		System.out.println(handback);
	}

	public boolean isNotificationEnabled(Notification notification) {
		return AttributeChangeNotification.class.isAssignableFrom(notification.getClass());
	}

}

The following example adds ConsoleLoggingNotificationListener (defined in the preceding example) to notificationListenerMappings:

<beans>

	<bean id="exporter" class="org.springframework.jmx.export.MBeanExporter">
		<property name="beans">
			<map>
				<entry key="bean:name=testBean1" value-ref="testBean"/>
			</map>
		</property>
		<property name="notificationListenerMappings">
			<map>
				<entry key="bean:name=testBean1">
					<bean class="com.example.ConsoleLoggingNotificationListener"/>
				</entry>
			</map>
		</property>
	</bean>

	<bean id="testBean" class="org.springframework.jmx.JmxTestBean">
		<property name="name" value="TEST"/>
		<property name="age" value="100"/>
	</bean>

</beans>

With the preceding configuration in place, every time a JMX Notification is broadcast from the target MBean (bean:name=testBean1), the ConsoleLoggingNotificationListener bean that was registered as a listener through the notificationListenerMappings property is notified. The ConsoleLoggingNotificationListener bean can then take whatever action it deems appropriate in response to the Notification.

You can also use straight bean names as the link between exported beans and listeners, as the following example shows:

<beans>

	<bean id="exporter" class="org.springframework.jmx.export.MBeanExporter">
		<property name="beans">
			<map>
				<entry key="bean:name=testBean1" value-ref="testBean"/>
			</map>
		</property>
		<property name="notificationListenerMappings">
			<map>
				<entry key="testBean">
					<bean class="com.example.ConsoleLoggingNotificationListener"/>
				</entry>
			</map>
		</property>
	</bean>

	<bean id="testBean" class="org.springframework.jmx.JmxTestBean">
		<property name="name" value="TEST"/>
		<property name="age" value="100"/>
	</bean>

</beans>

If you want to register a single NotificationListener instance for all of the beans that the enclosing MBeanExporter exports, you can use the special wildcard (*) as the key for an entry in the notificationListenerMappings property map, as the following example shows:

<property name="notificationListenerMappings">
	<map>
		<entry key="*">
			<bean class="com.example.ConsoleLoggingNotificationListener"/>
		</entry>
	</map>
</property>

If you need to do the inverse (that is, register a number of distinct listeners against an MBean), you must instead use the notificationListeners list property (in preference to the notificationListenerMappings property). This time, instead of configuring a NotificationListener for a single MBean, we configure NotificationListenerBean instances. A NotificationListenerBean encapsulates a NotificationListener and the ObjectName (or ObjectNames) that it is to be registered against in an MBeanServer. The NotificationListenerBean also encapsulates a number of other properties, such as a NotificationFilter and an arbitrary handback object that can be used in advanced JMX notification scenarios.

The configuration when using NotificationListenerBean instances is not wildly different to what was presented previously, as the following example shows:

<beans>

	<bean id="exporter" class="org.springframework.jmx.export.MBeanExporter">
		<property name="beans">
			<map>
				<entry key="bean:name=testBean1" value-ref="testBean"/>
			</map>
		</property>
		<property name="notificationListeners">
			<list>
				<bean class="org.springframework.jmx.export.NotificationListenerBean">
					<constructor-arg>
						<bean class="com.example.ConsoleLoggingNotificationListener"/>
					</constructor-arg>
					<property name="mappedObjectNames">
						<list>
							<value>bean:name=testBean1</value>
						</list>
					</property>
				</bean>
			</list>
		</property>
	</bean>

	<bean id="testBean" class="org.springframework.jmx.JmxTestBean">
		<property name="name" value="TEST"/>
		<property name="age" value="100"/>
	</bean>

</beans>

The preceding example is equivalent to the first notification example. Assume, then, that we want to be given a handback object every time a Notification is raised and that we also want to filter out extraneous Notifications by supplying a NotificationFilter. The following example accomplishes these goals:

<beans>

	<bean id="exporter" class="org.springframework.jmx.export.MBeanExporter">
		<property name="beans">
			<map>
				<entry key="bean:name=testBean1" value-ref="testBean1"/>
				<entry key="bean:name=testBean2" value-ref="testBean2"/>
			</map>
		</property>
		<property name="notificationListeners">
			<list>
				<bean class="org.springframework.jmx.export.NotificationListenerBean">
					<constructor-arg ref="customerNotificationListener"/>
					<property name="mappedObjectNames">
						<list>
							<!-- handles notifications from two distinct MBeans -->
							<value>bean:name=testBean1</value>
							<value>bean:name=testBean2</value>
						</list>
					</property>
					<property name="handback">
						<bean class="java.lang.String">
							<constructor-arg value="This could be anything..."/>
						</bean>
					</property>
					<property name="notificationFilter" ref="customerNotificationListener"/>
				</bean>
			</list>
		</property>
	</bean>

	<!-- implements both the NotificationListener and NotificationFilter interfaces -->
	<bean id="customerNotificationListener" class="com.example.ConsoleLoggingNotificationListener"/>

	<bean id="testBean1" class="org.springframework.jmx.JmxTestBean">
		<property name="name" value="TEST"/>
		<property name="age" value="100"/>
	</bean>

	<bean id="testBean2" class="org.springframework.jmx.JmxTestBean">
		<property name="name" value="ANOTHER TEST"/>
		<property name="age" value="200"/>
	</bean>

</beans>

(For a full discussion of what a handback object is and, indeed, what a NotificationFilter is, see the section of the JMX specification (1.2) entitled 'The JMX Notification Model'.)

Publishing Notifications

Spring provides support not only for registering to receive Notifications but also for publishing Notifications.

This section is really only relevant to Spring-managed beans that have been exposed as MBeans through an MBeanExporter. Any existing user-defined MBeans should use the standard JMX APIs for notification publication.

The key interface in Spring’s JMX notification publication support is the NotificationPublisher interface (defined in the org.springframework.jmx.export.notification package). Any bean that is going to be exported as an MBean through an MBeanExporter instance can implement the related NotificationPublisherAware interface to gain access to a NotificationPublisher instance. The NotificationPublisherAware interface supplies an instance of a NotificationPublisher to the implementing bean through a simple setter method, which the bean can then use to publish Notifications.

As stated in the javadoc of the NotificationPublisher interface, managed beans that publish events through the NotificationPublisher mechanism are not responsible for the state management of notification listeners. Spring’s JMX support takes care of handling all the JMX infrastructure issues. All you need to do, as an application developer, is implement the NotificationPublisherAware interface and start publishing events by using the supplied NotificationPublisher instance. Note that the NotificationPublisher is set after the managed bean has been registered with an MBeanServer.

Using a NotificationPublisher instance is quite straightforward. You create a JMX Notification instance (or an instance of an appropriate Notification subclass), populate the notification with the data pertinent to the event that is to be published, and invoke the sendNotification(Notification) on the NotificationPublisher instance, passing in the Notification.

In the following example, exported instances of the JmxTestBean publish a NotificationEvent every time the add(int, int) operation is invoked:

package org.springframework.jmx;

import org.springframework.jmx.export.notification.NotificationPublisherAware;
import org.springframework.jmx.export.notification.NotificationPublisher;
import javax.management.Notification;

public class JmxTestBean implements IJmxTestBean, NotificationPublisherAware {

	private String name;
	private int age;
	private boolean isSuperman;
	private NotificationPublisher publisher;

	// other getters and setters omitted for clarity

	public int add(int x, int y) {
		int answer = x + y;
		this.publisher.sendNotification(new Notification("add", this, 0));
		return answer;
	}

	public void dontExposeMe() {
		throw new RuntimeException();
	}

	public void setNotificationPublisher(NotificationPublisher notificationPublisher) {
		this.publisher = notificationPublisher;
	}

}

The NotificationPublisher interface and the machinery to get it all working is one of the nicer features of Spring’s JMX support. It does, however, come with the price tag of coupling your classes to both Spring and JMX. As always, the advice here is to be pragmatic. If you need the functionality offered by the NotificationPublisher and you can accept the coupling to both Spring and JMX, then do so.