Skip to content
This repository has been archived by the owner on Jan 3, 2019. It is now read-only.

(Archived - No longer maintained) Pluggable indexer triggered by JMS events

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

fcrepo4-archive/fcrepo-message-consumer

Repository files navigation

This project is no longer maintained

Users are encouraged to make use of the fcrepo-camel-toolbox for similar functionality.

fcrepo-message-consumer

This is a fcrepo 4.x indexer that listens to the Fedora JMS topic, retrieves a message including pid and eventType, looks up object properties, gets and passes the transformed or untransformed properties on to any number of registered handlers. It is built relying heavily on Spring machinery, including:

  • spring-lang
  • spring-jms
  • activemq-spring (?)

Running the indexer

In the simplest case, the indexer can be configured in the same container as the repository. See kitchen-sink/fuseki for an example of this configuration.

For production deployment, it is more typical to run the indexer on a separate machine. So we also have a stand-alone mode where the indexer is run as its own webapp:

$ git clone https://github.com/futures/fcrepo-jms-indexer-pluggable.git
$ cd fcrepo-jms-indexer-pluggable/fcrepo-jms-indexer-webapp
$ mvn -D jetty.port=9999 install jetty:run

Configuring the indexer

Test Spring Configuration

Production Spring Configuration

indexer-core.xml

  <!-- sparql-update indexer -->
  <bean id="sparqlUpdate" class="org.fcrepo.indexer.SparqlIndexer">
    <!-- base URL for triplestore subjects, PID will be appended -->
    <property name="prefix" value="http://localhost:${fcrepo.dynamic.test.port:8080}/rest/objects/"/>

    <!-- fuseki (used by tests) -->
    <property name="queryBase" value="http://localhost:3030/test/query"/>
    <property name="updateBase" value="http://localhost:3030/test/update"/>
    <property name="formUpdates">
      <value type="java.lang.Boolean">false</value>
    </property>

    <!-- sesame -->
    <!--
    <property name="queryBase" value="http://localhost:8080/openrdf-sesame/repositories/test"/>
    <property name="updateBase" value="http://localhost:8080/openrdf-sesame/repositories/test/statements"/>
    <property name="formUpdates">
      <value type="java.lang.Boolean">true</value>
    </property>
    -->
  </bean>
  
  <!--Embedded Server used in spring-test -->
  <!--
  
  <bean id="multiCore" class="org.apache.solr.core.CoreContainer"
    factory-method="createAndLoad" c:solrHome="target/test-classes/solr"
    c:configFile-ref="solrConfig"/>
    
  <bean class="java.io.File" id="solrConfig">
    <constructor-arg type="String">
      <value>target/test-classes/solr/solr.xml</value>
    </constructor-arg>
  </bean>

  <bean id="solrServer"
    class="org.apache.solr.client.solrj.embedded.EmbeddedSolrServer"
    c:coreContainer-ref="multiCore" c:coreName="testCore"/>
    -->
  <!-- end Embedded Server-->
  
  <!--Standardalone solr Server -->
  <bean id="solrServer" class="org.apache.solr.client.solrj.impl.HttpSolrServer">
    <constructor-arg index="0" value="http://${fcrepo.host:localhost}:${solrIndexer.port:8983}/solr/" />
  </bean>
  
  <!-- Solr Indexer START-->
    <bean id="solrIndexer" class="org.fcrepo.indexer.solr.SolrIndexer">
    <constructor-arg ref="solrServer" />
    </bean>

  <!-- file serializer -->
  <bean id="fileSerializer" class="org.fcrepo.indexer.FileSerializer">
    <property name="path" value="./target/test-classes/fileSerializer/"/>
  </bean>

  <!-- Message Driven POJO (MDP) that manages individual indexers -->
  <bean id="indexerGroup" class="org.fcrepo.indexer.IndexerGroup">
    <property name="repositoryURL" value="http://localhost:${fcrepo.dynamic.test.port:8080}/rest/objects/" />
    <property name="indexers">
      <set>
        <ref bean="sparqlUpdate"/>
        <ref bean="solrIndexer"/>
        <ref bean="fileSerializer"/>
      </set>
    </property>
  </bean>
  <!--end indexer-core.xml-->

Here 3 indexers are implemented, sparqlUpdate writing to an as configured fuseki triplestore, solrIndexer writing to an as configured standalone solr instance, and fileSerializer writing to an arbitrary path.

indexer-events.xml

  <bean id="connectionFactory"
    class="org.apache.activemq.ActiveMQConnectionFactory">
    <property name="brokerURL" value="vm://localhost"/>
  </bean>

  <bean id="pooledConnectionFactory"
    class="org.apache.activemq.pool.PooledConnectionFactory"
    depends-on="connectionFactory">
    <property name="connectionFactory" ref="connectionFactory"/>
    <property name="maxConnections" value="1"/>
    <property name="idleTimeout" value="0"/>
  </bean>
  
  <!-- ActiveMQ queue to listen for events -->
  <bean id="destination" class="org.apache.activemq.command.ActiveMQTopic">
    <constructor-arg value="fedora" />
  </bean>

  <!-- and this is the message listener container -->
  <bean id="jmsContainer" class="org.springframework.jms.listener.DefaultMessageListenerContainer"
    depends-on="destination, pooledConnectionFactory">
    <property name="connectionFactory" ref="connectionFactory"/>
    <property name="destination" ref="destination"/>
    <property name="messageListener" ref="indexerGroup" />
    <property name="sessionTransacted" value="true"/>
  </bean>

The magic is in the jmsContainer bean. It listens to the destination for messages, and pass them onto our messageListener. The messageListener retrieves the Fedora object from the repo (for adds/updates) and passes the pid and content to each indexer class defined in the indexers set.

Dependencies

Currently, the tests work with either Jena Fuseki or Sesame triplestores/SPARQL servers. To switch between them, edit src/test/resources/spring-test/indexer-core.xml.

Fuseki

Fuseki is the easiest to setup -- just download it from http://www.apache.org/dist/jena/binaries/, unpack and start fuseki-server:

curl -O http://www.apache.org/dist/jena/binaries/jena-fuseki-0.2.7-distribution.tar.gz
tar xvfz jena-fuseki-0.2.7-distribution.tar.gz
cd jena-fuseki-0.2.7
./fuseki-server --update --mem /test

Sesame

Sesame requires a little more setup to run with the tests, since by default it uses the same port as Fedora. To setup Sesame with Tomcat running on an alternate port:

  • Download Sesame from http://sourceforge.net/projects/sesame/files/Sesame%202/

  • Download Tomcat from http://tomcat.apache.org/download-70.cgi* Unpack Sesame and Tomcat, and move the Sesame WAR file into the Tomcat webapps directory

  • Change the Tomcat port to something other than 8080 to avoid conflict with Fedora, and then start Tomcat.

  • Use the Sesame console to create a repository

    curl -L -O http://downloads.sourceforge.net/project/sesame/Sesame%202/2.7.5/openrdf-sesame-2.7.5-sdk.tar.gz
    curl -O http://www.apache.org/dist/tomcat/tomcat-7/v7.0.42/bin/apache-tomcat-7.0.42.tar.gz
    tar xvfz apache-tomcat-7.0.42.tar.gz
    tar xvfz openrdf-sesame-2.7.5-sdk.tar.gz
    cp openrdf-sesame-2.7.5/war/openrdf-sesame.war apache-tomcat-7.0.42/webapps/
    cat apache-tomcat-7.0.42/conf/server.xml | sed -e's/8080/${tomcat.port}/' > tmp.xml
    mv tmp.xml apache-tomcat-7.0.42/conf/server.xml
    export CATALINA_HOME=`pwd`/apache-tomcat-7.0.42
    export JAVA_OPTS="$JAVA_OPTS -Dtomcat.port=8081"
    apache-tomcat-7.0.42/bin/startup.sh
    openrdf-sesame-2.7.5/bin/console.sh
    > connect http://localhost:8081/openrdf-sesame.
    > create native.
    Repository ID [native]: test
    Repository title [Native store]: test
    Triple indexes [spoc,posc]: spoc,posc
    > quit.

Solr

Solr can be installed embedded into a jetty server (recommended for test) or in a tomcat container (recommended for production). Download install and configuration are here: https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/solr/Getting+Started

Maven Build

Use the following MAVEN_OPTS on build

MAVEN_OPTS="-Xmx750M -XX:MaxPermSize=300M" mvn clean install

Caveat: Blank Nodes

Fedora doesn't currently support blank nodes.

Authenticated repo

If REST calls to your Fedora repository require BASIC authentication, you'll need to set two system variables in your servlet container, fcrepo.username and fcrepo.password. In Jetty/Maven 3, you can set some values in your settings.xml file that will later be set to these two system variables:

<profiles>
  <profile>
    <id>fcrepo</id>
    <activation>
      <activeByDefault>true</activeByDefault>
    </activation>
    <properties>
      <fcrepo.username>example</fcrepo.username>
      <fcrepo.password>xxxxxxxx</fcrepo.password>
    </properties>
  </profile>
</profiles>

In Tomcat 7 you can set the following command line options in your conf/setenv.sh file:

JAVA_OPTS="$JAVA_OPTS -Dfcrepo.username=example -Dfcrepo.password=xxxxxxxx "

About

(Archived - No longer maintained) Pluggable indexer triggered by JMS events

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published