설명 없음

dependabot[bot] 8c6e0ac856 Bump the guide-dependencies-maven group across 2 directories with 1 update 5 달 전
.github d32172bfed Add dco.yml to disable checks for Org members 5 달 전
complete 8c6e0ac856 Bump the guide-dependencies-maven group across 2 directories with 1 update 5 달 전
initial 8c6e0ac856 Bump the guide-dependencies-maven group across 2 directories with 1 update 5 달 전
.gitignore 69bb7ddee3 Add ignores for VSCode 5 년 전
CONTRIBUTING.adoc f238e5ccd5 Migrate to DCO 5 달 전
LICENSE.txt aff42cddc1 Upgrade LICENSE file to comply with standards. 4 년 전
README.adoc 8ba75bc42d Update jackson link (#78) 1 년 전

README.adoc

:spring_version: current
:jackson: https://github.com/FasterXML/jackson
:AtMessageMapping: https://docs.spring.io/spring/docs/{spring_version}/javadoc-api/org/springframework/messaging/handler/annotation/MessageMapping.html
:AtController: https://docs.spring.io/spring/docs/{spring_version}/javadoc-api/org/springframework/stereotype/Controller.html
:AtEnableWebSocketMessageBroker: https://docs.spring.io/spring/docs/{spring_version}/javadoc-api/org/springframework/messaging/simp/config/EnableWebSocketMessageBroker.html
:Stomp_JS: http://jmesnil.net/stomp-websocket/doc/
:AtSendTo: https://docs.spring.io/spring/docs/{spring_version}/javadoc-api/org/springframework/messaging/handler/annotation/SendTo.html
:toc:
:icons: font
:source-highlighter: prettify
:project_id: gs-messaging-stomp-websocket

This guide walks you through the process of creating a "`Hello, world`" application that
sends messages back and forth between a browser and a server. WebSocket is a thin,
lightweight layer above TCP. This makes it suitable for using "`subprotocols`" to embed
messages. In this guide, we use
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Streaming_Text_Oriented_Messaging_Protocol[STOMP] messaging
with Spring to create an interactive web application. STOMP is a subprotocol operating
on top of the lower-level WebSocket.

== What You Will Build

You will build a server that accepts a message that carries a user's name. In response,
the server will push a greeting into a queue to which the client is subscribed.

== What You Need

include::https://raw.githubusercontent.com/spring-guides/getting-started-macros/main/prereq_editor_jdk_buildtools.adoc[]

include::https://raw.githubusercontent.com/spring-guides/getting-started-macros/main/how_to_complete_this_guide.adoc[]

[[scratch]]
== Starting with Spring Initializr

You can use this https://start.spring.io/#!type=maven-project&groupId=com.example&artifactId=messaging-stomp-websocket&name=messaging-stomp-websocket&description=Demo%20project%20for%20Spring%20Boot&packageName=com.example.messaging-stomp-websocket&dependencies=websocket[pre-initialized project] and click Generate to download a ZIP file. This project is configured to fit the examples in this tutorial.

To manually initialize the project:

. Navigate to https://start.spring.io.
This service pulls in all the dependencies you need for an application and does most of the setup for you.
. Choose either Gradle or Maven and the language you want to use. This guide assumes that you chose Java.
. Click *Dependencies* and select *Websocket*.
. Click *Generate*.
. Download the resulting ZIP file, which is an archive of a web application that is configured with your choices.

NOTE: If your IDE has the Spring Initializr integration, you can complete this process from your IDE.

NOTE: You can also fork the project from Github and open it in your IDE or other editor.

[[initial]]
== Create a Resource Representation Class

Now that you have set up the project and build system, you can create your STOMP message
service.

Begin the process by thinking about service interactions.

The service will accept messages that contain a name in a STOMP message whose body is a
JSON object. If the name is `Fred`, the message might resemble the following:

====
[source,json]
----
{
"name": "Fred"
}
----
====

To model the message that carries the name, you can create a plain old Java object with a
`name` property and a corresponding `getName()` method, as the following listing (from
`src/main/java/com/example/messagingstompwebsocket/HelloMessage.java`) shows:

====
[source,java,tabsize=2]
----
include::complete/src/main/java/com/example/messagingstompwebsocket/HelloMessage.java[]
----
====

Upon receiving the message and extracting the name, the service will process it by
creating a greeting and publishing that greeting on a separate queue to which the client
is subscribed. The greeting will also be a JSON object, which as the following listing
shows:

====
[source,json]
----
{
"content": "Hello, Fred!"
}
----
====

To model the greeting representation, add another plain old Java object with a `content`
property and a corresponding `getContent()` method, as the following listing (from
`src/main/java/com/example/messagingstompwebsocket/Greeting.java`) shows:

====
[source,java,tabsize=2]
----
include::complete/src/main/java/com/example/messagingstompwebsocket/Greeting.java[]
----
====

Spring will use the {jackson}[Jackson JSON] library to automatically marshal instances of
type `Greeting` into JSON.

Next, you will create a controller to receive the hello message and send a greeting
message.

== Create a Message-handling Controller

In Spring's approach to working with STOMP messaging, STOMP messages can be routed to
{AtController}[`@Controller`] classes. For example, the `GreetingController` (from
`src/main/java/com/example/messagingstompwebsocket/GreetingController.java`) is mapped to
handle messages to the `/hello` destination, as the following listing shows:

====
[source,java,tabsize=2]
----
include::complete/src/main/java/com/example/messagingstompwebsocket/GreetingController.java[]
----
====

This controller is concise and simple, but plenty is going on. We break it down step by
step.

The {AtMessageMapping}[`@MessageMapping`] annotation ensures that, if a message is sent to
the `/hello` destination, the `greeting()` method is called.

The payload of the message is bound to a `HelloMessage` object, which is passed into
`greeting()`.

Internally, the implementation of the method simulates a processing delay by causing the
thread to sleep for one second. This is to demonstrate that, after the client sends a
message, the server can take as long as it needs to asynchronously process the message.
The client can continue with whatever work it needs to do without waiting for the
response.

After the one-second delay, the `greeting()` method creates a `Greeting` object and
returns it. The return value is broadcast to all subscribers of `/topic/greetings`, as
specified in the {AtSendTo}[`@SendTo`] annotation. Note that the name from the input
message is sanitized, since, in this case, it will be echoed back and re-rendered in the
browser DOM on the client side.

== Configure Spring for STOMP messaging

Now that the essential components of the service are created, you can configure Spring to
enable WebSocket and STOMP messaging.

Create a Java class named `WebSocketConfig` that resembles the following listing (from
`src/main/java/com/example/messagingstompwebsocket/WebSocketConfig.java`):

====
[source,java,tabsize=2]
----
include::complete/src/main/java/com/example/messagingstompwebsocket/WebSocketConfig.java[]
----
====

`WebSocketConfig` is annotated with `@Configuration` to indicate that it is a Spring
configuration class. It is also annotated with
{AtEnableWebSocketMessageBroker}[`@EnableWebSocketMessageBroker`]. As its name suggests,
`@EnableWebSocketMessageBroker` enables WebSocket message handling, backed by a message
broker.

The `configureMessageBroker()` method implements the default method in
`WebSocketMessageBrokerConfigurer` to configure the message broker. It starts by calling
`enableSimpleBroker()` to enable a simple memory-based message broker to carry the
greeting messages back to the client on destinations prefixed with `/topic`. It also
designates the `/app` prefix for messages that are bound for methods annotated with
`@MessageMapping`. This prefix will be used to define all the message mappings. For
example, `/app/hello` is the endpoint that the `GreetingController.greeting()` method is
mapped to handle.

The `registerStompEndpoints()` method registers the `/gs-guide-websocket` endpoint for websocket connections.

== Create a Browser Client

With the server-side pieces in place, you can turn your attention to the JavaScript client
that will send messages to and receive messages from the server side.

Create an `index.html` file similar to the following listing (from
`src/main/resources/static/index.html`):

====
[source,html]
----
include::complete/src/main/resources/static/index.html[]
----
====

This HTML file imports the https://stomp-js.github.io/[`StompJS`] javascript library that will be used to
communicate with our server through STOMP over websocket. We also import `app.js`, which
contains the logic of our client application. The following listing (from
`src/main/resources/static/app.js`) shows that file:

====
[source,javascript,tabsize=2]
----
include::complete/src/main/resources/static/app.js[]
----
====

The main pieces of this JavaScript file to understand are the `stompClient.onConnect` and `sendName`
functions.

`stompClient` is initialized with `brokerURL` referring to path `/gs-guide-websocket`,
which is where our websockets server waits for
connections. Upon a successful connection, the client subscribes to the `/topic/greetings`
destination, where the server will publish greeting messages. When a greeting is received
on that destination, it will append a paragraph element to the DOM to display the greeting
message.

The `sendName()` function retrieves the name entered by the user and uses the STOMP client
to send it to the `/app/hello` destination (where `GreetingController.greeting()` will
receive it).

The `main.css` can be omitted if you like, or you can create an empty
one, just so the `` can be resolved.

== Make the Application Executable

Spring Boot creates an application class for you. In this case, it needs no further
modification. You can use it to run this application. The following listing (from
`src/main/java/com/example/messagingstompwebsocket/MessagingStompWebsocketApplication.java`)
shows the application class:

====
[source,java,tabsize=2]
----
include::complete/src/main/java/com/example/messagingstompwebsocket/MessagingStompWebsocketApplication.java[]
----
====

include::https://raw.githubusercontent.com/spring-guides/getting-started-macros/main/spring-boot-application-new-path.adoc[]

include::https://raw.githubusercontent.com/spring-guides/getting-started-macros/main/build_an_executable_jar_subhead.adoc[]

include::https://raw.githubusercontent.com/spring-guides/getting-started-macros/main/build_an_executable_jar_with_both.adoc[]


Logging output is displayed. The service should be up and running within a few seconds.

== Test the service

Now that the service is running, point your browser at http://localhost:8080 and click the *Connect* button.

Upon opening a connection, you are asked for your name. Enter your name and click *Send*.
Your name is sent to the server as a JSON message over STOMP. After a one-second simulated
delay, the server sends a message back with a "`Hello`" greeting that is displayed on the
page. At this point, you can send another name or you can click the *Disconnect* button to
close the connection.

== Summary

Congratulations! You have just developed a STOMP-based messaging service with Spring.

== See Also

The following guides may also be helpful:

* https://stomp-js.github.io/[StompJS client library docs]
* https://spring.io/guides/gs/serving-web-content/[Serving Web Content with Spring MVC]
* https://spring.io/guides/gs/spring-boot/[Building an Application with Spring Boot]

include::https://raw.githubusercontent.com/spring-guides/getting-started-macros/main/footer.adoc[]