This version is still in development and is not considered stable yet. For the latest stable version, please use Spring Integration 6.4.0! |
SMB Support
Spring Integration provides support for file transfer operations with SMB.
The Server Message Block (SMB) is a simple network protocol that lets you transfer files to a shared file server.
You need to include this dependency into your project:
-
Maven
-
Gradle
<dependency>
<groupId>org.springframework.integration</groupId>
<artifactId>spring-integration-smb</artifactId>
<version>6.3.7-SNAPSHOT</version>
</dependency>
compile "org.springframework.integration:spring-integration-smb:6.3.7-SNAPSHOT"
Overview
The Java CIFS Client Library has been chosen as a Java implementation for the CIFS/SMB networking protocol.
Its SmbFile
abstraction is simply wrapped to the Spring Integration "Remote File" foundations like SmbSession
, SmbRemoteFileTemplate
, etc.
The SMB Channel Adapters and support classes implementations are fully similar to existing components for (S)FTP or AWS S3 protocols. So, if you familiar with those components it is pretty straightforward to use.
Spring Integration supports sending and receiving files over SMB by providing three client-side endpoints: inbound channel adapter, outbound channel adapter, and outbound gateway. It also provides convenient namespace-based configuration options for defining these client components.
To use the SMB namespace, add the following to the header of your XML file:
xmlns:int-smb="http://www.springframework.org/schema/integration/smb"
xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.springframework.org/schema/integration/smb
https://www.springframework.org/schema/integration/smb/spring-integration-smb.xsd"
SMB Session Factory
Before configuring the SMB adapter, you must configure an SMB session factory. You can configure the SMB session factory with a regular bean definition, as the following examples show:
The SmbSessionFactory
exposes options to set the SMB protocol with Min/Max versions.
For example, supporting a minimum version of SMB 2.1 and a maximum version of the SMB 3.1.1:
@Bean
public SmbSessionFactory smbSessionFactory() {
SmbSessionFactory smbSession = new SmbSessionFactory();
smbSession.setHost("myHost");
smbSession.setPort(445);
smbSession.setDomain("myDomain");
smbSession.setUsername("myUser");
smbSession.setPassword("myPassword");
smbSession.setShareAndDir("myShareAndDir");
smbSession.setSmbMinVersion(DialectVersion.SMB210);
smbSession.setSmbMaxVersion(DialectVersion.SMB311);
return smbSession;
}
The SmbSessionFactory
can be initialized with a custom jcifs.CIFSContext
.
Setting of the SMB protocol Min/Max versions must be done in your implementation of jcifs.CIFSContext .
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@Bean
public SmbSessionFactory smbSessionFactory() {
SmbSessionFactory smbSession = new SmbSessionFactory(new MyCIFSContext());
smbSession.setHost("myHost");
smbSession.setPort(445);
smbSession.setDomain("myDomain");
smbSession.setUsername("myUser");
smbSession.setPassword("myPassword");
smbSession.setShareAndDir("myShareAndDir");
return smbSession;
}
SMB Inbound Channel Adapter
To download SMB files locally the SmbInboundFileSynchronizingMessageSource
is provided.
It is simple extension of the AbstractInboundFileSynchronizingMessageSource
which requires SmbInboundFileSynchronizer
injection.
For filtering remote files you still can use any existing FileListFilter
implementations, but particular SmbRegexPatternFileListFilter
and SmbSimplePatternFileListFilter
are provided.
@Bean
public SmbInboundFileSynchronizer smbInboundFileSynchronizer() {
SmbInboundFileSynchronizer fileSynchronizer =
new SmbInboundFileSynchronizer(smbSessionFactory());
fileSynchronizer.setFilter(compositeFileListFilter());
fileSynchronizer.setRemoteDirectory("mySharedDirectoryPath");
fileSynchronizer.setDeleteRemoteFiles(true);
return fileSynchronizer;
}
@Bean
public CompositeFileListFilter<SmbFile> compositeFileListFilter() {
CompositeFileListFilter<SmbFile> filters = new CompositeFileListFilter<>();
filters.addFilter(new SmbRegexPatternFileListFilter("^(?i).+((\\.txt))$"));
return filters;
}
@Bean
public MessageChannel smbFileInputChannel() {
return new DirectChannel();
}
@Bean
@InboundChannelAdapter(value = "smbFileInputChannel",
poller = @Poller(fixedDelay = "2000"))
public MessageSource<File> smbMessageSource() {
SmbInboundFileSynchronizingMessageSource messageSource =
new SmbInboundFileSynchronizingMessageSource(smbInboundFileSynchronizer());
messageSource.setLocalDirectory(new File("myLocalDirectoryPath"));
messageSource.setAutoCreateLocalDirectory(true);
return messageSource;
}
For XML configuration the <int-smb:inbound-channel-adapter>
component is provided.
Starting with version 6.2, you can filter SMB files based on last-modified strategy using SmbLastModifiedFileListFilter
.
This filter can be configured with an age
property so that only files older than this value are passed by the filter.
The age defaults to 60 seconds, but you should choose an age that is large enough to avoid picking up a file early (due to, say, network glitches.
Look into its Javadoc for more information.
Configuring with the Java DSL
The following Spring Boot application shows an example of how to configure the inbound adapter with the Java DSL:
@SpringBootApplication
public class SmbJavaApplication {
public static void main(String[] args) {
new SpringApplicationBuilder(SmbJavaApplication.class)
.web(false)
.run(args);
}
@Bean
public SmbSessionFactory smbSessionFactory() {
SmbSessionFactory smbSession = new SmbSessionFactory();
smbSession.setHost("myHost");
smbSession.setPort(445);
smbSession.setDomain("myDomain");
smbSession.setUsername("myUser");
smbSession.setPassword("myPassword");
smbSession.setShareAndDir("myShareAndDir");
smbSession.setSmbMinVersion(DialectVersion.SMB210);
smbSession.setSmbMaxVersion(DialectVersion.SMB311);
return smbSession;
}
@Bean
public IntegrationFlow smbInboundFlow() {
return IntegrationFlow
.from(Smb.inboundAdapter(smbSessionFactory())
.preserveTimestamp(true)
.remoteDirectory("smbSource")
.regexFilter(".*\\.txt$")
.localFilename(f -> f.toUpperCase() + ".a")
.localDirectory(new File("d:\\smb_files")),
e -> e.id("smbInboundAdapter")
.autoStartup(true)
.poller(Pollers.fixedDelay(5000)))
.handle(m -> System.out.println(m.getPayload()))
.get();
}
}
SMB Streaming Inbound Channel Adapter
This adapter produces message with payloads of type InputStream
, letting files be fetched without writing to the local file system.
Since the session remains open, the consuming application is responsible for closing the session when the file has been consumed.
The session is provided in the closeableResource
header (IntegrationMessageHeaderAccessor.CLOSEABLE_RESOURCE
).
Standard framework components, such as the FileSplitter
and StreamTransformer
, automatically close the session.
See File Splitter and Stream Transformer for more information about these components.
The following example shows how to configure an inbound-streaming-channel-adapter
:
<int-smb:inbound-streaming-channel-adapter id="smbInbound"
channel="smbChannel"
session-factory="sessionFactory"
filename-pattern="*.txt"
filename-regex=".*\.txt"
filter="filter"
filter-expression="@myFilterBean.check(#root)"
remote-file-separator="/"
comparator="comparator"
max-fetch-size="1"
remote-directory-expression="'foo/bar'">
<int:poller fixed-rate="1000" />
</int-smb:inbound-streaming-channel-adapter>
Only one of filename-pattern
, filename-regex
, filter
, or filter-expression
is allowed.
The SmbStreamingMessageSource
adapter prevents duplicates for remote files with SmbPersistentAcceptOnceFileListFilter
based on the in-memory SimpleMetadataStore
.
By default, this filter is also applied with the filename pattern (or regex).
If you need to allow duplicates, you can use AcceptAllFileListFilter
.
Any other use cases can be handled by CompositeFileListFilter
(or ChainFileListFilter
).
The Java configuration (later in the document) shows one technique to remove the remote file after processing to avoid duplicates.
For more information about the SmbPersistentAcceptOnceFileListFilter
, and how it is used, see Remote Persistent File List Filters.
Use the max-fetch-size
attribute to limit the number of files fetched on each poll when a fetch is necessary.
Set it to 1
and use a persistent filter when running in a clustered environment.
See Inbound Channel Adapters: Controlling Remote File Fetching for more information.
The adapter puts the remote directory and file name in the FileHeaders.REMOTE_DIRECTORY
and FileHeaders.REMOTE_FILE
headers, respectively.
The FileHeaders.REMOTE_FILE_INFO
header provides additional remote file information (represented in JSON by default).
If you set the fileInfoJson
property on the SmbStreamingMessageSource
to false
, the header contains an SmbFileInfo
object.
Configuring with Java Configuration
The following Spring Boot application shows an example of how to configure the inbound adapter with Java configuration:
@SpringBootApplication
public class SmbJavaApplication {
public static void main(String[] args) {
new SpringApplicationBuilder(SmbJavaApplication.class)
.web(false)
.run(args);
}
@Bean
@InboundChannelAdapter(channel = "stream")
public MessageSource<InputStream> smbMessageSource() {
SmbStreamingMessageSource messageSource = new SmbStreamingMessageSource(template());
messageSource.setRemoteDirectory("smbSource/");
messageSource.setFilter(new AcceptAllFileListFilter<>());
messageSource.setMaxFetchSize(1);
return messageSource;
}
@Bean
@Transformer(inputChannel = "stream", outputChannel = "data")
public org.springframework.integration.transformer.Transformer transformer() {
return new StreamTransformer("UTF-8");
}
@Bean
public SmbRemoteFileTemplate template() {
return new SmbRemoteFileTemplate(smbSessionFactory());
}
@ServiceActivator(inputChannel = "data", adviceChain = "after")
@Bean
public MessageHandler handle() {
return System.out::println;
}
@Bean
public ExpressionEvaluatingRequestHandlerAdvice after() {
ExpressionEvaluatingRequestHandlerAdvice advice = new ExpressionEvaluatingRequestHandlerAdvice();
advice.setOnSuccessExpression(
"@template.remove(headers['file_remoteDirectory'] + headers['file_remoteFile'])");
advice.setPropagateEvaluationFailures(true);
return advice;
}
}
Notice that, in this example, the message handler downstream of the transformer has an advice
that removes the remote file after processing.
Inbound Channel Adapters: Controlling Remote File Fetching
There are two properties that you should consider when you configure inbound channel adapters.
max-messages-per-poll
, as with all pollers, can be used to limit the number of messages emitted on each poll (if more than the configured value are ready).
max-fetch-size
can limit the number of files retrieved from the remote server at one time.
The following scenarios assume the starting state is an empty local directory:
-
max-messages-per-poll=2
andmax-fetch-size=1
: The adapter fetches one file, emits it, fetches the next file, emits it, and then sleeps until the next poll. -
max-messages-per-poll=2
andmax-fetch-size=2
): The adapter fetches both files and then emits each one. -
max-messages-per-poll=2
andmax-fetch-size=4
: The adapter fetches up to four files (if available) and emits the first two (if there are at least two). The next two files are emitted on the next poll. -
max-messages-per-poll=2
andmax-fetch-size
not specified: The adapter fetches all remote files and emits the first two (if there are at least two). The subsequent files are emitted on subsequent polls (two at a time). When all files are consumed, the remote fetch is attempted again, to pick up any new files.
When you deploy multiple instances of an application, we recommend a small max-fetch-size , to avoid one instance “grabbing” all the files and starving other instances.
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Another use for max-fetch-size
is if you want to stop fetching remote files but continue to process files that have already been fetched.
Setting the maxFetchSize
property on the MessageSource
(programmatically, with JMX, or with a control bus) effectively stops the adapter from fetching more files but lets the poller continue to emit messages for files that have previously been fetched.
If the poller is active when the property is changed, the change takes effect on the next poll.
The synchronizer can be provided with a Comparator<SmbFile>
.
This is useful when restricting the number of files fetched with maxFetchSize
.
SMB Outbound Channel Adapter
For writing files to an SMB share, and for XML <int-smb:outbound-channel-adapter>
component we use the SmbMessageHandler
.
In case of Java configuration a SmbMessageHandler
should be supplied with the SmbSessionFactory
(or SmbRemoteFileTemplate
).
@Bean
@ServiceActivator(inputChannel = "storeToSmbShare")
public MessageHandler smbMessageHandler(SmbSessionFactory smbSessionFactory) {
SmbMessageHandler handler = new SmbMessageHandler(smbSessionFactory);
handler.setRemoteDirectoryExpression(
new LiteralExpression("remote-target-dir"));
handler.setFileNameGenerator(m ->
m.getHeaders().get(FileHeaders.FILENAME, String.class) + ".test");
handler.setAutoCreateDirectory(true);
return handler;
}
Configuring with the Java DSL
The following Spring Boot application shows an example of how to configure the outbound adapter using the Java DSL:
@SpringBootApplication
@IntegrationComponentScan
public class SmbJavaApplication {
public static void main(String[] args) {
ConfigurableApplicationContext context =
new SpringApplicationBuilder(SmbJavaApplication.class)
.web(false)
.run(args);
MyGateway gateway = context.getBean(MyGateway.class);
gateway.sendToSmb(new File("/foo/bar.txt"));
}
@Bean
public SmbSessionFactory smbSessionFactory() {
SmbSessionFactory smbSession = new SmbSessionFactory();
smbSession.setHost("myHost");
smbSession.setPort(445);
smbSession.setDomain("myDomain");
smbSession.setUsername("myUser");
smbSession.setPassword("myPassword");
smbSession.setShareAndDir("myShareAndDir");
smbSession.setSmbMinVersion(DialectVersion.SMB210);
smbSession.setSmbMaxVersion(DialectVersion.SMB311);
return smbSession;
}
@Bean
public IntegrationFlow smbOutboundFlow() {
return IntegrationFlow.from("toSmbChannel")
.handle(Smb.outboundAdapter(smbSessionFactory(), FileExistsMode.REPLACE)
.useTemporaryFileName(false)
.fileNameExpression("headers['" + FileHeaders.FILENAME + "']")
.remoteDirectory("smbTarget")
).get();
}
@MessagingGateway
public interface MyGateway {
@Gateway(requestChannel = "toSmbChannel")
void sendToSmb(File file);
}
}
SMB Outbound Gateway
The SMB outbound gateway provides a limited set of commands to interact with a remote SMB server. The supported commands are:
-
ls
(list files) -
nlst
(list file names) -
get
(retrieve file) -
mget
(retrieve file(s)) -
rm
(remove file(s)) -
mv
(move/rename file) -
put
(send file) -
mput
(send multiple files)
Using the ls
Command
ls
lists remote files and supports the following options:
-
-1
: Retrieve a list of filenames. The default is to retrieve a list ofFileInfo
objects -
-a
: Include all files (including those starting with '.') -
-f
: Do not sort the list -
-dirs
: Include directories (excluded by default) -
-links
: Include symbolic links (excluded by default) -
-R
: List the remote directory recursively
In addition, filename filtering is provided in the same manner as the inbound-channel-adapter
.
The message payload resulting from an ls
operation is a list of file names or a list of FileInfo
objects (depending on whether you usr the -1
switch).
These objects provide information such as modified time, permissions, and others.
The remote directory that the ls
command acted on is provided in the file_remoteDirectory
header.
When using the recursive option (-R
), the fileName
includes any subdirectory elements and represents the relative path to the file (relative to the remote directory).
If you use the -dirs
option, each recursive directory is also returned as an element in the list.
In this case, we recommend that you not use the -1
option, because you would not be able to distinguish files from directories, which you can do when you use FileInfo
objects.
Using nlst
Command
nlst
lists remote file names and supports only one option:
-
-f
: Do not sort the list
The message payload resulting from an nlst
operation is a list of file names.
The file_remoteDirectory
header holds the remote directory on which the nlst
command acted.
Using the get
Command
get
retrieves a remote file and supports the following options:
-
-P
: Preserve the timestamp of the remote file. -
-stream
: Retrieve the remote file as a stream. -
-D
: Delete the remote file after successful transfer. The remote file is not deleted if the transfer is ignored, because theFileExistsMode
isIGNORE
and the local file already exists.
The file_remoteDirectory
header holds the remote directory, and the file_remoteFile
header holds the filename.
The message payload resulting from a get
operation is a File
object representing the retrieved file.
If you use the -stream
option, the payload is an InputStream
rather than a File
.
For text files, a common use case is to combine this operation with a file splitter or a stream transformer.
When consuming remote files as streams, you are responsible for closing the Session
after the stream is consumed.
For convenience, the Session
is provided in the closeableResource
header, and IntegrationMessageHeaderAccessor
offers convenience method:
Closeable closeable = new IntegrationMessageHeaderAccessor(message).getCloseableResource();
if (closeable != null) {
closeable.close();
}
Framework components, such as the File Splitter and Stream Transformer, automatically close the session after the data is transferred.
The following example shows how to consume a file as a stream:
<int-smb:outbound-gateway session-factory="smbSessionFactory"
request-channel="inboundGetStream"
command="get"
command-options="-stream"
expression="payload"
remote-directory="smbTarget"
reply-channel="stream" />
<int-file:splitter input-channel="stream" output-channel="lines" />
If you consume the input stream in a custom component, you must close the Session .
You can either do that in your custom code or route a copy of the message to a service-activator and use SpEL, as the following example shows:
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<int:service-activator input-channel="closeSession"
expression="headers['closeableResource'].close()" />
Using the mget
Command
mget
retrieves multiple remote files based on a pattern and supports the following options:
-
-P
: Preserve the timestamps of the remote files. -
-R
: Retrieve the entire directory tree recursively. -
-x
: Throw an exception if no files match the pattern (otherwise, an empty list is returned). -
-D
: Delete each remote file after successful transfer. If the transfer is ignored, the remote file is not deleted, because theFileExistsMode
isIGNORE
and the local file already exists.
The message payload resulting from an mget
operation is a List<File>
object (that is, a List
of File
objects, each representing a retrieved file).
If the FileExistsMode is IGNORE , the payload of the output message no longer contain files that were not fetched due to the file already existing.
Previously, the array contained all files, including those that already existed.
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The expression you use determine the remote path should produce a result that ends with for example
myfiles/
fetches the complete tree under myfiles
.
You can use a recursive MGET
, combined with the FileExistsMode.REPLACE_IF_MODIFIED
mode, to periodically synchronize an entire remote directory tree locally.
This mode sets the local file’s last modified timestamp to the remote file’s timestamp, regardless of the -P
(preserve timestamp) option.
Notes for when using recursion (
-R )The pattern is ignored and If you filter a subdirectory, no additional traversal of that subdirectory is performed. The Typically, you would use the |
The persistent file list filters now have a boolean property forRecursion
.
Setting this property to true
, also sets alwaysAcceptDirectories
, which means that the recursive operation on the outbound gateways (ls
and mget
) will now always traverse the full directory tree each time.
This is to solve a problem where changes deep in the directory tree were not detected.
In addition, forRecursion=true
causes the full path to files to be used as the metadata store keys; this solves a problem where the filter did not work properly if a file with the same name appears multiple times in different directories.
IMPORTANT: This means that existing keys in a persistent metadata store will not be found for files beneath the top level directory.
For this reason, the property is false
by default; this may change in a future release.
You can configure the SmbSimplePatternFileListFilter
and SmbRegexPatternFileListFilter
to always pass directories by setting the alwaysAcceptDirectorties
to true
.
Doing so allows recursion for a simple pattern, as the following examples show:
<bean id="starDotTxtFilter"
class="org.springframework.integration.smb.filters.SmbSimplePatternFileListFilter">
<constructor-arg value="*.txt" />
<property name="alwaysAcceptDirectories" value="true" />
</bean>
<bean id="dotStarDotTxtFilter"
class="org.springframework.integration.smb.filters.SmbRegexPatternFileListFilter">
<constructor-arg value="^.*\.txt$" />
<property name="alwaysAcceptDirectories" value="true" />
</bean>
You can provide one of these filters by using the filter
property on the gateway.
Using the put
Command
put
sends a file to the remote server.
The payload of the message can be a java.io.File
, a byte[]
, or a String
.
A remote-filename-generator
(or expression) is used to name the remote file.
Other available attributes include remote-directory
, temporary-remote-directory
and their *-expression
equivalents: use-temporary-file-name
and auto-create-directory
.
See the schema documentation for more information.
The message payload resulting from a put
operation is a String
that contains the full path of the file on the server after transfer.
Using the mput
Command
mput
sends multiple files to the server and supports the following option:
-
-R
: Recursive — send all files (possibly filtered) in the directory and subdirectories
The message payload must be a java.io.File
(or String
) that represents a local directory.
A collection of File
or String
is also supported.
The same attributes as the put
command are supported.
In addition, you can filter files in the local directory with one of mput-pattern
, mput-regex
, mput-filter
, or mput-filter-expression
.
The filter works with recursion, as long as the subdirectories themselves pass the filter.
Subdirectories that do not pass the filter are not recursed.
The message payload resulting from an mput
operation is a List<String>
object (that is, a List
of remote file paths resulting from the transfer).
Using the rm
Command
The rm
command has no options.
If the remove operation was successful, the resulting message payload is Boolean.TRUE
.
Otherwise, the message payload is Boolean.FALSE
.
The file_remoteDirectory
header holds the remote directory, and the file_remoteFile
header holds the file name.
Using the mv
Command
The mv
command has no options.
The expression
attribute defines the “from” path, and the rename-expression
attribute defines the “to” path.
By default, the rename-expression
is headers['file_renameTo']
.
This expression must not evaluate to null or an empty String
.
If necessary, any remote directories needed are created.
The payload of the result message is Boolean.TRUE
.
The file_remoteDirectory
header holds the original remote directory, and the file_remoteFile
header holds the filename.
The file_renameTo
header holds the new path.
The remoteDirectoryExpression
can be used in the mv
command for convenience.
If the “from” file is not a full file path, the result of remoteDirectoryExpression
is used as the remote directory.
The same applies for the “to” file, for example, if the task is just to rename a remote file in some directory.
Additional Command Information
The get
and mget
commands support the local-filename-generator-expression
attribute.
It defines a SpEL expression to generate the names of local files during the transfer.
The root object of the evaluation context is the request message.
The remoteFileName
variable is also available.
It is particularly useful for mget
(for example: local-filename-generator-expression="#remoteFileName.toUpperCase() + headers.foo"
).
The get
and mget
commands support the local-directory-expression
attribute.
It defines a SpEL expression to generate the names of local directories during the transfer.
The root object of the evaluation context is the request message.
The remoteDirectory
variable is also available.
It is particularly useful for mget (for example: local-directory-expression="'/tmp/local/' + #remoteDirectory.toUpperCase() + headers.myheader"
).
This attribute is mutually exclusive with the local-directory
attribute.
For all commands, the 'expression' property of the gateway holds the path on which the command acts.
For the mget
command, the expression might evaluate to , meaning to retrieve all files,
somedirectory/
, and other values that end with *
.
The following example shows a gateway configured for an ls
command:
<int-smb:outbound-gateway id="gateway1"
session-factory="smbSessionFactory"
request-channel="inbound1"
command="ls"
command-options="-1"
expression="payload"
reply-channel="toSplitter"/>
The payload of the message sent to the toSplitter
channel is a list of String
objects, each of which contains the name of a file.
If you omitted command-options="-1"
, the payload would be a list of FileInfo
objects.
You can provide options as a space-delimited list (for example, command-options="-1 -dirs -links"
).
The GET
, MGET
, PUT
, and MPUT
commands support a FileExistsMode
property (mode
when using the namespace support).
This affects the behavior when the local file exists (GET
and MGET
) or the remote file exists (PUT
and MPUT
).
The supported modes are REPLACE
, APPEND
, FAIL
, and IGNORE
.
For backwards compatibility, the default mode for PUT
and MPUT
operations is REPLACE
.
For GET
and MGET
operations, the default is FAIL
.
Configuring with Java Configuration
The following Spring Boot application shows an example of how to configure the outbound gateway with Java configuration:
@SpringBootApplication
public class SmbJavaApplication {
public static void main(String[] args) {
new SpringApplicationBuilder(SmbJavaApplication.class)
.web(false)
.run(args);
}
@Bean
public SmbSessionFactory smbSessionFactory() {
SmbSessionFactory smbSession = new SmbSessionFactory();
smbSession.setHost("myHost");
smbSession.setPort(445);
smbSession.setDomain("myDomain");
smbSession.setUsername("myUser");
smbSession.setPassword("myPassword");
smbSession.setShareAndDir("myShareAndDir");
smbSession.setSmbMinVersion(DialectVersion.SMB210);
smbSession.setSmbMaxVersion(DialectVersion.SMB311);
return smbSession;
}
@Bean
@ServiceActivator(inputChannel = "smbChannel")
public MessageHandler handler() {
SmbOutboundGateway smbOutboundGateway =
new SmbOutboundGateway(smbSessionFactory(), "'my_remote_dir/'");
smbOutboundGateway.setOutputChannelName("replyChannel");
return smbOutboundGateway;
}
}
Configuring with the Java DSL
The following Spring Boot application shows an example of how to configure the outbound gateway with the Java DSL:
@SpringBootApplication
public class SmbJavaApplication {
public static void main(String[] args) {
new SpringApplicationBuilder(SmbJavaApplication.class)
.web(false)
.run(args);
}
@Bean
public SmbSessionFactory smbSessionFactory() {
SmbSessionFactory smbSession = new SmbSessionFactory();
smbSession.setHost("myHost");
smbSession.setPort(445);
smbSession.setDomain("myDomain");
smbSession.setUsername("myUser");
smbSession.setPassword("myPassword");
smbSession.setShareAndDir("myShareAndDir");
smbSession.setSmbMinVersion(DialectVersion.SMB210);
smbSession.setSmbMaxVersion(DialectVersion.SMB311);
return smbSession;
}
@Bean
public SmbOutboundGatewaySpec smbOutboundGateway() {
return Smb.outboundGateway(smbSessionFactory(),
AbstractRemoteFileOutboundGateway.Command.MGET, "payload")
.options(AbstractRemoteFileOutboundGateway.Option.RECURSIVE)
.regexFileNameFilter("(subSmbSource|.*.txt)")
.localDirectoryExpression("'localDirectory/' + #remoteDirectory")
.localFilenameExpression("#remoteFileName.replaceFirst('smbSource', 'localTarget')");
}
@Bean
public IntegrationFlow smbFlow(AbstractRemoteFileOutboundGateway<SmbFile> smbOutboundGateway) {
return f -> f
.handle(smbOutboundGateway)
.channel(c -> c.queue("remoteFileOutputChannel"));
}
}
Outbound Gateway Partial Success (mget
and mput
)
When performing operations on multiple files (by using mget
and mput
) an exception can occur some time after one or more files have been transferred.
In this case a PartialSuccessException
is thrown.
As well as the usual MessagingException
properties (failedMessage
and cause
), this exception has two additional properties:
-
partialResults
: The successful transfer results. -
derivedInput
: The list of files generated from the request message (such as local files to transfer for anmput
).
These attributes let you determine which files were successfully transferred and which were not.
In the case of a recursive mput
, the PartialSuccessException
may have nested PartialSuccessException
instances.
Consider the following directory structure:
root/
|- file1.txt
|- subdir/
| - file2.txt
| - file3.txt
|- zoo.txt
If the exception occurs on file3.txt
, the PartialSuccessException
thrown by the gateway has derivedInput
of file1.txt
, subdir
, and zoo.txt
and partialResults
of file1.txt
.
Its cause
is another PartialSuccessException
with derivedInput
of file2.txt
and file3.txt
and partialResults
of file2.txt
.
Remote File Information
The SmbStreamingMessageSource
(SMB Streaming Inbound Channel Adapter), SmbInboundFileSynchronizingMessageSource
(SMB Inbound Channel Adapter) and "read"-commands of the SmbOutboundGateway
(SMB Outbound Gateway) provide additional headers in the message to produce with an information about the remote file:
-
FileHeaders.REMOTE_HOST_PORT
- the host:port pair the remote session has been connected to during file transfer operation; -
FileHeaders.REMOTE_DIRECTORY
- the remote directory the operation has been performed; -
FileHeaders.REMOTE_FILE
- the remote file name; applicable only for single file operations.
Since the SmbInboundFileSynchronizingMessageSource
doesn’t produce messages against remote files, but using a local copy, the AbstractInboundFileSynchronizer
stores an information about remote file in the MetadataStore
(which can be configured externally) in the URI style (protocol://host:port/remoteDirectory#remoteFileName
) during synchronization operation.
This metadata is retrieved by the SmbInboundFileSynchronizingMessageSource
when local file is polled.
When local file is deleted, it is recommended to remove its metadata entry.
The AbstractInboundFileSynchronizer
provides a removeRemoteFileMetadata()
callback for this purpose.
In addition, there is a setMetadataStorePrefix()
to be used in the metadata keys.
It is recommended to have this prefix be different from the one used in the MetadataStore
-based FileListFilter
implementations, when the same MetadataStore
instance is shared between these components, to avoid entry overriding because both filter and AbstractInboundFileSynchronizer
use the same local file name for the metadata entry key.