Use the following tasks to configure permanent bus destinations on service integration buses.
The steps involved in configuring a bus destination depend on the intended usage of the destination.
For example, the following figure shows a basic scenario based on an application using a JMS queue for point-to-point messaging. A producing application sends messages to a JMS queue from which a consuming application retrieves the messages. The JMS queue is assigned to a queue destination and its associated queue point, where messages are stored.
After you have created a queue destination, you can optionally configure the queue point to override some properties configured on the queue destination. You can also undertake other configuration tasks on the destination and its queue point, and can act on the runtime view.
Each messaging engine has a default exception destination, named _SYSTEM.Exception.Destinaton.messaging_engine_name . This exception destination can be used to handle messages that cannot be delivered for all bus destinations that are localized to the messaging engine. Each bus destination can be configured with a non-default exception destination.
For more information about configuring bus destinations, see the following topics:
Use this task to display administrative lists of bus destinations for a service integration bus.
Use the following tasks to create a new bus destination on a service integration bus.
You can view or change the configuration properties of a bus destination, that is, a queue, topic space, alias destination, or foreign destination.
Use this task to configure one or more mediations for a selected bus destination in a service integration bus.
Use this task to configure a forward routing path for a selected bus queue. The forward routing path identifies a sequence of bus destinations that a message should pass through after it has been delivered to the bus destination to which the producer is attached.
Use this task to configure a reverse routing path between two bus destinations. The reverse routing path identifies the list of destinations to which a reply message should be sent when the consumer of a request message sends a reply message back to the producer of the reply message.
Use this task to configure context properties for a bus destination.
Service integration bus security uses role-based authorization. When messaging security is enabled, users and groups must have authority to undertake messaging operations, at a bus destination. By administering destination roles, you can control which users and groups can undertake operations at a bus destination, and the types of operations that they can perform.
Use these tasks to delete a bus destination from a service integration bus.
Use this task to reset a bus destination.
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