Since we're on a major migration process of this website, some component documents here are out of sync right now. In the meantime you may want to look at the early version of the new website
https://camel.apache.org/staging/
We would very much like to receive any feedback on the new site, please join the discussion on the Camel user mailing list.

BeanShell

Camel supports BeanShell among other Scripting Languages to allow an Expression or Predicate to be used in the DSL or Xml Configuration.

To use a BeanShell expression use the following Java code:

...choice()
    .when(script("beanshell", "request.getHeaders().get(\"foo\").equals(\"bar\")"))
       .to("...")

Or the something like this in your Spring XML:

<filter>
  <language language="beanshell">request.getHeaders().get("Foo") == null</language>
  ...

BeanShell Issues

You must use BeanShell 2.0b5 or greater. Note that as of 2.0b5 BeanShell cannot compile scripts, which causes Camel releases before 2.6 to fail when configured with BeanShell expressions.

You could follow the examples above to create an Predicate in a Message Filter or as an Expression for a Recipient List

ScriptContext Options

 

The JSR-223 scripting language's ScriptContext is pre-configured with the following attributes all set at ENGINE_SCOPE.

Attribute

Type

Value

camelContext

org.apache.camel.CamelContext

The Camel Context.

context

org.apache.camel.CamelContext

The Camel Context (cannot be used in groovy).

exchange

org.apache.camel.Exchange

The current Exchange.

properties

org.apache.camel.builder.script.PropertiesFunction

Camel 2.9: Function with a resolve method to make it easier to use Camels Properties component from scripts. See further below for example.

request

org.apache.camel.Message

The IN message.

response

org.apache.camel.Message

Deprecated: The OUT message. The OUT message is null by default. Use the IN message instead.

See Scripting Languages for the list of languages with explicit DSL support.

Passing Additional Arguments to the ScriptingEngine

Available from Camel 2.8

You can provide additional arguments to the ScriptingEngine using a header on the Camel message with the key CamelScriptArguments.

Example:

public void testArgumentsExample() throws Exception {
    getMockEndpoint("mock:result").expectedMessageCount(0);
    getMockEndpoint("mock:unmatched").expectedMessageCount(1);

    // additional arguments to ScriptEngine
    Map<String, Object> arguments = new HashMap<>();
    arguments.put("foo", "bar");
    arguments.put("baz", 7);

    // those additional arguments is provided as a header on the Camel Message
    template.sendBodyAndHeader("direct:start", "hello", ScriptBuilder.ARGUMENTS, arguments);

    assertMockEndpointsSatisfied();


 


Using Properties Function

Available from Camel 2.9

If you need to use the Properties component from a script to lookup property placeholders, then its a bit cumbersome to do so. For example, to set a header name myHeader with a value from a property placeholder, whose key is taken from a header named foo.

.setHeader("myHeader").groovy("context.resolvePropertyPlaceholders('{{' + request.headers.get('foo') + '}}')")

From Camel 2.9: you can now use the properties function and the same example is simpler:

.setHeader("myHeader").groovy("properties.resolve(request.headers.get('foo'))")


Loading Script From External Resource

Available from Camel 2.11

You can externalize the script and have Camel load it from a resource such as classpath:, file:, or http:. This is done using the following syntax: resource:scheme:location e.g. to refer to a file on the classpath you can do:

.setHeader("myHeader").groovy("resource:classpath:mygroovy.groovy")


How to Get the Result from Multiple Statements Script

Available from Camel 2.14

The script engine's eval method returns a null when it runs a multi-statement script. However, Camel can look up the value of a script's result by using the key result from the value set. When writing a multi-statement script set the value of the result variable as the script return value.

textbar = "baz"; # some other statements ... # camel take the result value as the script evaluation result result = body * 2 + 1

 

Dependencies

To use scripting languages in your camel routes you need to add the a dependency on camel-script which integrates the JSR-223 scripting engine.

If you use maven you could just add the following to your pom.xml, substituting the version number for the latest & greatest release (see the download page for the latest versions).

<dependency>
 <groupId>org.apache.camel</groupId>
 <artifactId>camel-script</artifactId>
 <version>x.x.x</version>
</dependency>
© 2004-2015 The Apache Software Foundation.
Apache Camel, Camel, Apache, the Apache feather logo, and the Apache Camel project logo are trademarks of The Apache Software Foundation. All other marks mentioned may be trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective owners.
Graphic Design By Hiram