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Chapter 11

JMS, Kafka, Messaging, Events, and Streaming Integration

Connect Camel routes to brokers and event platforms and understand message-driven architecture patterns in real systems.

Inside this chapter

  1. Why Messaging Is a Natural Fit
  2. JMS Example
  3. Kafka and Streaming
  4. Event-Driven Design Questions

Series navigation

Study the chapters in order for the clearest path from Camel basics to advanced route design and production operations. Use the navigation at the bottom of each page to move through the full series.

Tutorial Home

Chapter 11

Why Messaging Is a Natural Fit

Camel works very naturally with message brokers and event platforms because routing, transformation, retries, and dead-letter logic are core integration problems in those systems. JMS and Kafka are especially common in enterprise and event-driven environments.

Chapter 11

JMS Example

from("jms:queue:newOrders")
    .to("bean:orderValidator")
    .to("jms:queue:validatedOrders");
Chapter 11

Kafka and Streaming

With Kafka-style integration, Camel can help bridge producers, consumers, transformations, filtering, and forwarding across event-driven systems. Teams should still understand broker semantics well, because durable messaging behavior depends on both Camel and the messaging platform.

Chapter 11

Event-Driven Design Questions

Advanced engineers ask about ordering, retry semantics, idempotency, replay, poison messages, consumer scaling, and backpressure. Camel helps with route expression, but architecture still requires thought.

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