Modified: websites/production/camel/content/dead-letter-channel.html
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--- websites/production/camel/content/dead-letter-channel.html (original)
+++ websites/production/camel/content/dead-letter-channel.html Fri Aug 25 
10:20:13 2017
@@ -36,17 +36,6 @@
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     <title>
     Apache Camel: Dead Letter Channel
@@ -86,158 +75,45 @@
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-<div class="wiki-content maincontent"><h2 
id="DeadLetterChannel-DeadLetterChannel">Dead Letter Channel</h2><p>Camel 
supports the <a shape="rect" class="external-link" 
href="http://www.enterpriseintegrationpatterns.com/DeadLetterChannel.html"; 
rel="nofollow">Dead Letter Channel</a> from the <a shape="rect" 
href="enterprise-integration-patterns.html">EIP patterns</a> using the <a 
shape="rect" class="external-link" 
href="http://camel.apache.org/maven/current/camel-core/apidocs/org/apache/camel/processor/DeadLetterChannel.html";>DeadLetterChannel</a>
 processor which is an <a shape="rect" href="error-handler.html">Error 
Handler</a>.</p><p><span class="confluence-embedded-file-wrapper"><img 
class="confluence-embedded-image confluence-external-resource" 
src="http://www.enterpriseintegrationpatterns.com/img/DeadLetterChannelSolution.gif";
 
data-image-src="http://www.enterpriseintegrationpatterns.com/img/DeadLetterChannelSolution.gif";></span></p><div
 class="confluence-information-macro confluenc
 e-information-macro-tip"><p class="title">Differences Between The 
DeadLetterChannel And The DefaultErrorHandler</p><span class="aui-icon 
aui-icon-small aui-iconfont-approve 
confluence-information-macro-icon"></span><div 
class="confluence-information-macro-body"><p>The&#160;<strong><code>DefaultErrorHandler</code></strong>
 does very little: it ends the Exchange immediately and propagates the thrown 
Exception back to the 
caller.</p><p>The&#160;<strong><code>DeadLetterChannel</code></strong> lets you 
control behaviors including redelivery, whether to propagate the thrown 
Exception to the caller (the&#160;<strong><code>handled</code></strong> 
option), and where the (failed) Exchange should now be routed 
to.</p><p>The&#160;<strong><code>DeadLetterChannel</code></strong> is also by 
default configured to not be verbose in the logs, so when a message is handled 
and moved to the dead letter endpoint, then there is nothing logged. If you 
want some level of logging you can use the various opti
 ons on the redelivery policy / dead letter channel to configure this. For 
example if you want the message history then 
set&#160;<strong><code>logExhaustedMessageHistory=true</code></strong> 
(and&#160;<strong><code>logHandled=true</code></strong> for <strong>Camel 
2.15.x</strong> or older).</p><p>When 
the&#160;<strong><code>DeadLetterChannel</code></strong> moves a message to the 
dead letter endpoint, any new Exception thrown is by default handled by the 
dead letter channel as well. This ensures that 
the&#160;<strong><code>DeadLetterChannel</code></strong> will always succeed. 
From <strong>Camel 2.15</strong>: this behavior can be changed by setting the 
option <strong><code>deadLetterHandleNewException=false</code></strong>. Then 
if a new Exception is thrown, then the dead letter channel will fail and 
propagate back that new Exception (which is the behavior of the default error 
handler). When a new Exception occurs then the dead letter channel logs this 
at&#160;<strong><code>WARN</co
 de></strong> level. This can be turned off by setting 
<strong><code>logNewException=false</code></strong>.</p></div></div><h3 
id="DeadLetterChannel-Redelivery">Redelivery</h3><p>It is common for a 
temporary outage or database deadlock to cause a message to fail to process; 
but the chances are if its tried a few more times with some time delay then it 
will complete fine. So we typically wish to use some kind of redelivery policy 
to decide how many times to try redeliver a message and how long to wait before 
redelivery attempts.</p><p>The <a shape="rect" class="external-link" 
href="http://camel.apache.org/maven/current/camel-core/apidocs/org/apache/camel/processor/RedeliveryPolicy.html";>RedeliveryPolicy</a>
 defines how the message is to be redelivered. You can customize things 
like</p><ul><li>The number of times a message is attempted to be redelivered 
before it is considered a failure and sent to the dead letter 
channel.</li><li>The initial redelivery timeout.</li><li>Whether or not 
 exponential backoff is used, i.e., the time between retries increases using a 
backoff multiplier.</li><li>Whether to use collision avoidance to add some 
randomness to the timings.</li><li>Delay pattern (see below for 
details).</li><li><strong>Camel 2.11:</strong> Whether to allow redelivery 
during stopping/shutdown.</li></ul><p>Once all attempts at redelivering the 
message fails then the message is forwarded to the dead letter queue.</p><h3 
id="DeadLetterChannel-AboutMovingExchangetoDeadLetterQueueandUsinghandled()">About
 Moving Exchange to Dead Letter Queue and 
Using&#160;<strong><code>handled()</code></strong></h3><p><strong><code>handled()</code></strong>
 on <a shape="rect" href="dead-letter-channel.html">Dead Letter 
Channel</a></p><p>When all attempts of redelivery have failed the <a 
shape="rect" href="exchange.html">Exchange</a> is moved to the dead letter 
queue (the dead letter endpoint). The exchange is then complete and from the 
client point of view it was processed. As such
  the <a shape="rect" href="dead-letter-channel.html">Dead Letter Channel</a> 
have handled the <a shape="rect" href="exchange.html">Exchange</a>.</p><p>For 
instance configuring the dead letter channel as:</p><p><strong>Using the <a 
shape="rect" href="fluent-builders.html">Fluent Builders</a></strong></p><div 
class="code panel pdl" style="border-width: 1px;"><div class="codeContent 
panelContent pdl">
-<script class="brush: java; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
type="syntaxhighlighter"><![CDATA[errorHandler(deadLetterChannel(&quot;jms:queue:dead&quot;)
+<div class="wiki-content maincontent"><h2 
id="DeadLetterChannel-DeadLetterChannel">Dead Letter Channel</h2><p>Camel 
supports the <a shape="rect" class="external-link" 
href="http://www.enterpriseintegrationpatterns.com/DeadLetterChannel.html"; 
rel="nofollow">Dead Letter Channel</a> from the <a shape="rect" 
href="enterprise-integration-patterns.html">EIP patterns</a> using the <a 
shape="rect" class="external-link" 
href="http://camel.apache.org/maven/current/camel-core/apidocs/org/apache/camel/processor/DeadLetterChannel.html";>DeadLetterChannel</a>
 processor which is an <a shape="rect" href="error-handler.html">Error 
Handler</a>.</p><p><span class="confluence-embedded-file-wrapper"><img 
class="confluence-embedded-image confluence-external-resource" 
src="http://www.enterpriseintegrationpatterns.com/img/DeadLetterChannelSolution.gif";
 
data-image-src="http://www.enterpriseintegrationpatterns.com/img/DeadLetterChannelSolution.gif";></span></p><parameter
 ac:name="title">Differences Between The
  DeadLetterChannel And The 
DefaultErrorHandler</parameter><rich-text-body><p>The&#160;<strong><code>DefaultErrorHandler</code></strong>
 does very little: it ends the Exchange immediately and propagates the thrown 
Exception back to the 
caller.</p><p>The&#160;<strong><code>DeadLetterChannel</code></strong> lets you 
control behaviors including redelivery, whether to propagate the thrown 
Exception to the caller (the&#160;<strong><code>handled</code></strong> 
option), and where the (failed) Exchange should now be routed 
to.</p><p>The&#160;<strong><code>DeadLetterChannel</code></strong> is also by 
default configured to not be verbose in the logs, so when a message is handled 
and moved to the dead letter endpoint, then there is nothing logged. If you 
want some level of logging you can use the various options on the redelivery 
policy / dead letter channel to configure this. For example if you want the 
message history then 
set&#160;<strong><code>logExhaustedMessageHistory=true</code></strong
 > (and&#160;<strong><code>logHandled=true</code></strong> for <strong>Camel 
 > 2.15.x</strong> or older).</p><p>When 
 > the&#160;<strong><code>DeadLetterChannel</code></strong> moves a message to 
 > the dead letter endpoint, any new Exception thrown is by default handled by 
 > the dead letter channel as well. This ensures that 
 > the&#160;<strong><code>DeadLetterChannel</code></strong> will always 
 > succeed. From <strong>Camel 2.15</strong>: this behavior can be changed by 
 > setting the option 
 > <strong><code>deadLetterHandleNewException=false</code></strong>. Then if a 
 > new Exception is thrown, then the dead letter channel will fail and 
 > propagate back that new Exception (which is the behavior of the default 
 > error handler). When a new Exception occurs then the dead letter channel 
 > logs this at&#160;<strong><code>WARN</code></strong> level. This can be 
 > turned off by setting 
 > <strong><code>logNewException=false</code></strong>.</p></rich-text-body><h3 
 > id="DeadLetterChannel-Redelivery">Redelivery</h3><p>It is
  common for a temporary outage or database deadlock to cause a message to fail 
to process; but the chances are if its tried a few more times with some time 
delay then it will complete fine. So we typically wish to use some kind of 
redelivery policy to decide how many times to try redeliver a message and how 
long to wait before redelivery attempts.</p><p>The <a shape="rect" 
class="external-link" 
href="http://camel.apache.org/maven/current/camel-core/apidocs/org/apache/camel/processor/RedeliveryPolicy.html";>RedeliveryPolicy</a>
 defines how the message is to be redelivered. You can customize things 
like</p><ul><li>The number of times a message is attempted to be redelivered 
before it is considered a failure and sent to the dead letter 
channel.</li><li>The initial redelivery timeout.</li><li>Whether or not 
exponential backoff is used, i.e., the time between retries increases using a 
backoff multiplier.</li><li>Whether to use collision avoidance to add some 
randomness to the timings.</li
 ><li>Delay pattern (see below for details).</li><li><strong>Camel 
 >2.11:</strong> Whether to allow redelivery during 
 >stopping/shutdown.</li></ul><p>Once all attempts at redelivering the message 
 >fails then the message is forwarded to the dead letter queue.</p><h3 
 >id="DeadLetterChannel-AboutMovingExchangetoDeadLetterQueueandUsinghandled()">About
 > Moving Exchange to Dead Letter Queue and 
 >Using&#160;<strong><code>handled()</code></strong></h3><p><strong><code>handled()</code></strong>
 > on <a shape="rect" href="dead-letter-channel.html">Dead Letter 
 >Channel</a></p><p>When all attempts of redelivery have failed the <a 
 >shape="rect" href="exchange.html">Exchange</a> is moved to the dead letter 
 >queue (the dead letter endpoint). The exchange is then complete and from the 
 >client point of view it was processed. As such the <a shape="rect" 
 >href="dead-letter-channel.html">Dead Letter Channel</a> have handled the <a 
 >shape="rect" href="exchange.html">Exchange</a>.</p><p>For instance 
 >configuring the dea
 d letter channel as:</p><p><strong>Using the <a shape="rect" 
href="fluent-builders.html">Fluent Builders</a></strong></p><parameter 
ac:name="language">java</parameter><plain-text-body>errorHandler(deadLetterChannel("jms:queue:dead")
     .maximumRedeliveries(3).redeliveryDelay(5000));
-]]></script>
-</div></div><p><strong>Using the <a shape="rect" 
href="spring-xml-extensions.html">Spring XML Extensions</a></strong></p><div 
class="code panel pdl" style="border-width: 1px;"><div class="codeContent 
panelContent pdl">
-<script class="brush: xml; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
type="syntaxhighlighter"><![CDATA[&lt;route 
errorHandlerRef=&quot;myDeadLetterErrorHandler&quot;&gt;
+</plain-text-body><p><strong>Using the <a shape="rect" 
href="spring-xml-extensions.html">Spring XML 
Extensions</a></strong></p><parameter 
ac:name="language">xml</parameter><plain-text-body>&lt;route 
errorHandlerRef="myDeadLetterErrorHandler"&gt;
    &lt;!-- ... --&gt;
 &lt;/route&gt;
 
-&lt;bean id=&quot;myDeadLetterErrorHandler&quot; 
class=&quot;org.apache.camel.builder.DeadLetterChannelBuilder&quot;&gt;
-    &lt;property name=&quot;deadLetterUri&quot; 
value=&quot;jms:queue:dead&quot;/&gt;
-    &lt;property name=&quot;redeliveryPolicy&quot; 
ref=&quot;myRedeliveryPolicyConfig&quot;/&gt;
+&lt;bean id="myDeadLetterErrorHandler" 
class="org.apache.camel.builder.DeadLetterChannelBuilder"&gt;
+    &lt;property name="deadLetterUri" value="jms:queue:dead"/&gt;
+    &lt;property name="redeliveryPolicy" ref="myRedeliveryPolicyConfig"/&gt;
 &lt;/bean&gt;
 
-&lt;bean id=&quot;myRedeliveryPolicyConfig&quot; 
class=&quot;org.apache.camel.processor.RedeliveryPolicy&quot;&gt;
-    &lt;property name=&quot;maximumRedeliveries&quot; value=&quot;3&quot;/&gt;
-    &lt;property name=&quot;redeliveryDelay&quot; value=&quot;5000&quot;/&gt;
+&lt;bean id="myRedeliveryPolicyConfig" 
class="org.apache.camel.processor.RedeliveryPolicy"&gt;
+    &lt;property name="maximumRedeliveries" value="3"/&gt;
+    &lt;property name="redeliveryDelay" value="5000"/&gt;
 &lt;/bean&gt;
-]]></script>
-</div></div><p>The <a shape="rect" href="dead-letter-channel.html">Dead Letter 
Channel</a> above will clear the caused exception 
<strong><code>setException(null)</code></strong>, by moving the caused 
exception to a property on the <a shape="rect" 
href="exchange.html">Exchange</a>, with the key 
<strong><code>Exchange.EXCEPTION_CAUGHT</code></strong>. Then the <a 
shape="rect" href="exchange.html">Exchange</a> is moved to the 
<strong><code>jms:queue:dead</code></strong> destination and the client will 
not notice the failure.</p><h3 
id="DeadLetterChannel-AboutMovingExchangetoDeadLetterQueueandUsingtheOriginalMessage">About
 Moving Exchange to Dead Letter Queue and Using the Original Message</h3><p>The 
option <strong><code>useOriginalMessage</code></strong> is used for routing the 
original input message instead of the current message that potentially is 
modified during routing.</p><p>For instance if you have this route:</p><div 
class="code panel pdl" style="border-width: 1px;"><div class=
 "codeContent panelContent pdl">
-<script class="brush: java; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
type="syntaxhighlighter"><![CDATA[   from(&quot;jms:queue:order:input&quot;)
-       .to(&quot;bean:validateOrder&quot;)
-       .to(&quot;bean:transformOrder&quot;)
-       .to(&quot;bean:handleOrder&quot;);
-]]></script>
-</div></div><p>The route listen for JMS messages and validates, transforms and 
handle it. During this the <a shape="rect" href="exchange.html">Exchange</a> 
payload is transformed/modified. So in case something goes wrong and we want to 
move the message to another JMS destination, then we can configure our <a 
shape="rect" href="dead-letter-channel.html">Dead Letter Channel</a> with 
the&#160;<strong><code>useOriginalMessage</code></strong> option. But when we 
move the <a shape="rect" href="exchange.html">Exchange</a> to this destination 
we do not know in which state the message is in. Did the error happen in before 
the&#160;<strong><code>transformOrder</code></strong> or after? So to be sure 
we want to move the original input message we received from 
<strong><code>jms:queue:order:input</code></strong>. So we can do this by 
enabling the&#160;<strong><code>useOriginalMessage</code></strong> option as 
shown below:</p><div class="code panel pdl" style="border-width: 1px;"><div 
class="code
 Content panelContent pdl">
-<script class="brush: java; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
type="syntaxhighlighter"><![CDATA[// will use original body
-errorHandler(deadLetterChannel(&quot;jms:queue:dead&quot;)
+</plain-text-body><p>The <a shape="rect" href="dead-letter-channel.html">Dead 
Letter Channel</a> above will clear the caused exception 
<strong><code>setException(null)</code></strong>, by moving the caused 
exception to a property on the <a shape="rect" 
href="exchange.html">Exchange</a>, with the key 
<strong><code>Exchange.EXCEPTION_CAUGHT</code></strong>. Then the <a 
shape="rect" href="exchange.html">Exchange</a> is moved to the 
<strong><code>jms:queue:dead</code></strong> destination and the client will 
not notice the failure.</p><h3 
id="DeadLetterChannel-AboutMovingExchangetoDeadLetterQueueandUsingtheOriginalMessage">About
 Moving Exchange to Dead Letter Queue and Using the Original Message</h3><p>The 
option <strong><code>useOriginalMessage</code></strong> is used for routing the 
original input message instead of the current message that potentially is 
modified during routing.</p><p>For instance if you have this 
route:</p><parameter ac:name="language">java</parameter><plain-text-bo
 dy>   from("jms:queue:order:input")
+       .to("bean:validateOrder")
+       .to("bean:transformOrder")
+       .to("bean:handleOrder");
+</plain-text-body><p>The route listen for JMS messages and validates, 
transforms and handle it. During this the <a shape="rect" 
href="exchange.html">Exchange</a> payload is transformed/modified. So in case 
something goes wrong and we want to move the message to another JMS 
destination, then we can configure our <a shape="rect" 
href="dead-letter-channel.html">Dead Letter Channel</a> with 
the&#160;<strong><code>useOriginalMessage</code></strong> option. But when we 
move the <a shape="rect" href="exchange.html">Exchange</a> to this destination 
we do not know in which state the message is in. Did the error happen in before 
the&#160;<strong><code>transformOrder</code></strong> or after? So to be sure 
we want to move the original input message we received from 
<strong><code>jms:queue:order:input</code></strong>. So we can do this by 
enabling the&#160;<strong><code>useOriginalMessage</code></strong> option as 
shown below:</p><parameter 
ac:name="language">java</parameter><plain-text-body>//
  will use original body
+errorHandler(deadLetterChannel("jms:queue:dead")
   .useOriginalMessage()
   .maximumRedeliveries(5)
   .redeliverDelay(5000);
-]]></script>
-</div></div><p>Then the messages routed to the 
<strong><code>jms:queue:dead</code></strong> is the original input. If we want 
to manually retry we can move the JMS message from the failed to the input 
queue, with no problem as the message is the same as the original we 
received.</p><h3 id="DeadLetterChannel-OnRedelivery">OnRedelivery</h3><p>When 
<a shape="rect" href="dead-letter-channel.html">Dead Letter Channel</a> is 
doing redeliver its possible to configure a <a shape="rect" 
href="processor.html">Processor</a> that is executed just 
<strong>before</strong> every redelivery attempt. This can be used for the 
situations where you need to alter the message before its redelivered. See 
below for sample.</p><div class="confluence-information-macro 
confluence-information-macro-tip"><p class="title">onException and 
onRedeliver</p><span class="aui-icon aui-icon-small aui-iconfont-approve 
confluence-information-macro-icon"></span><div 
class="confluence-information-macro-body"><p>We also supp
 ort for per <a shape="rect" 
href="exception-clause.html"><strong>onException</strong></a> to set an 
<strong><code>onRedeliver</code></strong>. That means you can do special on 
redelivery for different exceptions, as opposed 
to&#160;<strong><code>onRedelivery</code></strong> set on <a shape="rect" 
href="dead-letter-channel.html">Dead Letter Channel</a> can be viewed as a 
global scope.</p></div></div><h3 
id="DeadLetterChannel-RedeliveryDefaultValues">Redelivery Default 
Values</h3><p>Redelivery is disabled by default.</p><p>The default redeliver 
policy will use the following 
values:</p><ul><li><strong><code>maximumRedeliveries=0</code></strong></li><li><strong><code>redeliverDelay=1000L</code></strong>
 (1 second)</li><li><strong><code>maximumRedeliveryDelay = 60 * 
1000L</code></strong> (60 
seconds)</li><li><strong><code>backOffMultiplier</code></strong> and 
<strong><code>useExponentialBackOff</code></strong> are 
ignored.</li><li><strong><code>retriesExhaustedLogLevel=LoggingLevel.ERROR
 
</code></strong></li><li><strong><code>retryAttemptedLogLevel=LoggingLevel.DEBUG</code></strong></li><li>Stack
 traces are logged for exhausted messages, from <strong>Camel 
2.2</strong>.</li><li>Handled exceptions are not logged, from <strong>Camel 
2.3</strong>.</li><li><strong><code>logExhaustedMessageHistory</code></strong> 
is true for default error handler, and false for dead letter 
channel.</li><li><strong><code>logExhaustedMessageBody</code></strong> 
<strong>Camel 2.17:</strong>&#160;is disabled by default to avoid logging 
sensitive message body/header details. If this option is 
<strong><code>true</code></strong>, 
then&#160;<strong><code>logExhaustedMessageHistory</code></strong> must also be 
<strong><code>true</code></strong>.</li></ul><p>The maximum redeliver delay 
ensures that a delay is never longer than the value, default 1 minute. This can 
happen when 
<strong><code>useExponentialBackOff=true</code></strong>.</p><p>The&#160;<strong><code>maximumRedeliveries</code></strong>
 
 is the number of <strong>re</strong>-delivery attempts. By default Camel will 
try to process the exchange 1 + 5 times. 1 time for the normal attempt and then 
5 attempts as redeliveries.<br clear="none"> Setting 
the&#160;<strong><code>maximumRedeliveries=-1 </code></strong>(or 
&lt;&#160;<strong><code>-1</code></strong>) will then always redelivery 
(unlimited).<br clear="none"> Setting 
the&#160;<strong><code>maximumRedeliveries=0</code></strong> will disable 
re-delivery.</p><p>Camel will log delivery failures at 
the&#160;<strong><code>DEBUG</code></strong> logging level by default. You can 
change this by 
specifying&#160;<strong><code>retriesExhaustedLogLevel</code></strong> and/or 
<strong><code>retryAttemptedLogLevel</code></strong>. See <a shape="rect" 
class="external-link" 
href="http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/camel/trunk/camel-core/src/test/java/org/apache/camel/builder/ExceptionBuilderWithRetryLoggingLevelSetTest.java";>ExceptionBuilderWithRetryLoggingLevelSetTest</a>
 for an exampl
 e.</p><p>You can turn logging of stack traces on/off. If turned off Camel will 
still log the redelivery attempt. It's just much less verbose.</p><h4 
id="DeadLetterChannel-RedeliverDelayPattern">Redeliver Delay 
Pattern</h4><p>Delay pattern is used as a single option to set a range pattern 
for delays. When a delay pattern is in use the following options no longer 
apply:</p><ul><li><strong><code>delay</code></strong></li><li><strong><code>backOffMultiplier</code></strong></li><li><strong><code>useExponentialBackOff</code></strong></li><li><strong><code>useCollisionAvoidance</code></strong></li><li><strong><code>maximumRedeliveryDelay</code></strong></li></ul><p>The
 idea is to set groups of ranges using the following syntax: 
<strong><code>limit:delay;limit 2:delay 2;limit 3:delay 3;...;limit N:delay 
N</code></strong></p><p>Each group has two values separated with colon:</p><ul 
class="alternate"><li><strong><code>limit</code></strong> = upper 
limit</li><li><strong><code>delay</code></str
 ong>&#160;= delay in milliseconds<br clear="none"> And the groups is again 
separated with semi-colon. The rule of thumb is that the next groups should 
have a higher limit than the previous group.</li></ul><p>Lets clarify this with 
an example:<br clear="none"> 
<strong><code>delayPattern=5:1000;10:5000;20:20000</code></strong></p><p>That 
gives us three groups:</p><ul 
class="alternate"><li><strong><code>5:1000</code></strong></li><li><strong><code>10:5000</code></strong></li><li><strong><code>20:20000</code></strong></li></ul><p>Resulting
 in these delays between redelivery attempts:</p><ul 
class="alternate"><li>Redelivery attempt number&#160;<strong><code>1..4 = 
0ms</code></strong> (as the first group start with 5)</li><li>Redelivery 
attempt number&#160;<strong><code>5..9 = 1000ms</code></strong> (the first 
group)</li><li>Redelivery attempt number&#160;<strong><code>10..19 = 
5000ms</code></strong> (the second group)</li><li>Redelivery attempt 
number&#160;<strong><code>20.. = 20000ms</c
 ode></strong> (the last group)</li></ul><p>Note: The first redelivery attempt 
is <strong><code>1</code></strong>, so the first group should start 
with&#160;<strong><code>1</code></strong> or higher.</p><p>You can start a 
group with limit&#160;<strong><code>1</code></strong> to e.g., have a starting 
delay: <strong><code>delayPattern=1:1000;5:5000</code></strong></p><ul 
class="alternate"><li>Redelivery attempt number&#160;<strong><code>1..4 = 
1000ms</code></strong> (the first group)</li><li>Redelivery attempt 
number&#160;<strong><code>5.. = 5000ms</code></strong> (the last 
group)</li></ul><p>There is no requirement that the next delay should be higher 
than the previous. You can use any delay value you like. For example with 
<strong><code>delayPattern=1:5000;3:1000</code></strong> we start with 5 sec 
delay and then later reduce that to&#160;<strong><code>1</code></strong> 
second.</p><h3 id="DeadLetterChannel-Redeliveryheader">Redelivery 
header</h3><p>When a message is redelivered the <
 a shape="rect" class="external-link" 
href="http://camel.apache.org/maven/camel-core/apidocs/org/apache/camel/processor/DeadLetterChannel.html";>DeadLetterChannel</a>
 will append a customizable header to the message to indicate how many times 
its been redelivered. <br clear="none"> Before <strong>Camel 2.6</strong>: The 
header is <strong><code>CamelRedeliveryCounter</code></strong>, which is also 
defined on the <strong><code>Exchange.REDELIVERY_COUNTER</code></strong>.<br 
clear="none"> From <strong>Camel 2.6</strong>: The 
header&#160;<strong><code>CamelRedeliveryMaxCounter</code></strong>, which is 
also defined on the 
<strong><code>Exchange.REDELIVERY_MAX_COUNTER</code></strong>, contains the 
maximum redelivery setting. This header is absent if you use 
<strong><code>retryWhile</code></strong> or have unlimited maximum redelivery 
configured.</p><p>And a boolean flag whether it is being redelivered or not 
(first attempt). The header&#160;<strong><code>CamelRedelivered</code></strong> 
co
 ntains a boolean if the message is redelivered or not, which is also defined 
on the <strong><code>Exchange.REDELIVERED</code></strong>.</p><h3 
id="DeadLetterChannel-DynamicallyCalculatedDelayFromtheExchange">Dynamically 
Calculated Delay From the Exchange</h3><p>In <strong>Camel 2.9</strong> and 
<strong>2.8.2</strong>: The header 
is&#160;<strong><code>CamelRedeliveryDelay</code></strong>, which is also 
defined on the <strong><code>Exchange.REDELIVERY_DELAY</code></strong>. If this 
header is absent, normal redelivery rules apply.</p><h4 
id="DeadLetterChannel-WhichEndpointFailed">Which Endpoint 
Failed</h4><p><strong>Available as of Camel 2.1</strong></p><p>When Camel 
routes messages it will decorate the <a shape="rect" 
href="exchange.html">Exchange</a> with a property that contains the 
<strong>last</strong> endpoint Camel send the <a shape="rect" 
href="exchange.html">Exchange</a> to:</p><div class="code panel pdl" 
style="border-width: 1px;"><div class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
-<script class="brush: java; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
type="syntaxhighlighter"><![CDATA[String lastEndpointUri = 
exchange.getProperty(Exchange.TO_ENDPOINT, String.class);
-]]></script>
-</div></div><p>The <strong><code>Exchange.TO_ENDPOINT</code></strong> have the 
constant value <strong><code>CamelToEndpoint</code></strong>. This information 
is updated when Camel sends a message to any endpoint. So if it exists its the 
<strong>last</strong> endpoint which Camel send the Exchange to.</p><p>When for 
example processing the <a shape="rect" href="exchange.html">Exchange</a> at a 
given <a shape="rect" href="endpoint.html">Endpoint</a> and the message is to 
be moved into the dead letter queue, then Camel also decorates the Exchange 
with another property that contains that <strong>last</strong> 
endpoint:</p><div class="code panel pdl" style="border-width: 1px;"><div 
class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
-<script class="brush: java; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
type="syntaxhighlighter"><![CDATA[String failedEndpointUri = 
exchange.getProperty(Exchange.FAILURE_ENDPOINT, String.class);
-]]></script>
-</div></div><p>The <strong><code>Exchange.FAILURE_ENDPOINT</code></strong> 
have the constant value 
<strong><code>CamelFailureEndpoint</code></strong>.</p><p>This allows for 
example you to fetch this information in your dead letter queue and use that 
for error reporting. This is usable if the Camel route is a bit dynamic such as 
the dynamic <a shape="rect" href="recipient-list.html">Recipient List</a> so 
you know which endpoints failed.</p><p><strong>Note:</strong> this information 
is retained on the Exchange even if the message is subsequently processed 
successfully by a given endpoint only to fail, for example, in local <a 
shape="rect" href="bean.html">Bean</a> processing instead. So, beware that this 
is a hint that helps pinpoint errors.</p><div class="code panel pdl" 
style="border-width: 1px;"><div class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
-<script class="brush: java; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
type="syntaxhighlighter"><![CDATA[from(&quot;activemq:queue:foo&quot;)
-    .to(&quot;http://someserver/somepath&quot;)
-    .beanRef(&quot;foo&quot;);
-]]></script>
-</div></div><p>Now suppose the route above and a failure happens in the 
<code>foo</code> bean. Then the 
<strong><code>Exchange.TO_ENDPOINT</code></strong> and 
<strong><code>Exchange.FAILURE_ENDPOINT</code></strong> will still contain the 
value of <code><a shape="rect" class="external-link" 
href="http://someserver/somepath"; 
rel="nofollow">http://someserver/somepath</a></code>.</p><h3 
id="DeadLetterChannel-OnPrepareFailure"><code>OnPrepareFailure</code></h3><p><strong>Available
 as of Camel 2.16</strong></p><p>Before the exchange is sent to the dead letter 
queue, you can use&#160;<strong><code>onPrepare</code></strong> to allow a 
custom&#160;<strong><code>Processor</code></strong> to prepare the exchange, 
such as adding information why the Exchange failed.</p><p>For example, the 
following processor adds a header with the exception message:</p><div 
class="code panel pdl" style="border-width: 1px;"><div class="codeContent 
panelContent pdl">
-<script class="brush: java; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
type="syntaxhighlighter"><![CDATA[    public static class MyPrepareProcessor 
implements Processor {
+</plain-text-body><p>Then the messages routed to the 
<strong><code>jms:queue:dead</code></strong> is the original input. If we want 
to manually retry we can move the JMS message from the failed to the input 
queue, with no problem as the message is the same as the original we 
received.</p><h3 id="DeadLetterChannel-OnRedelivery">OnRedelivery</h3><p>When 
<a shape="rect" href="dead-letter-channel.html">Dead Letter Channel</a> is 
doing redeliver its possible to configure a <a shape="rect" 
href="processor.html">Processor</a> that is executed just 
<strong>before</strong> every redelivery attempt. This can be used for the 
situations where you need to alter the message before its redelivered. See 
below for sample.</p><parameter ac:name="title">onException and 
onRedeliver</parameter><rich-text-body><p>We also support for per <a 
shape="rect" href="exception-clause.html"><strong>onException</strong></a> to 
set an <strong><code>onRedeliver</code></strong>. That means you can do special 
on redeli
 very for different exceptions, as opposed 
to&#160;<strong><code>onRedelivery</code></strong> set on <a shape="rect" 
href="dead-letter-channel.html">Dead Letter Channel</a> can be viewed as a 
global scope.</p></rich-text-body><h3 
id="DeadLetterChannel-RedeliveryDefaultValues">Redelivery Default 
Values</h3><p>Redelivery is disabled by default.</p><p>The default redeliver 
policy will use the following 
values:</p><ul><li><strong><code>maximumRedeliveries=0</code></strong></li><li><strong><code>redeliverDelay=1000L</code></strong>
 (1 second)</li><li><strong><code>maximumRedeliveryDelay = 60 * 
1000L</code></strong> (60 
seconds)</li><li><strong><code>backOffMultiplier</code></strong> and 
<strong><code>useExponentialBackOff</code></strong> are 
ignored.</li><li><strong><code>retriesExhaustedLogLevel=LoggingLevel.ERROR</code></strong></li><li><strong><code>retryAttemptedLogLevel=LoggingLevel.DEBUG</code></strong></li><li>Stack
 traces are logged for exhausted messages, from <strong>Camel 2.2</
 strong>.</li><li>Handled exceptions are not logged, from <strong>Camel 
2.3</strong>.</li><li><strong><code>logExhaustedMessageHistory</code></strong> 
is true for default error handler, and false for dead letter 
channel.</li><li><strong><code>logExhaustedMessageBody</code></strong> 
<strong>Camel 2.17:</strong>&#160;is disabled by default to avoid logging 
sensitive message body/header details. If this option is 
<strong><code>true</code></strong>, 
then&#160;<strong><code>logExhaustedMessageHistory</code></strong> must also be 
<strong><code>true</code></strong>.</li></ul><p>The maximum redeliver delay 
ensures that a delay is never longer than the value, default 1 minute. This can 
happen when 
<strong><code>useExponentialBackOff=true</code></strong>.</p><p>The&#160;<strong><code>maximumRedeliveries</code></strong>
 is the number of <strong>re</strong>-delivery attempts. By default Camel will 
try to process the exchange 1 + 5 times. 1 time for the normal attempt and then 
5 attempts as redel
 iveries.<br clear="none"> Setting 
the&#160;<strong><code>maximumRedeliveries=-1 </code></strong>(or 
&lt;&#160;<strong><code>-1</code></strong>) will then always redelivery 
(unlimited).<br clear="none"> Setting 
the&#160;<strong><code>maximumRedeliveries=0</code></strong> will disable 
re-delivery.</p><p>Camel will log delivery failures at 
the&#160;<strong><code>DEBUG</code></strong> logging level by default. You can 
change this by 
specifying&#160;<strong><code>retriesExhaustedLogLevel</code></strong> and/or 
<strong><code>retryAttemptedLogLevel</code></strong>. See <a shape="rect" 
class="external-link" 
href="http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/camel/trunk/camel-core/src/test/java/org/apache/camel/builder/ExceptionBuilderWithRetryLoggingLevelSetTest.java";>ExceptionBuilderWithRetryLoggingLevelSetTest</a>
 for an example.</p><p>You can turn logging of stack traces on/off. If turned 
off Camel will still log the redelivery attempt. It's just much less 
verbose.</p><h4 id="DeadLetterChannel-Redeli
 verDelayPattern">Redeliver Delay Pattern</h4><p>Delay pattern is used as a 
single option to set a range pattern for delays. When a delay pattern is in use 
the following options no longer 
apply:</p><ul><li><strong><code>delay</code></strong></li><li><strong><code>backOffMultiplier</code></strong></li><li><strong><code>useExponentialBackOff</code></strong></li><li><strong><code>useCollisionAvoidance</code></strong></li><li><strong><code>maximumRedeliveryDelay</code></strong></li></ul><p>The
 idea is to set groups of ranges using the following syntax: 
<strong><code>limit:delay;limit 2:delay 2;limit 3:delay 3;...;limit N:delay 
N</code></strong></p><p>Each group has two values separated with colon:</p><ul 
class="alternate"><li><strong><code>limit</code></strong> = upper 
limit</li><li><strong><code>delay</code></strong>&#160;= delay in 
milliseconds<br clear="none"> And the groups is again separated with 
semi-colon. The rule of thumb is that the next groups should have a higher 
limit than t
 he previous group.</li></ul><p>Lets clarify this with an example:<br 
clear="none"> 
<strong><code>delayPattern=5:1000;10:5000;20:20000</code></strong></p><p>That 
gives us three groups:</p><ul 
class="alternate"><li><strong><code>5:1000</code></strong></li><li><strong><code>10:5000</code></strong></li><li><strong><code>20:20000</code></strong></li></ul><p>Resulting
 in these delays between redelivery attempts:</p><ul 
class="alternate"><li>Redelivery attempt number&#160;<strong><code>1..4 = 
0ms</code></strong> (as the first group start with 5)</li><li>Redelivery 
attempt number&#160;<strong><code>5..9 = 1000ms</code></strong> (the first 
group)</li><li>Redelivery attempt number&#160;<strong><code>10..19 = 
5000ms</code></strong> (the second group)</li><li>Redelivery attempt 
number&#160;<strong><code>20.. = 20000ms</code></strong> (the last 
group)</li></ul><p>Note: The first redelivery attempt is 
<strong><code>1</code></strong>, so the first group should start 
with&#160;<strong><code>1</code
 ></strong> or higher.</p><p>You can start a group with 
 >limit&#160;<strong><code>1</code></strong> to e.g., have a starting delay: 
 ><strong><code>delayPattern=1:1000;5:5000</code></strong></p><ul 
 >class="alternate"><li>Redelivery attempt number&#160;<strong><code>1..4 = 
 >1000ms</code></strong> (the first group)</li><li>Redelivery attempt 
 >number&#160;<strong><code>5.. = 5000ms</code></strong> (the last 
 >group)</li></ul><p>There is no requirement that the next delay should be 
 >higher than the previous. You can use any delay value you like. For example 
 >with <strong><code>delayPattern=1:5000;3:1000</code></strong> we start with 5 
 >sec delay and then later reduce that to&#160;<strong><code>1</code></strong> 
 >second.</p><h3 id="DeadLetterChannel-Redeliveryheader">Redelivery 
 >header</h3><p>When a message is redelivered the <a shape="rect" 
 >class="external-link" 
 >href="http://camel.apache.org/maven/camel-core/apidocs/org/apache/camel/processor/DeadLetterChannel.html";>DeadLetterChannel</a>
 > will append 
 a customizable header to the message to indicate how many times its been 
redelivered. <br clear="none"> Before <strong>Camel 2.6</strong>: The header is 
<strong><code>CamelRedeliveryCounter</code></strong>, which is also defined on 
the <strong><code>Exchange.REDELIVERY_COUNTER</code></strong>.<br clear="none"> 
From <strong>Camel 2.6</strong>: The 
header&#160;<strong><code>CamelRedeliveryMaxCounter</code></strong>, which is 
also defined on the 
<strong><code>Exchange.REDELIVERY_MAX_COUNTER</code></strong>, contains the 
maximum redelivery setting. This header is absent if you use 
<strong><code>retryWhile</code></strong> or have unlimited maximum redelivery 
configured.</p><p>And a boolean flag whether it is being redelivered or not 
(first attempt). The header&#160;<strong><code>CamelRedelivered</code></strong> 
contains a boolean if the message is redelivered or not, which is also defined 
on the <strong><code>Exchange.REDELIVERED</code></strong>.</p><h3 
id="DeadLetterChannel-DynamicallyC
 alculatedDelayFromtheExchange">Dynamically Calculated Delay From the 
Exchange</h3><p>In <strong>Camel 2.9</strong> and <strong>2.8.2</strong>: The 
header is&#160;<strong><code>CamelRedeliveryDelay</code></strong>, which is 
also defined on the <strong><code>Exchange.REDELIVERY_DELAY</code></strong>. If 
this header is absent, normal redelivery rules apply.</p><h4 
id="DeadLetterChannel-WhichEndpointFailed">Which Endpoint 
Failed</h4><p><strong>Available as of Camel 2.1</strong></p><p>When Camel 
routes messages it will decorate the <a shape="rect" 
href="exchange.html">Exchange</a> with a property that contains the 
<strong>last</strong> endpoint Camel send the <a shape="rect" 
href="exchange.html">Exchange</a> to:</p><parameter 
ac:name="language">java</parameter><plain-text-body>String lastEndpointUri = 
exchange.getProperty(Exchange.TO_ENDPOINT, String.class);
+</plain-text-body><p>The <strong><code>Exchange.TO_ENDPOINT</code></strong> 
have the constant value <strong><code>CamelToEndpoint</code></strong>. This 
information is updated when Camel sends a message to any endpoint. So if it 
exists its the <strong>last</strong> endpoint which Camel send the Exchange 
to.</p><p>When for example processing the <a shape="rect" 
href="exchange.html">Exchange</a> at a given <a shape="rect" 
href="endpoint.html">Endpoint</a> and the message is to be moved into the dead 
letter queue, then Camel also decorates the Exchange with another property that 
contains that <strong>last</strong> endpoint:</p><parameter 
ac:name="language">java</parameter><plain-text-body>String failedEndpointUri = 
exchange.getProperty(Exchange.FAILURE_ENDPOINT, String.class);
+</plain-text-body><p>The 
<strong><code>Exchange.FAILURE_ENDPOINT</code></strong> have the constant value 
<strong><code>CamelFailureEndpoint</code></strong>.</p><p>This allows for 
example you to fetch this information in your dead letter queue and use that 
for error reporting. This is usable if the Camel route is a bit dynamic such as 
the dynamic <a shape="rect" href="recipient-list.html">Recipient List</a> so 
you know which endpoints failed.</p><p><strong>Note:</strong> this information 
is retained on the Exchange even if the message is subsequently processed 
successfully by a given endpoint only to fail, for example, in local <a 
shape="rect" href="bean.html">Bean</a> processing instead. So, beware that this 
is a hint that helps pinpoint errors.</p><parameter 
ac:name="language">java</parameter><plain-text-body>from("activemq:queue:foo")
+    .to("http://someserver/somepath";)
+    .beanRef("foo");
+</plain-text-body><p>Now suppose the route above and a failure happens in the 
<code>foo</code> bean. Then the 
<strong><code>Exchange.TO_ENDPOINT</code></strong> and 
<strong><code>Exchange.FAILURE_ENDPOINT</code></strong> will still contain the 
value of <code><a shape="rect" class="external-link" 
href="http://someserver/somepath"; 
rel="nofollow">http://someserver/somepath</a></code>.</p><h3 
id="DeadLetterChannel-OnPrepareFailure"><code>OnPrepareFailure</code></h3><p><strong>Available
 as of Camel 2.16</strong></p><p>Before the exchange is sent to the dead letter 
queue, you can use&#160;<strong><code>onPrepare</code></strong> to allow a 
custom&#160;<strong><code>Processor</code></strong> to prepare the exchange, 
such as adding information why the Exchange failed.</p><p>For example, the 
following processor adds a header with the exception message:</p><parameter 
ac:name="language">java</parameter><plain-text-body>    public static class 
MyPrepareProcessor implements Processor {
         @Override
         public void process(Exchange exchange) throws Exception {
             Exception cause = exchange.getProperty(Exchange.EXCEPTION_CAUGHT, 
Exception.class);
-            exchange.getIn().setHeader(&quot;FailedBecause&quot;, 
cause.getMessage());
+            exchange.getIn().setHeader("FailedBecause", cause.getMessage());
         }
-    }]]></script>
-</div></div><p>Then configure the error handler to use the processor as 
follows:</p><div class="code panel pdl" style="border-width: 1px;"><div 
class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
-<script class="brush: java; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
type="syntaxhighlighter"><![CDATA[errorHandler(deadLetterChannel(&quot;jms:dead&quot;).onPrepareFailure(new
 MyPrepareProcessor()));]]></script>
-</div></div><p>&#160;</p><p>Configuring this from XML DSL is as 
follows:</p><div class="code panel pdl" style="border-width: 1px;"><div 
class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
-<script class="brush: xml; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
type="syntaxhighlighter"><![CDATA[&lt;bean id=&quot;myPrepare&quot; 
class=&quot;org.apache.camel.processor.DeadLetterChannelOnPrepareTest.MyPrepareProcessor&quot;/&gt;
-
-&lt;errorHandler id=&quot;dlc&quot; type=&quot;DeadLetterChannel&quot; 
deadLetterUri=&quot;jms:dead&quot; 
onPrepareFailureRef=&quot;myPrepare&quot;/&gt;]]></script>
-</div></div><p>&#160;</p><p>The&#160;<strong><code>onPrepare</code></strong> 
is also available using the default error handler.</p><h3 
id="DeadLetterChannel-WhichRouteFailed">Which Route 
Failed</h3><p><strong>Available as of Camel 2.10.4/2.11</strong></p><p>When 
Camel error handler handles an error such as <a shape="rect" 
href="dead-letter-channel.html">Dead Letter Channel</a> or using <a 
shape="rect" href="exception-clause.html">Exception Clause</a> with 
<strong><code>handled=true</code></strong>, then Camel will decorate the <a 
shape="rect" href="exchange.html">Exchange</a> with the route id where the 
error occurred.</p><p>Example:</p><div class="code panel pdl" 
style="border-width: 1px;"><div class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
-<script class="brush: java; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
type="syntaxhighlighter"><![CDATA[String failedRouteId = 
exchange.getProperty(Exchange.FAILURE_ROUTE_ID, String.class);
-]]></script>
-</div></div><p>The <strong><code>Exchange.FAILURE_ROUTE_ID</code></strong> 
have the constant value <strong><code>CamelFailureRouteId</code></strong>. This 
allows for example you to fetch this information in your dead letter queue and 
use that for error reporting.</p><h3 
id="DeadLetterChannel-ControlifRedeliveryisAllowedDuringStopping/Shutdown">Control
 if Redelivery is Allowed During Stopping/Shutdown</h3><p><strong>Available as 
of Camel 2.11</strong></p><p>Before <strong>Camel 2.10</strong>, Camel would 
perform redelivery while stopping a route, or shutting down Camel. This has 
improved a bit in <strong>Camel 2.10</strong>: Camel will no longer perform 
redelivery attempts when shutting down aggressively, e.g., during <a 
shape="rect" href="graceful-shutdown.html">Graceful Shutdown</a> and timeout 
hit.</p><p>From <strong>Camel 2.11</strong>: there is a new option 
<strong><code>allowRedeliveryWhileStopping</code></strong> which you can use to 
control if redelivery is allowed or not; no
 tice that any in progress redelivery will still be executed. This option can 
only disallow any redelivery to be executed <em><strong>after</strong></em> the 
stopping of a route/shutdown of Camel has been triggered. If a redelivery is 
disallowed then a <strong><code>RejectedExcutionException</code></strong> is 
set on the <a shape="rect" href="exchange.html">Exchange</a> and the processing 
of the <a shape="rect" href="exchange.html">Exchange</a> stops. This means any 
consumer will see the <a shape="rect" href="exchange.html">Exchange</a> as 
failed due the <strong><code>RejectedExcutionException</code></strong>. The 
default value is <strong><code>true</code></strong> for backward 
compatibility.</p><p>For example, the following snippet shows how to do this 
with Java DSL and XML DSL:</p><div class="code panel pdl" style="border-width: 
1px;"><div class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
-<script class="brush: java; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
type="syntaxhighlighter"><![CDATA[
-
-// this error handler will try up till 20 redelivery attempts with 1 second 
between.
-// however if we are stopping then do not allow any redeliver attempts.
-errorHandler(defaultErrorHandler()
-        .allowRedeliveryWhileStopping(false)
-        
.maximumRedeliveries(20).redeliveryDelay(1000).retryAttemptedLogLevel(LoggingLevel.INFO));
-
-from(&quot;seda:foo&quot;).routeId(&quot;foo&quot;)
-    .to(&quot;mock:foo&quot;)
-    .throwException(new IllegalArgumentException(&quot;Forced&quot;));
-]]></script>
-</div></div>And the sample sample with XML DSL<div class="code panel pdl" 
style="border-width: 1px;"><div class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
-<script class="brush: xml; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
type="syntaxhighlighter"><![CDATA[
-&lt;!-- notice we use the errorHandlerRef attribute to refer to the error 
handler to use as default --&gt;
-   &lt;camelContext errorHandlerRef=&quot;myErrorHandler&quot; 
xmlns=&quot;http://camel.apache.org/schema/spring&quot;&gt;
-
-       &lt;!-- configure error handler, to redeliver up till 10 times, with 1 
sec delay
-            and if we are stopping then do not allow redeliveries, to stop 
faster --&gt;
-       &lt;errorHandler id=&quot;myErrorHandler&quot; 
type=&quot;DefaultErrorHandler&quot;&gt;
-               &lt;redeliveryPolicy maximumRedeliveries=&quot;20&quot; 
redeliveryDelay=&quot;1000&quot; allowRedeliveryWhileStopping=&quot;false&quot; 
retryAttemptedLogLevel=&quot;INFO&quot;/&gt;
-       &lt;/errorHandler&gt;
-
-       &lt;route id=&quot;foo&quot;&gt;
-           &lt;from uri=&quot;seda:foo&quot;/&gt;
-               &lt;to uri=&quot;mock:foo&quot;/&gt;
-               &lt;throwException ref=&quot;forced&quot;/&gt;
-       &lt;/route&gt;
-
-   &lt;/camelContext&gt;
-]]></script>
-</div></div><h3 id="DeadLetterChannel-Samples">Samples</h3><p>The following 
example shows how to configure the Dead Letter Channel configuration using the 
<a shape="rect" href="dsl.html">DSL</a></p><div class="code panel pdl" 
style="border-width: 1px;"><div class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
-<script class="brush: java; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
type="syntaxhighlighter"><![CDATA[
-RouteBuilder builder = new RouteBuilder() {
-    public void configure() {
-        // using dead letter channel with a seda queue for errors
-        errorHandler(deadLetterChannel(&quot;seda:errors&quot;));
-
-        // here is our route
-        from(&quot;seda:a&quot;).to(&quot;seda:b&quot;);
-    }
-};
-]]></script>
-</div></div>You can also configure the <a shape="rect" class="external-link" 
href="http://camel.apache.org/maven/current/camel-core/apidocs/org/apache/camel/processor/RedeliveryPolicy.html";>RedeliveryPolicy</a>
 as this example shows<div class="code panel pdl" style="border-width: 
1px;"><div class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
-<script class="brush: java; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
type="syntaxhighlighter"><![CDATA[
-RouteBuilder builder = new RouteBuilder() {
-    public void configure() {
-        // configures dead letter channel to use seda queue for errors and use 
at most 2 redelveries
-        // and exponential backoff
-        
errorHandler(deadLetterChannel(&quot;seda:errors&quot;).maximumRedeliveries(2).useExponentialBackOff());
-
-        // here is our route
-        from(&quot;seda:a&quot;).to(&quot;seda:b&quot;);
-    }
-};
-]]></script>
-</div></div><h3 
id="DeadLetterChannel-HowCanIModifytheExchangeBeforeRedelivery?">How Can I 
Modify the Exchange Before Redelivery?</h3><p>We support directly in <a 
shape="rect" href="dead-letter-channel.html">Dead Letter Channel</a> to set a 
<a shape="rect" href="processor.html">Processor</a> that is executed 
<strong>before</strong> each redelivery attempt. When <a shape="rect" 
href="dead-letter-channel.html">Dead Letter Channel</a> is doing redeliver its 
possible to configure a <a shape="rect" href="processor.html">Processor</a> 
that is executed just <strong>before</strong> every redelivery attempt. This 
can be used for the situations where you need to alter the message before its 
redelivered. Here we configure the <a shape="rect" 
href="dead-letter-channel.html">Dead Letter Channel</a> to use our processor 
<strong><code>MyRedeliveryProcessor</code></strong> to be executed before each 
redelivery.</p><div class="code panel pdl" style="border-width: 1px;"><div 
class="codeContent panelC
 ontent pdl">
-<script class="brush: java; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
type="syntaxhighlighter"><![CDATA[
-// we configure our Dead Letter Channel to invoke
-// MyRedeliveryProcessor before a redelivery is
-// attempted. This allows us to alter the message before
-errorHandler(deadLetterChannel(&quot;mock:error&quot;).maximumRedeliveries(5)
-        .onRedelivery(new MyRedeliverProcessor())
-        // setting delay to zero is just to make unit testing faster
-        .redeliveryDelay(0L));
-]]></script>
-</div></div>And this is the processor 
<strong><code>MyRedeliveryProcessor</code></strong> where we alter the 
message.<div class="code panel pdl" style="border-width: 1px;"><div 
class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
-<script class="brush: java; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
type="syntaxhighlighter"><![CDATA[
-// This is our processor that is executed before every redelivery attempt
-// here we can do what we want in the java code, such as altering the message
-public class MyRedeliverProcessor implements Processor {
-
-    public void process(Exchange exchange) throws Exception {
-        // the message is being redelivered so we can alter it
-
-        // we just append the redelivery counter to the body
-        // you can of course do all kind of stuff instead
-        String body = exchange.getIn().getBody(String.class);
-        int count = exchange.getIn().getHeader(Exchange.REDELIVERY_COUNTER, 
Integer.class);
-
-        exchange.getIn().setBody(body + count);
-
-        // the maximum redelivery was set to 5
-        int max = exchange.getIn().getHeader(Exchange.REDELIVERY_MAX_COUNTER, 
Integer.class);
-        assertEquals(5, max);
-    }
-}
-]]></script>
-</div></div><h3 
id="DeadLetterChannel-HowCanILogWhatCausedtheDeadLetterChanneltobeInvoked?">How 
Can I Log What Caused the Dead Letter Channel to be Invoked?</h3><p>You often 
need to know what went wrong that caused the Dead Letter Channel to be used and 
it does not offer logging for this purpose. So the Dead Letter Channel's 
endpoint can be set to a endpoint of our own (such 
as&#160;<strong><code>direct:deadLetterChannel</code></strong>). We write a 
route to accept this Exchange and log the Exception, then forward on to where 
we want the failed Exchange moved to (which might be a DLQ queue for instance). 
See also&#160;<a shape="rect" class="external-link" 
href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/13711462/logging-camel-exceptions-and-sending-to-the-dead-letter-channel";
 
rel="nofollow">http://stackoverflow.com/questions/13711462/logging-camel-exceptions-and-sending-to-the-dead-letter-channel</a></p><p></p><h4
 id="DeadLetterChannel-UsingThisPattern">Using This Pattern</h4>
+    }</plain-text-body><p>Then configure the error handler to use the 
processor as follows:</p><parameter 
ac:name="language">java</parameter><plain-text-body>errorHandler(deadLetterChannel("jms:dead").onPrepareFailure(new
 MyPrepareProcessor()));</plain-text-body><p>&#160;</p><p>Configuring this from 
XML DSL is as follows:</p><parameter 
ac:name="language">xml</parameter><plain-text-body>&lt;bean id="myPrepare" 
class="org.apache.camel.processor.DeadLetterChannelOnPrepareTest.MyPrepareProcessor"/&gt;
 
-<p>If you would like to use this EIP Pattern then please read the <a 
shape="rect" href="getting-started.html">Getting Started</a>, you may also find 
the <a shape="rect" href="architecture.html">Architecture</a> useful 
particularly the description of <a shape="rect" 
href="endpoint.html">Endpoint</a> and <a shape="rect" 
href="uris.html">URIs</a>. Then you could try out some of the <a shape="rect" 
href="examples.html">Examples</a> first before trying this pattern out.</p><ul 
class="alternate"><li><a shape="rect" href="error-handler.html">Error 
Handler</a></li><li><a shape="rect" href="exception-clause.html">Exception 
Clause</a></li></ul></div>
+&lt;errorHandler id="dlc" type="DeadLetterChannel" deadLetterUri="jms:dead" 
onPrepareFailureRef="myPrepare"/&gt;</plain-text-body><p>&#160;</p><p>The&#160;<strong><code>onPrepare</code></strong>
 is also available using the default error handler.</p><h3 
id="DeadLetterChannel-WhichRouteFailed">Which Route 
Failed</h3><p><strong>Available as of Camel 2.10.4/2.11</strong></p><p>When 
Camel error handler handles an error such as <a shape="rect" 
href="dead-letter-channel.html">Dead Letter Channel</a> or using <a 
shape="rect" href="exception-clause.html">Exception Clause</a> with 
<strong><code>handled=true</code></strong>, then Camel will decorate the <a 
shape="rect" href="exchange.html">Exchange</a> with the route id where the 
error occurred.</p><p>Example:</p><parameter 
ac:name="language">java</parameter><plain-text-body>String failedRouteId = 
exchange.getProperty(Exchange.FAILURE_ROUTE_ID, String.class);
+</plain-text-body><p>The 
<strong><code>Exchange.FAILURE_ROUTE_ID</code></strong> have the constant value 
<strong><code>CamelFailureRouteId</code></strong>. This allows for example you 
to fetch this information in your dead letter queue and use that for error 
reporting.</p><h3 
id="DeadLetterChannel-ControlifRedeliveryisAllowedDuringStopping/Shutdown">Control
 if Redelivery is Allowed During Stopping/Shutdown</h3><p><strong>Available as 
of Camel 2.11</strong></p><p>Before <strong>Camel 2.10</strong>, Camel would 
perform redelivery while stopping a route, or shutting down Camel. This has 
improved a bit in <strong>Camel 2.10</strong>: Camel will no longer perform 
redelivery attempts when shutting down aggressively, e.g., during <a 
shape="rect" href="graceful-shutdown.html">Graceful Shutdown</a> and timeout 
hit.</p><p>From <strong>Camel 2.11</strong>: there is a new option 
<strong><code>allowRedeliveryWhileStopping</code></strong> which you can use to 
control if redelivery is allowed or n
 ot; notice that any in progress redelivery will still be executed. This option 
can only disallow any redelivery to be executed <em><strong>after</strong></em> 
the stopping of a route/shutdown of Camel has been triggered. If a redelivery 
is disallowed then a <strong><code>RejectedExcutionException</code></strong> is 
set on the <a shape="rect" href="exchange.html">Exchange</a> and the processing 
of the <a shape="rect" href="exchange.html">Exchange</a> stops. This means any 
consumer will see the <a shape="rect" href="exchange.html">Exchange</a> as 
failed due the <strong><code>RejectedExcutionException</code></strong>. The 
default value is <strong><code>true</code></strong> for backward 
compatibility.</p><p>For example, the following snippet shows how to do this 
with Java DSL and XML 
DSL:<plain-text-body>{snippet:id=e1|lang=java|url=camel/trunk/camel-core/src/test/java/org/apache/camel/processor/RedeliveryErrorHandlerNoRedeliveryOnShutdownTest.java}</plain-text-body>And
 the sample sampl
 e with XML 
DSL<plain-text-body>{snippet:id=e1|lang=xml|url=camel/trunk/components/camel-spring/src/test/resources/org/apache/camel/spring/processor/SpringRedeliveryErrorHandlerNoRedeliveryOnShutdownTest.xml}</plain-text-body></p><h3
 id="DeadLetterChannel-Samples">Samples</h3><p>The following example shows how 
to configure the Dead Letter Channel configuration using the <a shape="rect" 
href="dsl.html">DSL</a><plain-text-body>{snippet:id=e3|lang=java|url=camel/trunk/camel-core/src/test/java/org/apache/camel/builder/ErrorHandlerTest.java}</plain-text-body>You
 can also configure the <a shape="rect" class="external-link" 
href="http://camel.apache.org/maven/current/camel-core/apidocs/org/apache/camel/processor/RedeliveryPolicy.html";>RedeliveryPolicy</a>
 as this example 
shows<plain-text-body>{snippet:id=e4|lang=java|url=camel/trunk/camel-core/src/test/java/org/apache/camel/builder/ErrorHandlerTest.java}</plain-text-body></p><h3
 id="DeadLetterChannel-HowCanIModifytheExchangeBeforeRedelivery
 ?">How Can I Modify the Exchange Before Redelivery?</h3><p>We support directly 
in <a shape="rect" href="dead-letter-channel.html">Dead Letter Channel</a> to 
set a <a shape="rect" href="processor.html">Processor</a> that is executed 
<strong>before</strong> each redelivery attempt. When <a shape="rect" 
href="dead-letter-channel.html">Dead Letter Channel</a> is doing redeliver its 
possible to configure a <a shape="rect" href="processor.html">Processor</a> 
that is executed just <strong>before</strong> every redelivery attempt. This 
can be used for the situations where you need to alter the message before its 
redelivered. Here we configure the <a shape="rect" 
href="dead-letter-channel.html">Dead Letter Channel</a> to use our processor 
<strong><code>MyRedeliveryProcessor</code></strong> to be executed before each 
redelivery.<plain-text-body>{snippet:id=e1|lang=java|url=camel/trunk/camel-core/src/test/java/org/apache/camel/processor/DeadLetterChannelOnRedeliveryTest.java}</plain-text-body>
 And this is the processor <strong><code>MyRedeliveryProcessor</code></strong> 
where we alter the 
message.<plain-text-body>{snippet:id=e2|lang=java|url=camel/trunk/camel-core/src/test/java/org/apache/camel/processor/DeadLetterChannelOnRedeliveryTest.java}</plain-text-body></p><h3
 
id="DeadLetterChannel-HowCanILogWhatCausedtheDeadLetterChanneltobeInvoked?">How 
Can I Log What Caused the Dead Letter Channel to be Invoked?</h3><p>You often 
need to know what went wrong that caused the Dead Letter Channel to be used and 
it does not offer logging for this purpose. So the Dead Letter Channel's 
endpoint can be set to a endpoint of our own (such 
as&#160;<strong><code>direct:deadLetterChannel</code></strong>). We write a 
route to accept this Exchange and log the Exception, then forward on to where 
we want the failed Exchange moved to (which might be a DLQ queue for instance). 
See also&#160;<a shape="rect" class="external-link" 
href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/13711462/logging-camel-excep
 tions-and-sending-to-the-dead-letter-channel" 
rel="nofollow">http://stackoverflow.com/questions/13711462/logging-camel-exceptions-and-sending-to-the-dead-letter-channel</a></p><p><parameter
 ac:name=""><a shape="rect" href="using-this-pattern.html">Using This 
Pattern</a></parameter></p><ul class="alternate"><li><a shape="rect" 
href="error-handler.html">Error Handler</a></li><li><a shape="rect" 
href="exception-clause.html">Exception Clause</a></li></ul></div>
         </td>
         <td valign="top">
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