public class AmqpIO
extends java.lang.Object
It's also possible to use AMQP 1.0 protocol via Apache Qpid JMS connection factory and the Apache Beam JmsIO.
The AmqpIO AmqpIO.Read can bind a AMQP listener endpoint and receive messages. It can
 also connect to a AMPQ broker (such as Apache Qpid or Apache ActiveMQ).
 
AmqpIO AmqpIO.Read returns an unbounded PCollection of Message
 containing the received messages.
 
To configure a AMQP source, you have to provide a list of addresses where it will receive
 messages. An address has the following form: [amqp[s]://][user[:password]@]domain[/[name]] where domain can be one of host | host:port | ip | ip:port | name. NB: the ~ character allows to bind a AMQP
 listener instead of connecting to a remote broker. For instance amqp://~0.0.0.0:1234 will
 bind a AMQP listener on any network interface on the 1234 port number.
 
The following example illustrates how to configure a AMQP source:
 pipeline.apply(AmqpIO.read()
   .withAddresses(Collections.singletonList("amqp://host:1234")))
 AmqpIO provides a sink to send PCollection elements as messages.
 
As for the AmqpIO.Read, AmqpIO AmqpIO.Write requires a list of addresses where to
 send messages. The following example illustrates how to configure the AmqpIO AmqpIO.Write:
 
 pipeline
   .apply(...) // provide PCollection<Message>
   .apply(AmqpIO.write());
 | Modifier and Type | Class and Description | 
|---|---|
| static class  | AmqpIO.ReadA  PTransformto read/receive messages using AMQP 1.0 protocol. | 
| static class  | AmqpIO.WriteA  PTransformto send messages using AMQP 1.0 protocol. | 
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description | 
|---|---|
| static AmqpIO.Read | read() | 
| static AmqpIO.Write | write() | 
public static AmqpIO.Read read()
public static AmqpIO.Write write()