Publicar eventos em tópicos de namespace usando Java
Este artigo fornece um guia rápido e passo a passo para publicar o CloudEvents usando Java. O código de exemplo neste artigo usa o formato JSON CloudEvents ao enviar eventos.
Pré-requisitos
Os pré-requisitos que você precisa ter em vigor antes de prosseguir são:
Uma assinatura de namespace, tópico e evento.
O pacote SDK beta mais recente. Se você estiver usando o maven, você pode consultar o repositório central do maven.
Importante
O suporte ao SDK do plano de dados de entrega pull está disponível em pacotes beta. Você deve usar o pacote beta mais recente em seu projeto.
Um IDE que suporta Java como IntelliJ IDEA, Eclipse IDE ou Visual Studio Code.
Java JRE executando o nível de linguagem Java 8.
Publicar eventos em um tópico de namespace
Use a classe a seguir para entender as etapas básicas para publicar eventos.
package com.azure.messaging.eventgrid.samples;
import com.azure.core.credential.AzureKeyCredential;
import com.azure.core.http.HttpClient;
import com.azure.core.models.CloudEvent;
import com.azure.core.models.CloudEventDataFormat;
import com.azure.core.util.BinaryData;
import com.azure.messaging.eventgrid.EventGridClient;
import com.azure.messaging.eventgrid.EventGridClientBuilder;
import com.azure.messaging.eventgrid.EventGridMessagingServiceVersion;
import java.time.OffsetDateTime;
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.HashMap;
import java.util.List;
import java.util.Random;
/**
* <p>Simple demo publisher of CloudEvents to Event Grid namespace topics.
*
* This code samples should use Java 1.8 level or above to avoid compilation errors.
*
* You should consult the resources below to use the client SDK and set up your project using maven.
* @see <a href="https://github.com/Azure/azure-sdk-for-java/tree/main/sdk/eventgrid/azure-messaging-eventgrid">Event Grid data plane client SDK documentation</a>
* @see <a href="https://github.com/Azure/azure-sdk-for-java/blob/main/sdk/boms/azure-sdk-bom/README.md">Azure BOM for client libraries</a>
* @see <a href="https://aka.ms/spring/versions">Spring Version Mapping</a> if you are using Spring.
* @see <a href="https://aka.ms/azsdk">Tool with links to control plane and data plane SDKs across all languages supported</a>.
*</p>
*/
public class NamespaceTopicPublisher {
private static final String TOPIC_NAME = "<yourNamespaceTopicName>";
public static final String ENDPOINT = "<yourFullHttpsUrlToTheNamespaceEndpoint>";
public static final int NUMBER_OF_EVENTS_TO_BUILD_THAT_DOES_NOT_EXCEED_100 = 10;
//TODO Do NOT include keys in source code. This code's objective is to give you a succinct sample about using Event Grid, not to provide an authoritative example for handling secrets in applications.
/**
* For security concerns, you should not have keys or any other secret in any part of the application code.
* You should use services like Azure Key Vault for managing your keys.
*/
public static final AzureKeyCredential CREDENTIAL = new AzureKeyCredential("<namespace key>");
public static void main(String[] args) {
//TODO Update Event Grid version number to your desired version. You can find more information on data plane APIs here:
//https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/rest/api/eventgrid/.
EventGridClient eventGridClient = new EventGridClientBuilder()
.httpClient(HttpClient.createDefault()) // Requires Java 1.8 level
.endpoint(ENDPOINT)
.serviceVersion(EventGridMessagingServiceVersion.V2023_06_01_PREVIEW)
.credential(CREDENTIAL).buildClient(); // you may want to use .buildAsyncClient() for an asynchronous (project reactor) client.
List<CloudEvent> cloudEvents = buildCloudEvents(NUMBER_OF_EVENTS_TO_BUILD_THAT_DOES_NOT_EXCEED_100);
eventGridClient.publishCloudEvents(TOPIC_NAME, cloudEvents);
System.out.println("--> Number of events published: " + NUMBER_OF_EVENTS_TO_BUILD_THAT_DOES_NOT_EXCEED_100); // There is no partial publish. Either all succeed or none.
}
/**
* <p>Builds a list of valid CloudEvents for testing purposes</p>
* @param numberOfEventsToBuild this should not exceed 100, which is the maximum number of events allowed in a single HTTP request or 1MB in size, whichever is met first.
* @return the list of CloudEvents
*/
private static List<CloudEvent> buildCloudEvents(int numberOfEventsToBuild) {
List<CloudEvent> cloudEvents = new ArrayList<>(numberOfEventsToBuild);
while (numberOfEventsToBuild >= 1) {
cloudEvents.add(buildCloudEvent());
numberOfEventsToBuild--;
}
return cloudEvents;
}
/**
* <p>Builds a valid CloudEvent for testing purposes.</p>
* @return a CloudEvent
*/
private static CloudEvent buildCloudEvent() {
String orderId = Integer.toString(new Random().nextInt(1000-10+1) + 10); // Generates a random integer between 1000 and 1 (exclusive)
return new CloudEvent("/account/a-4305/orders", "com.MyCompanyName.OrderCreated",
BinaryData.fromObject(new HashMap<String, String>() {
{
put("orderId", orderId);
put("orderResourceURL", "https://www.MyCompanyName.com/orders/" + orderId);
put("isRushOrder", "true");
put("customerType", "Institutional");
}
}), CloudEventDataFormat.JSON, "application/json")
.setTime(OffsetDateTime.now());
}
}
Próximos passos
- Consulte Referência da API Java.
- Consulte receber eventos usando a entrega pull se quiser se conectar à Grade de Eventos e controlar a hora e a taxa em que você lê os eventos. Você também pode usar um ponto de extremidade privado para ler eventos da Grade de Eventos usando a entrega pull.
- Consulte Inscrever-se em eventos usando a entrega por push para Hubs de Eventos se precisar se inscrever em eventos usando Hubs de Eventos como destino.
- Para saber mais sobre o modelo de entrega pull, consulte Visão geral da pull delivery.