XJ Identity Action
Provided by: "Apache Software Foundation"
Support Level for this Kamelet is: "Preview"
Apply the XJ Identity Transformation to transform JSON to XML and XML to JSON.
Configuration Options
The following table summarizes the configuration options available for the xj-identity-action Kamelet:
| Property | Name | Description | Type | Default | Example | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
direction *  | 
Direction  | 
The transform direction, possible values are XML2JSON or JSON2XML  | 
String  | 
| Fields marked with (*) are mandatory. | 
Usage
This section summarizes how the xj-identity-action can be used in various contexts.
Knative Action
The xj-identity-action Kamelet can be used as intermediate step in a Knative binding.
apiVersion: camel.apache.org/v1alpha1
kind: KameletBinding
metadata:
  name: xj-identity-action-binding
spec:
  source:
    ref:
      kind: Kamelet
      apiVersion: camel.apache.org/v1alpha1
      name: timer-source
    properties:
      message: "Hello"
  steps:
  - ref:
      kind: Kamelet
      apiVersion: camel.apache.org/v1alpha1
      name: xj-identity-action
    properties:
      direction: "The Direction"
  sink:
    ref:
      kind: Channel
      apiVersion: messaging.knative.dev/v1
      name: mychannel
Make sure you have Camel K installed into the Kubernetes cluster you’re connected to.
Save the xj-identity-action-binding.yaml file into your hard drive, then configure it according to your needs.
You can run the action using the following command:
kubectl apply -f xj-identity-action-binding.yaml
Binding to Knative using the Kamel CLI:
The procedure described above can be simplified into a single execution of the kamel bind command:
kamel bind timer-source?message=Hello --step xj-identity-action -p "step-0.direction=The Direction" channel:mychannel
This will create the KameletBinding under the hood and apply it to the current namespace in the cluster.
Kafka Action
The xj-identity-action Kamelet can be used as intermediate step in a Kafka binding.
apiVersion: camel.apache.org/v1alpha1
kind: KameletBinding
metadata:
  name: xj-identity-action-binding
spec:
  source:
    ref:
      kind: Kamelet
      apiVersion: camel.apache.org/v1alpha1
      name: timer-source
    properties:
      message: "Hello"
  steps:
  - ref:
      kind: Kamelet
      apiVersion: camel.apache.org/v1alpha1
      name: xj-identity-action
    properties:
      direction: "The Direction"
  sink:
    ref:
      kind: KafkaTopic
      apiVersion: kafka.strimzi.io/v1beta1
      name: my-topic
Ensure that you’ve installed Strimzi and created a topic named my-topic in the current namespace.
Make also sure you have Camel K installed into the Kubernetes cluster you’re connected to.
Save the xj-identity-action-binding.yaml file into your hard drive, then configure it according to your needs.
You can run the action using the following command:
kubectl apply -f xj-identity-action-binding.yaml
Binding to Kafka using the Kamel CLI:
The procedure described above can be simplified into a single execution of the kamel bind command:
kamel bind timer-source?message=Hello --step xj-identity-action -p "step-0.direction=The Direction" kafka.strimzi.io/v1beta1:KafkaTopic:my-topic
This will create the KameletBinding under the hood and apply it to the current namespace in the cluster.