File
Since Camel 1.1
The file language is merged with Simple language which means you can use all the file syntax directly within the simple language.
The File Expression Language is an extension to the Simple language, adding file related capabilities. These capabilities are related to common use cases working with file path and names. The goal is to allow expressions to be used with the File and FTP components for setting dynamic file patterns for both consumer and producer.
File Language options
The File language supports 2 options, which are listed below.
Name | Default | Java Type | Description |
---|---|---|---|
resultType |
|
Sets the class name of the result type (type from output) |
|
trim |
|
|
Whether to trim the value to remove leading and trailing whitespaces and line breaks |
Syntax
This language is an extension to the Simple language
so the Simple syntax applies also. So the table below
only lists the additional.
As opposed to Simple language
File Language also supports
Constant expressions so you can enter a fixed
filename.
All the file tokens use the same expression name as the method on the
java.io.File
object, for instance file:absolute
refers to the
java.io.File.getAbsolute()
method. Notice that not all expressions are
supported by the current Exchange. For instance the FTP
component supports some of the options, where as the
File component supports all of them.
Expression | Type | File Consumer | File Producer | FTP Consumer | FTP Producer | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
file:name |
String |
yes |
no |
yes |
no |
refers to the file name (is relative to the starting directory, see note below) |
file:name.ext |
String |
yes |
no |
yes |
no |
refers to the file extension only |
file:name.ext.single |
String |
yes |
no |
yes |
no |
refers to the file extension. If the file extension has mutiple dots, then this expression strips and only returns the last part. |
file:name.noext |
String |
yes |
no |
yes |
no |
refers to the file name with no extension (is relative to the starting directory, see note below) |
file:name.noext.single |
String |
yes |
no |
yes |
no |
refers to the file name with no extension (is relative to the starting directory, see note below). If the file extension has multiple dots, then this expression strips only the last part, and keep the others. |
file:onlyname |
String |
yes |
no |
yes |
no |
refers to the file name only with no leading paths. |
file:onlyname.noext |
String |
yes |
no |
yes |
no |
refers to the file name only with no extension and with no leading paths. |
file:onlyname.noext.single |
String |
yes |
no |
yes |
no |
refers to the file name only with no extension and with no leading paths. If the file extension has multiple dots, then this expression strips only the last part, and keep the others. |
file:ext |
String |
yes |
no |
yes |
no |
refers to the file extension only |
file:parent |
String |
yes |
no |
yes |
no |
refers to the file parent |
file:path |
String |
yes |
no |
yes |
no |
refers to the file path |
file:absolute |
Boolean |
yes |
no |
no |
no |
refers to whether the file is regarded as absolute or relative |
file:absolute.path |
String |
yes |
no |
no |
no |
refers to the absolute file path |
file:length |
Long |
yes |
no |
yes |
no |
refers to the file length returned as a Long type |
file:size |
Long |
yes |
no |
yes |
no |
refers to the file length returned as a Long type |
file:modified |
Date |
yes |
no |
yes |
no |
Refers to the file last modified returned as a Date type |
date:_command:pattern_ |
String |
yes |
yes |
yes |
yes |
for date formatting using the |
File token example
Relative paths
We have a java.io.File
handle for the file hello.txt
in the
following relative directory: .\filelanguage\test
. And we configure
our endpoint to use this starting directory .\filelanguage
. The file
tokens will return as:
Expression | Returns |
---|---|
file:name |
test\hello.txt |
file:name.ext |
txt |
file:name.noext |
test\hello |
file:onlyname |
hello.txt |
file:onlyname.noext |
hello |
file:ext |
txt |
file:parent |
filelanguage\test |
file:path |
filelanguage\test\hello.txt |
file:absolute |
false |
file:absolute.path |
\workspace\camel\camel-core\target\filelanguage\test\hello.txt |
Absolute paths
We have a java.io.File
handle for the file hello.txt
in the
following absolute directory:
\workspace\camel\camel-core\target\filelanguage\test
. And we configure
out endpoint to use the absolute starting directory
\workspace\camel\camel-core\target\filelanguage
. The file tokens will
return as:
Expression | Returns |
---|---|
file:name |
test\hello.txt |
file:name.ext |
txt |
file:name.noext |
test\hello |
file:onlyname |
hello.txt |
file:onlyname.noext |
hello |
file:ext |
txt |
file:parent |
\workspace\camel\camel-core\target\filelanguage\test |
file:path |
\workspace\camel\camel-core\target\filelanguage\test\hello.txt |
file:absolute |
true |
file:absolute.path |
\workspace\camel\camel-core\target\filelanguage\test\hello.txt |
Samples
You can enter a fixed Constant expression such as
myfile.txt
:
fileName="myfile.txt"
Lets assume we use the file consumer to read files and want to move the read files to backup folder with the current date as a sub folder. This can be archieved using an expression like:
fileName="backup/${date:now:yyyyMMdd}/${file:name.noext}.bak"
relative folder names are also supported so suppose the backup folder should be a sibling folder then you can append .. as:
fileName="../backup/${date:now:yyyyMMdd}/${file:name.noext}.bak"
As this is an extension to the Simple language we have access to all the goodies from this language also, so in this use case we want to use the in.header.type as a parameter in the dynamic expression:
fileName="../backup/${date:now:yyyyMMdd}/type-${in.header.type}/backup-of-${file:name.noext}.bak"
If you have a custom Date you want to use in the expression then Camel supports retrieving dates from the message header.
fileName="orders/order-${in.header.customerId}-${date:in.header.orderDate:yyyyMMdd}.xml"
And finally we can also use a bean expression to invoke a POJO class that generates some String output (or convertible to String) to be used:
fileName="uniquefile-${bean:myguidgenerator.generateid}.txt"
And of course all this can be combined in one expression where you can use the File Language, Simple and the Bean language in one combined expression. This is pretty powerful for those common file path patterns.
Using Spring PropertyPlaceholderConfigurer together with the File component
In Camel you can use the File Language directly from the Simple language which makes a Content Based Router easier to do in Spring XML, where we can route based on file extensions as shown below:
<from uri="file://input/orders"/>
<choice>
<when>
<simple>${file:ext} == 'txt'</simple>
<to uri="bean:orderService?method=handleTextFiles"/>
</when>
<when>
<simple>${file:ext} == 'xml'</simple>
<to uri="bean:orderService?method=handleXmlFiles"/>
</when>
<otherwise>
<to uri="bean:orderService?method=handleOtherFiles"/>
</otherwise>
</choice>
If you use the fileName
option on the File endpoint
to set a dynamic filename using the File Language then make sure you
use the alternative syntax to avoid
clashing with Springs PropertyPlaceholderConfigurer
.
bundle-context.xml
<bean id="propertyPlaceholder" class="org.springframework.beans.factory.config.PropertyPlaceholderConfigurer">
<property name="location" value="classpath:bundle-context.cfg" />
</bean>
<bean id="sampleRoute" class="SampleRoute">
<property name="fromEndpoint" value="${fromEndpoint}" />
<property name="toEndpoint" value="${toEndpoint}" />
</bean>
bundle-context.cfg
fromEndpoint=activemq:queue:test
toEndpoint=file://fileRoute/out?fileName=test-$simple{date:now:yyyyMMdd}.txt
Notice how we use the $simple\{ } syntax in the toEndpoint
above.
If you don’t do this, there is a clash and Spring will throw an
exception like
org.springframework.beans.factory.BeanDefinitionStoreException:
Invalid bean definition with name 'sampleRoute' defined in class path resource [bundle-context.xml]:
Could not resolve placeholder 'date:now:yyyyMMdd'