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Getting Started
2.0.26 To get started, make sure your system has as a minimum Java JDK 6 or newer installed. Java JDK 7 is recommended.
Download spring-xd-1.0-M1.zip (TODO)
Unzip the distribution. This will yield the installation directory spring-xd. All the commands below are executed from this directory, so change into it before proceeding
$ cd spring-xdSpring XD can be run in two different modes. There’s a single-node runtime option for testing and development, and there’s a distributed runtime which supports distribution of processing tasks across multiple nodes. This document will get you up and running quickly with a single-node runtime. See Running Distributed Mode for details on setting up a distributed runtime.
The single node option is the easiest to get started with. It runs everything you need in a single process. To start it, you just need to run the following command
xd/bin>$ ./xd-singlenodeYou should then be able to start using Spring XD.
In Spring XD, a basic stream defines the ingestion of event driven data from a source to a sink that passes through any number of processors. Create a new stream by posting the stream definition to a REST endpoint. Stream defintions are built from a simple DSL. For example, execute:
$ curl -d "time | log" http://localhost:8080/streams/ticktock
This defines a stream named ticktock based off the DSL expression time | log. The DSL uses the "pipe" symbol |, to connect a source to a sink. The stream server finds the time and log definitions in the modules directory and uses them to setup the stream. In this simple example, the time source simply sends the current time as a message each second, and the log sink outputs it using the logging framework.
processing module 'Module [name=log, type=sink]' from group 'ticktock' with index: 1 processing module 'Module [name=time, type=source]' from group 'ticktock' with index: 0 17:26:18,774 WARN ThreadPoolTaskScheduler-1 logger.ticktock:141 - Thu May 23 17:26:18 EDT 2013
Learn about the modules available in Spring XD in the Sources, Processors, and Sinks sections of the documentation.
Don’t see what you’re looking for? Create a custom module (and then consider contributing it back to Spring XD).
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