Administer mediations
These topics provide information about mediations, which are used to change how messages are handled at destinations on a service integration bus.
Subtopics
- Secure mediations
Use the following tasks to secure mediations at an operations level. For example, a mediation inherits its identity from a the messaging engine, but we might want to specify an alternative identity for the mediation to use.- Configure mediations
Use the following tasks to modify the behavior of a mediation, control which messages are mediated, or influence how messages are processed.- Configure mediation points
In service integration technologies, messages are held at specialized message points called mediation points before they are processed by a mediation. Use the following tasks to set properties at mediation points to route messages and start and stop mediations:- Manage mediations with administrative commands
Use wsadmin commands to administer service integration technologies mediations. For example we can create, delete and view mediations, configure mediation properties and mediate destinations.- Operating mediations at mediation points
Use these tasks to start, stop and restart mediations at runtime at specialized message points called mediation points.- Administer messages on mediation points
Use these tasks to list and delete runtime messages held at mediation points in a service integration bus.- Example: Using mediations to trace, monitor and log messages
The most straightforward use of a mediation is for tracing, monitoring or logging messages that pass through a destination or topics spaces. This type of mediation does not modify the message; it only extracts information from the message and saves or displays the information elsewhere.
(ZOS) Workload classification file Automate peer recovery for transactions and messages in WAS A practical introduction to message mediation -- Part 1 A practical introduction to message mediation -- Part 3 A practical introduction to message mediation -- Part 4 A practical introduction to message mediation -- Part 5