IBM MQ CLIENT java.lang.UnsatisfiedLinkError: no mqjbnd05 in java.library.path exception [duplicate]

雨燕双飞 提交于 2019-12-25 09:02:51

问题


I am tring to connect to IBM websphere Client with a Java Programme the Following are the code:=

import com.ibm.mq.MQException;
import com.ibm.mq.MQGetMessageOptions;
import com.ibm.mq.MQMessage;
import com.ibm.mq.MQPutMessageOptions;
import com.ibm.mq.MQQueue;
import com.ibm.mq.MQQueueManager;


/**
 * Simple example program
 */
public class MQSample {

  // code identifier
  static final String sccsid = "@(#) MQMBID sn=p750-002-131001_DE su=_FswqMCqGEeOZ3ui-rZDONA pn=MQJavaSamples/wmqjava/MQSample.java";

  // define the name of the QueueManager
  private static final String qManager = "QM_ORANGE";
  // and define the name of the Queue
  private static final String qName = "SYSTEM.DEFAULT.LOCAL.QUEUE";
 // private static final String qName = "QM_APPLE";


  public static void main(String args[]) {
    try {

      System.out.println("Connecting to queue manager: " + qManager);
      MQQueueManager qMgr = new MQQueueManager(qManager);
      int openOptions =1| 16;
      System.out.println("Accessing queue: " + qName);
      MQQueue queue = qMgr.accessQueue(qName, openOptions);

      MQMessage msg = new MQMessage();
      msg.writeUTF("Hello, World!");
      MQPutMessageOptions pmo = new MQPutMessageOptions();
      System.out.println("Sending a message...");
      queue.put(msg, pmo);

      // Now get the message back again. First define a WebSphere MQ
      // message
      // to receive the data
    //  MQMessage rcvMessage = new MQMessage();

      // Specify default get message options
    //  MQGetMessageOptions gmo = new MQGetMessageOptions();

      // Get the message off the queue.
     // System.out.println("...and getting the message back again");
     // queue.get(rcvMessage, gmo);

      // And display the message text...
      //String msgText = rcvMessage.readUTF();
     // System.out.println("The message is: " + msgText);

      // Close the queue
      System.out.println("Closing the queue");
      queue.close();

      // Disconnect from the QueueManager
      System.out.println("Disconnecting from the Queue Manager");
      qMgr.disconnect();
      System.out.println("Done!");
    }
    catch (MQException ex) {
      System.out.println("A WebSphere MQ Error occured : Completion Code " + ex.completionCode
          + " Reason Code " + ex.reasonCode);
      ex.printStackTrace();
      for (Throwable t = ex.getCause(); t != null; t = t.getCause()) {
        System.out.println("... Caused by ");
        t.printStackTrace();
      }

    }
    catch (java.io.IOException ex) {
      System.out.println("An IOException occured whilst writing to the message buffer: " + ex);
    }
    return;
  }
}

but right now i am getting following error

Exception in thread "main" java.lang.UnsatisfiedLinkError: no mqjbnd05 in java.library.path
    at java.lang.ClassLoader.loadLibrary(Unknown Source)
    at java.lang.Runtime.loadLibrary0(Unknown Source)
    at java.lang.System.loadLibrary(Unknown Source)
    at com.ibm.mq.MQSESSION.loadLib(MQSESSION.java:872)
    at com.ibm.mq.server.MQSESSION$1.run(MQSESSION.java:228)
    at java.security.AccessController.doPrivileged(Native Method)
    at com.ibm.mq.server.MQSESSION.<clinit>(MQSESSION.java:222)
    at com.ibm.mq.MQSESSIONServer.getMQSESSION(MQSESSIONServer.java:70)
    at com.ibm.mq.MQSESSION.getSession(MQSESSION.java:492)
    at com.ibm.mq.MQManagedConnectionJ11.<init>(MQManagedConnectionJ11.java:168)
    at com.ibm.mq.MQBindingsManagedConnectionFactoryJ11._createManagedConnection(MQBindingsManagedConnectionFactoryJ11.java:179)
    at com.ibm.mq.MQBindingsManagedConnectionFactoryJ11.createManagedConnection(MQBindingsManagedConnectionFactoryJ11.java:215)
    at com.ibm.mq.StoredManagedConnection.<init>(StoredManagedConnection.java:84)
    at com.ibm.mq.MQSimpleConnectionManager.allocateConnection(MQSimpleConnectionManager.java:168)
    at com.ibm.mq.MQQueueManagerFactory.obtainBaseMQQueueManager(MQQueueManagerFactory.java:772)
    at com.ibm.mq.MQQueueManagerFactory.procure(MQQueueManagerFactory.java:697)
    at com.ibm.mq.MQQueueManagerFactory.constructQueueManager(MQQueueManagerFactory.java:657)
    at com.ibm.mq.MQQueueManagerFactory.createQueueManager(MQQueueManagerFactory.java:153)
    at com.ibm.mq.MQQueueManager.<init>(MQQueueManager.java:451)
    at MQSample.main(MQSample.java:30)

when i refered about this everyone saying to put mqjbnd.dll in java.library i put that file in that path also still not working


回答1:


IBM MQ CLIENT java.lang.UnsatisfiedLinkError: no mqjbnd05 in java.library.path exception

Your title pretty much says it all. 'MQ Client' generally means that the queue manager is REMOTE to where you are running your application. But 'no mqjbnd05' means that you are attempting to connect to the queue manager in bindings mode, queue manager is running on the same server as your queue manager.

99% of the time an application gets that errors is because the application and queue manager are running on separate servers and the application is not specifying: channel name, hostname/IP address & port #.

Note: An application can connect in 2 ways to a queue manager: (1) client mode - meaning the application and queue manager are running on separate servers and the application is not specifying: channel name, hostname/IP address & port #.

(2) bindings mode - meaning the application and queue manager are running on the same servers (no networking information is specified).

Note: Don't use MQEnvironment class but rather put the connection information in a Hashtable and pass it to the MQQueueManager class. MQEnvironment is NOT thread safe.

Here's a working sample MQ application that will connect (client mode) to a remote queue manager:

import java.io.IOException;
import java.util.Hashtable;

import com.ibm.mq.*;
import com.ibm.mq.constants.CMQC;

/**
 * Java class to connect to MQ. Post and Retrieve messages.
 * 
 * Sample Command Line Parameters 
 *  -h 127.0.0.1 -p 1414 -c TEST.CHL -m MQA1 -q TEST.Q1 -u userid -x password
 */
public class MQClientTest
{
   private Hashtable<String, String> params = null;
   private Hashtable<String, Object> mqht = null;
   private String qManager;
   private String inputQName;

   /**
    * The constructor
    */
   public MQClientTest()
   {
      super();
   }

   /**
    * Make sure the required parameters are present.
    * 
    * @return true/false
    */
   private boolean allParamsPresent()
   {
      boolean b = params.containsKey("-h") && params.containsKey("-p") &&
                  params.containsKey("-c") && params.containsKey("-m") &&
                  params.containsKey("-u") && params.containsKey("-x") &&
                  params.containsKey("-q");
      if (b)
      {
         try
         {
            Integer.parseInt((String) params.get("-p"));
         }
         catch (NumberFormatException e)
         {
            b = false;
         }
      }

      return b;
   }

   /**
    * Extract the command-line parameters and initialize the MQ variables.
    * 
    * @param args
    * @throws IllegalArgumentException
    */
   private void init(String[] args) throws IllegalArgumentException
   {
      params = new Hashtable<String, String>();
      if (args.length > 0 && (args.length % 2) == 0)
      {
         for (int i = 0; i < args.length; i += 2)
         {
            params.put(args[i], args[i + 1]);
         }
      }
      else
      {
         throw new IllegalArgumentException();
      }

      if (allParamsPresent())
      {
         qManager = (String) params.get("-m");
         inputQName = (String) params.get("-q");

         mqht = new Hashtable<String, Object>();

         mqht.put(CMQC.CHANNEL_PROPERTY, params.get("-c"));
         mqht.put(CMQC.HOST_NAME_PROPERTY, params.get("-h"));

         try
         {
            mqht.put(CMQC.PORT_PROPERTY, new Integer(params.get("-p")));
         }
         catch (NumberFormatException e)
         {
            mqht.put(CMQC.PORT_PROPERTY, new Integer(1414));
         }

         mqht.put(CMQC.USER_ID_PROPERTY, params.get("-u"));
         mqht.put(CMQC.PASSWORD_PROPERTY, params.get("-x"));

         // I don't want to see MQ exceptions at the console.
         MQException.log = null;
      }
      else
      {
         throw new IllegalArgumentException();
      }
   }

   /**
    * Method to put then get a message to/from a queue.
    */
   public void putAndGetMessage()
   {
      MQQueueManager qMgr = null;
      MQQueue        queue = null;
      MQMessage      putMessage = null;
      MQMessage      getMessage = null;

      int openOptions = CMQC.MQOO_INPUT_AS_Q_DEF | CMQC.MQOO_OUTPUT + CMQC.MQOO_FAIL_IF_QUIESCING;

      MQGetMessageOptions gmo = new MQGetMessageOptions();
      gmo.options = CMQC.MQGMO_NO_WAIT + CMQC.MQGMO_FAIL_IF_QUIESCING;

      MQPutMessageOptions pmo = new MQPutMessageOptions();
      pmo.options = CMQC.MQPMO_FAIL_IF_QUIESCING;

      String msg = "Hello World, WelCome to MQ.";

      try
      {
         qMgr = new MQQueueManager(qManager, mqht);
         queue = qMgr.accessQueue(inputQName, openOptions);

         putMessage = new MQMessage();
         putMessage.writeUTF(msg);

         // put the message on the queue
         queue.put(putMessage, pmo);

         System.out.println("Message is put on MQ.");

         // get message from MQ.
         getMessage = new MQMessage();
         // assign message id to get message.
         getMessage.messageId = putMessage.messageId;

         /*
          * Tell the queue manager that we want a message with a specific MsgID.
          */
         gmo.matchOptions = CMQC.MQMO_MATCH_MSG_ID;

         // get message options.
         queue.get(getMessage, gmo);

         String retreivedMsg = getMessage.readUTF();
         System.out.println("Message got from MQ: " + retreivedMsg);
      }
      catch (MQException e)
      {
         System.err.println("CC=" + e.completionCode + " : RC=" + e.reasonCode);
      }
      catch (IOException e)
      {
         e.printStackTrace();
      }
      finally
      {
         try
         {
            if (queue != null)
               queue.close();
         }
         catch (MQException e)
         {
            System.err.println("MQCLOSE CC=" + e.completionCode + " : RC="
                  + e.reasonCode);
         }

         try
         {
            if (qMgr != null)
               qMgr.disconnect();
         }
         catch (MQException e2)
         {
            System.err.println("MQDISC CC=" + e2.completionCode + " : RC="
                  + e2.reasonCode);
         }
      }
   }

   public static void main(String[] args)
   {
      System.out.println("Processing Main...");
      MQClientTest clientTest = new MQClientTest();

      try
      {
         // initialize MQ.
         clientTest.init(args);
         // put and retrieve message from MQ.
         clientTest.putAndGetMessage();
      }
      catch (IllegalArgumentException e)
      {
         System.out.println("Usage: java MQClientTest -h host -p port -c channel -m QueueManagerName -q QueueName -u userid -x password");
         System.exit(1);
      }

      System.out.println("Done!");
   }
}



回答2:


There is nothing in the question to indicate which version of MQ client is being used, how it was installed, whether the IBM-provided code works, or whether the environment was set correctly. That makes this more of a "how do I configure and test MQ client?" kind of question so I'll answer it that way.

Back-level MQ clients were always installed using IBM's full-client install media. Newer clients can be installed using IBM's Java-only install media. It is always recommended to use one of these methods.

The one thing to not do (which coincidentally is the thing done most often) is to simply grab the jar files from the MQ Server installation. The reasons for this include:

  • The IBM installer lays down a known-good set of files.
  • Maintenance can be applied to an installation made using IBM's installer.
  • When using IBM's install methods, things like trace directories and the location of the MQClient.ini file are predictable.

So first thing is to make sure you are running from the latest IBM-provided full client or Java-only install media. Alternatively, install IBM MQ Advanced for Developers which delivers a full MQ install to the desktop, including all the client support. MQ Advanced for Developers is free for individual use.

Prior to launching code, set the environment. See:
Environment variables relevant to IBM MQ classes for Java
Environment variables used by IBM MQ classes for JMS

Per the docs:

On Windows, all the environment variables are set automatically during installation. On any other platform, you must set them yourself. On a UNIX system, you can use the script setjmsenv (if you are using a 32-bit JVM) or setjmsenv64 (if you are using a 64-bit JVM) to set the environment variables. On AIX, HP-UX, Linux, and Solaris, these scripts are in the MQ_INSTALLATION_PATH/java/bin directory.

IBM provides lots of sample code. On *nix systems this is in /opt/mqm/samp/. On windows it's in the [MQ install directory]\tools. If the full client is installed try the compiled C code first, like amqsgetc. This establishes whether basic connectivity is in place. Once you know the channel connectivity works, try the Java or JMS samples.

Getting back to the original post, before we can help we'd need to know which of the above steps had already been completed and something about the configuration. Otherwise what you get back generally leads you down a path to a setup in which configuration is almost guaranteed to be hosed: "Try adding this library here," or "try mucking about with your CLASSPATH like this..." Such trial-and-error approaches often work but are unsupportable and lead to problems over time.



来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/39849868/ibm-mq-client-java-lang-unsatisfiedlinkerror-no-mqjbnd05-in-java-library-path-e

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