ZMQx::Class - DEPRECATED - OO Interface to ZMQ
version 0.008
DEPRECATED - This was only a prototype and never used in production. I doubt it still works with current zmq.
# a ZeroMQ publisher # see example/publisher.pl use ZMQx::Class; my $publisher = ZMQx::Class->socket( 'PUB', bind => 'tcp://*:10000' ); while ( 1 ) { my $random = int( rand ( 10_000 ) ); say "sending $random hello"; $publisher->send( [ $random, 'hello' ] ); select( undef, undef, undef, 0.1); } # a ZeroMQ subscriber # see example/subscriber.pl use ZMQx::Class; use Anyevent; my $subscriber = ZMQx::Class->socket( 'SUB', connect => 'tcp://localhost:10000' ); $subscriber->subscribe( '1' ); my $watcher = $subscriber->anyevent_watcher( sub { while ( my $msg = $subscriber->receive ) { say "got $msg->[0] saying $msg->[1]"; } }); AnyEvent->condvar->recv;
DEPRECATED - This was only a prototype and never used in production. I doubt it still works with current zmq. But here are the old docs:
ZMQx::Class provides an object oriented & Perlish interface to ZeroMQ 3.2. It builds on ZMQ::FFI.
ZMQx::Class
Before you use ZMQx::Class, please read the excellent <ZeroMQ Guide|http://zguide.zeromq.org>. It's a fun and interesting read, containing everything you need to get started with ZeroMQ, including lots of example code.
my $ctx = ZMQx::Class->context;
Return the current context for this process.
ZMQx::Class pools one context per process (pid). It will always use the currents process socket, and set up a new context after a fork. This should be very helpful for most use cases (e.g. when you need a 0mq socket inside a preforked webapp).
If you want to get a new context, use ZMQx::Class->_new_context. But you will have to manage this context yourself!
ZMQx::Class->_new_context
my $socket = ZMQx::Class->socket( $type ); my $socket = ZMQx::Class->socket( $type, bind => $endpoint ); my $socket = ZMQx::Class->socket( $type, connect => $endpoint, \%opts ); my $socket = ZMQx::Class->socket( $context, $type );
socket is a factory method that returns a new ZMQx::Class::Socket object. The new socket will use the default process-wide context.
socket
ZMQx::Class::Socket
my $socket = ZMQx::Class->socket( $type );
Returns a new socket of the given type. Types are valid 0mq sockets:
REQ REP DEALER ROUTER PULL PUSH PUB SUB XPUB XSUB PAIR
This socket will be neither bound nor connected, and have no sockopts set.
connect / bind
my $socket = ZMQx::Class->socket( $type, [bind | connect] => $endpoint );
If you call socket like this, you will get back a socket that's already bound or connected to the given endpoint.
options
my $socket = ZMQx::Class->socket( $type, connect => $endpoint, { sndhwm => 500 });
You can pass in a hashref containing valid sockopts to set them before connect/bind. A lot of sockopts can only be set before connect/bind, so if you want to set them, either pass them to socket, or do not use the autoconnect/bind feater.
See Sockopts in ZMQx::Class::Socket for a list of valid options.
context
If you really need to, you can pass a context object as the first agrument to socket.
my $socket = ZMQx::Class->socket( $context, $type );
ZMQ is another perlish interface to libzmq. We found it to still be a bit too low-level (eg, you still need to import the sockopt-constants). ZMQ support libzmq 2 and 3, and promises a single interface to both. We are only interested in libzmq 3. ZMQx::Class includes some smartness to handle setup of context objects, even across forks. Lastly, we found this note from the docs not very promising: "Personally, I'd recommend only using this module for your one-shot scripts, and use ZMQ::LibZMQ* for all other uses."
Thanks to Validad for sponsoring the development of this module.
Thomas Klausner <domm@plix.at>
This software is copyright (c) 2013 - 2015 by Validad AG.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
To install ZMQx::Class, copy and paste the appropriate command in to your terminal.
cpanm
cpanm ZMQx::Class
CPAN shell
perl -MCPAN -e shell install ZMQx::Class
For more information on module installation, please visit the detailed CPAN module installation guide.