This library gives you bindings to ØMQ from node.js. This is not terribly
well tested, but there is at least one company successfully using these bindings
in production. Bug reports welcome.
To Install
First, get ØMQ 2.1, Homebrew on Mac will get you what you need.
Debian/Ubuntu users may also need to install the libev-dev
package.
Then use npm to install zeromq.node:
$ npm install zmq
npm
will yell at you if you don't have node 0.3.0, as that is required.
API
The API contains elements of the ØMQ API. You should refer to it
for in depth detail of the expected behaviors of the system. These methods will
never return error codes, but may throw an exception if any of the errors
described in the ØMQ documentation occur.
First, include the module:
zmq = require('zmq');
After that, you can create sockets with:
socket = zmq.createSocket('req');
Using ØMQ sockets
A socket is where the action happens. You can send and receive things and it is
oh such fun.
Constructor - function(type)
- type - A string describing the type of socket. You can read about the
different socket types here. The name you use here matches the
names of the
ZMQ_*
constants, sans the ZMQ_
prefix.
Methods
-
connect(address) - Connect to another socket. address
should be a string
as described in the ØMQ API docs. This method is not
asynchronous because it is non-blocking. ØMQ will use the provided address
when it's necessary and will not block here.
-
bind(address, callback) - Bind to a socket to wait for incoming data.
address
should be a string as described in the ØMQ API docs.
callback
will be called when binding is complete and takes one argument,
which may be an Error
, or simply undefined
if everything's peachy.
-
send(message, ...) - message
is a string to send across the wire. The
message is not sent immediately, but there is no callback indicating when
it has been transmitted. Have your server ack or something if you care that
much.
The message must be a Buffer
object or a string. It is assumed that
strings should be transmitted as UTF-8. If you provide more than one
argument to send, then a multipart ØMQ message will be sent.
-
close() - Closes the socket
Socket Options
To set a socket option on a socket, use socket[property]. For example,
socket['identity'] = "mainLoop";
The following properties are available (the ZMQ_XXX constant describes the name in the ZeroMQ documentation available at ØMQ setsockopt API):
- ioThreadAffinity - set affinity for IO thread (integer, ZMQ_AFFINITY);
- backlog - set connection backlog for listening sockets (integer, ZMQ_BACKLOG);
- identity - set the socket identity (name) (string, ZMQ_IDENTITY);
- lingerPeriod - set the linger period in milliseconds (integer, -1 = unlimited, ZMQ_LINGER);
- receiveBufferSize - set the kernel receive buffer size (integer, 0 = OS default, ZMQ_RCVBUF);
- sendBufferSize - set the kernel receive buffer size (integer, 0 = OS default, ZMQ_RCVBUF);
The following apply to message buffering and reconnection:
- reconnectionInterval - set the time to wait between reconnection attempts in milliseconds (ZeroMQ attempts to reconnect broken connection automatically behind the scenes) (integer, ZMQ_RECONNECT_IVL)
- highWaterMark - set high water mark (in number of outstanding messages) before buffered messages start being dropped or swapped to disk (integer, zero = unlimited, ZMQ_HWM);
- diskOffloadSize - set the amount of disk swap space in bytes for buffering messages in case of disconnection (integer, ZMQ_SWAP)
The following options are applicable to multicast:
- multicastLoop - set whether multicast can go over loopback or not (boolean, ZMQ_MCAST_LOOP);
- multicastDataRate - set maximum multicast transmission rate in kbits per second (integer, ZMQ_RATE);
- multicastRecovery - set maximum multicast recovery interval in seconds (integer, ZMQ_RECOVERY_IVL)
The following properties are exposed but not normally used by client code (they are used internally by the library):
- _fd - File descriptor (integer, ZMQ_FD);
- _ioevents - Event loop used internally (ZMQ_EVENTS);
- _receiveMore - Message has more parts (boolean, ZMQ_RCVMORE);
- _subscribe - Subscribe to a channel (see subscribe() method) (string, ZMQ_SUBSCRIBE);
- _unsubscribe - Unsubscribe to a channel (see unsubscribe() method) (string, ZMQ_UNSUBSCRIBE);
Events
-
message - A message was received. The arguments are the parts of the
message. So, for example, if you have an xrep
socket with plain req
sockets on the other end, you can do something like:
socket.on('message', function(envelope, blank, data) {
socket.send(envelope, blank, compute_reply_for(data));
});
-
error - There was some error. The only argument is an Error
object
explaining what the error was.
To Build
$ node-waf configure build
Testing
Tests are pretty incomplete right now, but to run what's there:
$ npm install vows
$ vows
Licensing
Licensed under the very permissive MIT License.