Provided by: libzmq-ffi-perl_1.19-1_all bug

NAME

       ZMQ::FFI - version agnostic Perl bindings for zeromq using ffi

VERSION

       version 1.19

SYNOPSIS

           #### send/recv ####

           use 5.012;
           use ZMQ::FFI qw(ZMQ_REQ ZMQ_REP);

           my $endpoint = "ipc://zmq-ffi-$$";
           my $ctx      = ZMQ::FFI->new();

           my $s1 = $ctx->socket(ZMQ_REQ);
           $s1->connect($endpoint);

           my $s2 = $ctx->socket(ZMQ_REP);
           $s2->bind($endpoint);

           $s1->send('ohhai');

           say $s2->recv();
           # ohhai

           #### pub/sub ####

           use 5.012;
           use ZMQ::FFI qw(ZMQ_PUB ZMQ_SUB);
           use Time::HiRes q(usleep);

           my $endpoint = "ipc://zmq-ffi-$$";
           my $ctx      = ZMQ::FFI->new();

           my $s = $ctx->socket(ZMQ_SUB);
           my $p = $ctx->socket(ZMQ_PUB);

           $s->connect($endpoint);
           $p->bind($endpoint);

           # all topics
           {
               $s->subscribe('');

               until ($s->has_pollin) {
                   # compensate for slow subscriber
                   usleep 100_000;
                   $p->send('ohhai');
               }

               say $s->recv();
               # ohhai

               $s->unsubscribe('');
           }

           # specific topics
           {
               $s->subscribe('topic1');
               $s->subscribe('topic2');

               until ($s->has_pollin) {
                   usleep 100_000;
                   $p->send('topic1 ohhai');
                   $p->send('topic2 ohhai');
               }

               while ($s->has_pollin) {
                   say join ' ', $s->recv();
                   # topic1 ohhai
                   # topic2 ohhai
               }
           }

           #### multipart ####

           use 5.012;
           use ZMQ::FFI qw(ZMQ_DEALER ZMQ_ROUTER);

           my $endpoint = "ipc://zmq-ffi-$$";
           my $ctx      = ZMQ::FFI->new();

           my $d = $ctx->socket(ZMQ_DEALER);
           $d->set_identity('dealer');

           my $r = $ctx->socket(ZMQ_ROUTER);

           $d->connect($endpoint);
           $r->bind($endpoint);

           $d->send_multipart([qw(ABC DEF GHI)]);

           say join ' ', $r->recv_multipart;
           # dealer ABC DEF GHI

           #### nonblocking ####

           use 5.012;
           use ZMQ::FFI qw(ZMQ_PUSH ZMQ_PULL);
           use AnyEvent;
           use EV;

           my $endpoint = "ipc://zmq-ffi-$$";
           my $ctx      = ZMQ::FFI->new();
           my @messages = qw(foo bar baz);

           my $pull = $ctx->socket(ZMQ_PULL);
           $pull->bind($endpoint);

           my $fd = $pull->get_fd();

           my $recv = 0;
           my $w = AE::io $fd, 0, sub {
               while ( $pull->has_pollin ) {
                   say $pull->recv();
                   # foo, bar, baz

                   $recv++;
                   if ($recv == 3) {
                       EV::break();
                   }
               }
           };

           my $push = $ctx->socket(ZMQ_PUSH);
           $push->connect($endpoint);

           my $sent = 0;
           my $t;
           $t = AE::timer 0, .1, sub {
               $push->send($messages[$sent]);

               $sent++;
               if ($sent == 3) {
                   undef $t;
               }
           };

           EV::run();

           #### specifying versions ####

           use ZMQ::FFI;

           # 2.x context
           my $ctx = ZMQ::FFI->new( soname => 'libzmq.so.1' );
           my ($major, $minor, $patch) = $ctx->version;

           # 3.x context
           my $ctx = ZMQ::FFI->new( soname => 'libzmq.so.3' );
           my ($major, $minor, $patch) = $ctx->version;

DESCRIPTION

       ZMQ::FFI exposes a high level, transparent, OO interface to zeromq independent of the underlying libzmq
       version.  Where semantics differ, it will dispatch to the appropriate backend for you.  As it uses ffi,
       there is no dependency on XS or compilation.

       As of 1.00 ZMQ::FFI is implemented using FFI::Platypus. This version has substantial performance
       improvements and you are encouraged to use 1.00 or newer.

CONTEXT API

   new
           my $ctx = ZMQ::FFI->new(%options);

       returns a new context object, appropriate for the version of libzmq found on your system. It accepts the
       following optional attributes:

       options

       threads
           zeromq thread pool size. Default: 1

       max_sockets
           requires zmq >= 3.x

           max number of sockets allowed for context. Default: 1024

       soname
               ZMQ::FFI->new( soname => '/path/to/libzmq.so' );
               ZMQ::FFI->new( soname => 'libzmq.so.3' );

           specify the libzmq library name to load.  By default ZMQ::FFI will first try the generic soname for
           the system, then the soname for each version of zeromq (e.g. libzmq.so.3). "soname" can also be the
           path to a particular libzmq so file

           It is technically possible to have multiple contexts of different versions in the same process,
           though the utility of doing such a thing is dubious

   version
           my ($major, $minor, $patch) = $ctx->version();

       return the libzmq version as the list "($major, $minor, $patch)"

   get
       requires zmq >= 3.x

           my $threads = $ctx->get(ZMQ_IO_THREADS)

       get a context option value

   set
       requires zmq >= 3.x

           $ctx->set(ZMQ_MAX_SOCKETS, 42)

       set a context option value

   socket
           my $socket = $ctx->socket(ZMQ_REQ)

       returns a socket of the specified type. See "SOCKET API" below

   proxy
           $ctx->proxy($frontend, $backend);

           $ctx->proxy($frontend, $backend, $capture);

       sets up and runs a "zmq_proxy". For zmq 2.x this will use a "ZMQ_STREAMER" device to simulate the proxy.
       The optional $capture is only supported for zmq >= 3.x however

   device
       zmq 2.x only

           $ctx->device($type, $frontend, $backend);

       sets up and runs a "zmq_device" with specified frontend and backend sockets

   destroy
       destroy the underlying zmq context. In general you shouldn't have to call this directly as it is called
       automatically for you when the object gets reaped

       See "CLEANUP" below

SOCKET API

       The following API is available on socket objects created by "$ctx->socket".

       For core attributes and functions, common across all versions of zeromq, convenience methods are
       provided. Otherwise, generic get/set methods are provided that will work independent of version.

       As attributes are constantly being added/removed from zeromq, it is unlikely the 'static' accessors will
       grow much beyond the current set.

   version
           my ($major, $minor, $patch) = $socket->version();

       same as Context "version" above

   connect
           $socket->connect($endpoint);

       does socket connect on the specified endpoint

   disconnect
       requires zmq >= 3.x

           $socket->disconnect($endpoint);

       does socket disconnect on the specified endpoint

   bind
           $socket->bind($endpoint);

       does socket bind on the specified endpoint

   unbind
       requires zmq >= 3.x

           $socket->unbind($endpoint);

       does socket unbind on the specified endpoint

   get_linger, set_linger
           my $linger = $socket->get_linger();

           $socket->set_linger($millis);

       get or set the socket linger period. Default: 0 (no linger)

       See "CLEANUP" below

   get_identity, set_identity
           my $ident = $socket->get_identity();

           $socket->set_identity($ident);

       get or set the socket identity for request/reply patterns

   get_fd
           my $fd = $socket->get_fd();

       get the file descriptor associated with the socket

   get
           my $option_value = $socket->get($option_name, $option_type);

           my $linger = $socket->get(ZMQ_LINGER, 'int');

       generic method to get the value for any socket option. $option_type is the type associated with
       $option_value in the zeromq API ("zmq_getsockopt" man page)

   set
           $socket->set($option_name, $option_type, $option_value);

           $socket->set(ZMQ_IDENTITY, 'binary', 'foo');

       generic method to set the value for any socket option.  $option_type is the type associated with
       $option_value in the zeromq API ("zmq_setsockopt" man page)

   subscribe
           $socket->subscribe($topic);

       add $topic to the subscription list

   unsubscribe
           $socket->unsubscribe($topic);

       remove $topic from the subscription list

   send
           $socket->send($msg);

           $socket->send($msg, $flags);

       sends a message using the optional flags

   send_multipart
           $socket->send($parts_aref);

           $socket->send($parts_aref, $flags);

       given an array ref of message parts, sends the multipart message using the optional flags. ZMQ_SNDMORE
       semantics are handled for you

   recv
           my $msg = $socket->recv();

           my $msg = $socket->recv($flags);

       receives a message using the optional flags

   recv_multipart
           my @parts = $socket->recv_multipart();

           my @parts = $socket->recv_multipart($flags);

       receives a multipart message, returning an array of parts. ZMQ_RCVMORE semantics are handled for you

   has_pollin, has_pollout
           while ( $socket->has_pollin ) { ... }

       checks ZMQ_EVENTS for ZMQ_POLLIN and ZMQ_POLLOUT respectively, and returns true/false depending on the
       state

   close
       close the underlying zmq socket. In general you shouldn't have to call this directly as it is called
       automatically for you when the object gets reaped

       See "CLEANUP" below

   die_on_error
           $socket->die_on_error(0);

           $socket->die_on_error(1);

       controls whether error handling should be exceptional or not. This is set to true by default. See "ERROR
       HANDLING" below

   has_error
       returns true or false depending on whether the last socket operation had an error. This is really just an
       alias for "last_errno"

   last_errno
       returns the system "errno" set by the last socket operation, or 0 if there was no error

   last_strerror
       returns the human readable system error message associated with the socket "last_errno"

CLEANUP

       With respect to cleanup "ZMQ::FFI" follows either the zeromq guide
       <http://zguide.zeromq.org/page:all#Making-a-Clean-Exit> recommendations or the behavior of other zmq
       bindings.  That is:

       •   it uses 0 linger by default (this is the default used by czmq <https://github.com/zeromq/czmq> and
           jzmq <https://github.com/zeromq/jzmq>)

       •   during object destruction it will call close/destroy for you

       •   it arranges the reference hierarchy such that sockets will be properly
                 cleaned up before their associated contexts

       •   it detects fork/thread situations and ensures sockets/contexts are only
                 cleaned up in their originating process/thread

       •   it guards against double closes/destroys

       Given the above you're probably better off letting "ZMQ::FFI" handle cleanup for you. But if for some
       reason you want to do explicit cleanup yourself you can. All the below will accomplish the same thing:

           # implicit cleanup
           {
               my $context = ZMQ::FFI->new();
               my $socket  = $ctx->socket($type);
               ...
               # close/destroy called in destructors at end of scope
           }

           # explicit cleanup
           $socket->close();
           $context->destroy();

           # ditto
           undef $socket;
           undef $context;

       Regarding "linger", you can always set this to a value you prefer if you don't like the default. Once set
       the new value will be used when the socket is subsequently closed (either implicitly or explicitly):

           $socket->set_linger(-1); # infinite linger
                                    # $context->destroy will block forever
                                    # (or until all pending messages have been sent)

ERROR HANDLING

       By default, ZMQ::FFI checks the return codes of underlying zmq functions for you, and in the case of an
       error it will die with the human readable system error message.

           $ctx->socket(-1);
           # dies with 'zmq_socket: Invalid argument'

       Usually this is what you want, but not always. Some zmq operations can return errors that are not fatal
       and should be handled. For example using "ZMQ_DONTWAIT" with send/recv can return "EAGAIN" and simply
       means try again, not die.

       For situations such as this you can turn off exceptional error handling by setting "die_on_error" to 0.
       It is then for you to check and manage any zmq errors by checking "last_errno":

           use Errno qw(EAGAIN);

           my $ctx = ZMQ::FFI->new();
           my $s   = $ctx->socket(ZMQ_DEALER);
           $s->bind('tcp://*:7200');

           $s->die_on_error(0); # turn off exceptional error handling

           while (1) {
               my $msg = $s->recv(ZMQ_DONTWAIT);

               if ($s->last_errno == EAGAIN) {
                   sleep 1;
               }
               elsif ($s->last_errno) {
                   die $s->last_strerror;
               }
               else {
                   warn "recvd: $msg";
                   last;
               }
           }

           $s->die_on_error(1); # turn back on exceptional error handling

FFI VS XS PERFORMANCE

       ZMQ::FFI uses FFI::Platypus on the backend. In addition to a friendly, usable interface, FFI::Platypus's
       killer feature is "attach". "attach" makes it possible to bind ffi functions in memory as first class
       Perl xsubs. This results in dramatic performance gains and gives you the flexibility of ffi with
       performance approaching that of XS.

       Testing indicates FFI::Platypus xsubs are around 30% slower than "real" XS xsubs. That may sound like a
       lot, but to put it in perspective that means, for zeromq, the XS bindings can send 10 million messages
       1-2 seconds faster than the ffi ones.

       If you really care about 1-2 seconds over 10 million messages you should be writing your solution in C
       anyways. An equivalent C implementation will be several hundred percent faster or more.

       Keep in mind also that the small speed bump you get using XS can easily be wiped out by crappy and poorly
       optimized Perl code.

       Now that Perl finally has a great ffi interface, it is hard to make the case to continue using XS. The
       slight speed bump just isn't worth giving up the convenience, flexibility, and portability of ffi.

       You can find the detailed performance results that informed this section at:
       <https://gist.github.com/calid/17df5bcfb81c83786d6f>

BUGS

       "ZMQ::FFI" is free as in beer in addition to being free as in speech. While I've done my best to ensure
       it's tasty, high quality beer, it probably isn't perfect.  If you encounter problems, or otherwise see
       room for improvement, please open an issue (or even better a pull request!) on github
       <https://github.com/zeromq/perlzmq>

SEE ALSO

       •   ZMQ::FFI::Constants

       •   ZMQ::FFI::Util

       •   FFI::Platypus

       •   FFI::Raw

       •   ZMQ::LibZMQ3

CREDITS

       Thank you to the following for patches, bug reports, feedback, or suggestions:

       Dave Lambley, Graham Ollis, Klaus Ita, Marc Mims, Parth Gandhi, Pawel Pabian, Robert Hunter, Sergey
       KHripchenko, Slaven Rezic, Whitney Jackson, pipcet

AUTHOR

       Dylan Cali <calid1984@gmail.com>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       This software is copyright (c) 2023 by Dylan Cali.

       This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5
       programming language system itself.