This crate bridges Tokio and ZeroMQ to allow for ZeroMQ in the async world.
Bump Deps & Pin future in RequestSender #39
Adds an iter_mut()
method to Multipart
0.3.0 adds support for tokio 1.0 thanks to YushiOMOTE!
Please see the examples
directory for a full set of examples. They are paired together based upon the socket types.
Usage is made to be simple, but opinionated. See the examples for working code, but in general, you need to import tokio
and tmq::*
To publish messages to all connected subscribers, you can use the publish
function:
use tmq::{publish, Context, Result};
use futures::SinkExt;
use log::info;
use std::env;
use std::time::Duration;
use tokio::time::delay_for;
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> Result<()> {
let mut socket = publish(&Context::new()).bind("tcp://127.0.0.1:7899")?;
let mut i = 0;
loop {
i += 1;
socket
.send(vec!["topic", &format!("Broadcast #{}", i)])
.await?;
delay_for(Duration::from_secs(1)).await;
}
}
a subscribe socket is a Stream
that reads in values from a publish socket. You specify the filter prefix using the subscribe
method, using ""
for all messages.
use futures::StreamExt;
use tmq::{subscribe, Context, Result};
use std::env;
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> Result<()> {
let mut socket = subscribe(&Context::new())
.connect("tcp://127.0.0.1:7899")?
.subscribe(b"topic")?;
while let Some(msg) = socket.next().await {
println!(
"Subscribe: {:?}",
msg?.iter()
.map(|item| item.as_str().unwrap_or("invalid text"))
.collect::<Vec<&str>>()
);
}
Ok(())
}