SYNOPSIS

void *zmq_socket (void *context, int type);

DESCRIPTION

The zmq_socket() function shall create a ØMQ socket within the specified context and return an opaque handle to the newly created socket. The type argument specifies the socket type, which determines the semantics of communication over the socket.

The newly created socket is initially unbound, and not associated with any endpoints. In order to establish a message flow a socket must first be connected to at least one endpoint with zmq_connect(3), or at least one endpoint must be created for accepting incoming connections with zmq_bind(3).

Key differences to conventional sockets

Generally speaking, conventional sockets present a synchronous interface to either connection-oriented reliable byte streams (SOCK_STREAM), or connection-less unreliable datagrams (SOCK_DGRAM). In comparison, ØMQ sockets present an abstraction of an asynchronous message queue, with the exact queueing semantics depending on the socket type in use. Where conventional sockets transfer streams of bytes or discrete datagrams, ØMQ sockets transfer discrete messages.

ØMQ sockets being asynchronous means that the timings of the physical connection setup and teardown, reconnect and effective delivery are transparent to the user and organized by ØMQ itself. Further, messages may be queued in the event that a peer is unavailable to receive them.

Conventional sockets allow only strict one-to-one (two peers), many-to-one (many clients, one server), or in some cases one-to-many (multicast) relationships. With the exception of ZMQ_PAIR, ØMQ sockets may be connected to multiple endpoints using zmq_connect(), while simultaneously accepting incoming connections from multiple endpoints bound to the socket using zmq_bind(), thus allowing many-to-many relationships.

Socket types

The following sections present the socket types defined by ØMQ, grouped by the general messaging pattern which is built from related socket types.

Request-reply pattern

The request-reply pattern is used for sending requests from a client to one or more instances of a service, and receiving subsequent replies to each request sent.

ZMQ_REQ

A socket of type ZMQ_REQ is used by a client to send requests to and receive replies from a service. This socket type allows only an alternating sequence of zmq_send(request) and subsequent zmq_recv(reply) calls. Each request sent is load-balanced among all services, and each reply received is matched with the last issued request.

When a ZMQ_REQ socket enters an exceptional state due to having reached the high water mark for all services, or if there are no services at all, then any zmq_send(3) operations on the socket shall block until the exceptional state ends or at least one service becomes available for sending; messages are not discarded.

Summary of ZMQ_REQ characteristics
Compatible peer sockets

ZMQ_REP

Direction

Bidirectional

Send/receive pattern

Send, Receive, Send, Receive, …

Outgoing routing strategy

Load-balanced

Incoming routing strategy

Last peer

ZMQ_HWM option action

Block

ZMQ_REP

A socket of type ZMQ_REP is used by a service to receive requests from and send replies to a client. This socket type allows only an alternating sequence of zmq_recv(request) and subsequent zmq_send(reply) calls. Each request received is fair-queued from among all clients, and each reply sent is routed to the client that issued the last request.

When a ZMQ_REP socket enters an exceptional state due to having reached the high water mark for a client, then any replies sent to the client in question shall be dropped until the exceptional state ends.

Summary of ZMQ_REP characteristics
Compatible peer sockets

ZMQ_REQ

Direction

Bidirectional

Send/receive pattern

Receive, Send, Receive, Send, …

Incoming routing strategy

Fair-queued

Outgoing routing stratagy

Last peer

ZMQ_HWM option action

Drop

Publish-subscribe pattern

The publish-subscribe pattern is used for one-to-many distribution of data from a single publisher to multiple subscribers in a fanout fashion.

ZMQ_PUB

A socket of type ZMQ_PUB is used by a publisher to distribute data. Messages sent are distributed in a fanout fashion to all connected peers. The zmq_recv(3) function is not implemented for this socket type.

When a ZMQ_PUB socket enters an exceptional state due to having reached the high water mark for a subscriber, then any messages that would be sent to the subscriber in question shall instead be dropped until the exceptional state ends.

Summary of ZMQ_PUB characteristics
Compatible peer sockets

ZMQ_SUB

Direction

Unidirectional

Send/receive pattern

Send only

Incoming routing strategy

N/A

Outgoing routing strategy

Fanout

ZMQ_HWM option action

Drop

ZMQ_SUB

A socket of type ZMQ_SUB is used by a subscriber to subscribe to data distributed by a publisher. Initially a ZMQ_SUB socket is not subscribed to any messages, use the ZMQ_SUBSCRIBE option of zmq_setsockopt(3) to specify which messages to subscribe to. The zmq_send() function is not implemented for this socket type.

Summary of ZMQ_SUB characteristics
Compatible peer sockets

ZMQ_PUB

Direction

Unidirectional

Send/receive pattern

Receive only

Incoming routing strategy

Fair-queued

Outgoing routing strategy

N/A

ZMQ_HWM option action

N/A

Pipeline pattern

The pipeline pattern is used for distributing data to nodes arranged in a pipeline. Data always flows down the pipeline, and each stage of the pipeline is connected to at least one node. When a pipeline stage is connected to multiple nodes data is load-balanced among all connected nodes.

ZMQ_DOWNSTREAM

A socket of type ZMQ_DOWNSTREAM is used by a pipeline node to send messages to downstream pipeline nodes. Messages are load-balanced to all connected downstream nodes. The zmq_recv() function is not implemented for this socket type.

When a ZMQ_DOWNSTREAM socket enters an exceptional state due to having reached the high water mark for all downstream nodes, or if there are no downstream nodes at all, then any zmq_send(3) operations on the socket shall block until the exceptional state ends or at least one downstream node becomes available for sending; messages are not discarded.

Summary of ZMQ_DOWNSTREAM characteristics
Compatible peer sockets

ZMQ_UPSTREAM

Direction

Unidirectional

Send/receive pattern

Send only

Incoming routing strategy

N/A

Outgoing routing strategy

Load-balanced

ZMQ_HWM option action

Block

ZMQ_UPSTREAM

A socket of type ZMQ_UPSTREAM is used by a pipeline node to receive messages from upstream pipeline nodes. Messages are fair-queued from among all connected upstream nodes. The zmq_send() function is not implemented for this socket type.

Summary of ZMQ_UPSTREAM characteristics
Compatible peer sockets

ZMQ_DOWNSTREAM

Direction

Unidirectional

Send/receive pattern

Receive only

Incoming routing strategy

Fair-queued

Outgoing routing strategy

N/A

ZMQ_HWM option action

N/A

Exclusive pair pattern

The exclusive pair is an advanced pattern used for communicating exclusively between two peers.

ZMQ_PAIR

A socket of type ZMQ_PAIR can only be connected to a single peer at any one time. No message routing or filtering is performed on messages sent over a ZMQ_PAIR socket.

When a ZMQ_PAIR socket enters an exceptional state due to having reached the high water mark for the connected peer, or if no peer is connected, then any zmq_send(3) operations on the socket shall block until the peer becomes available for sending; messages are not discarded.

Note
ZMQ_PAIR sockets are experimental, and are currently missing several features such as auto-reconnection.
Summary of ZMQ_PAIR characteristics
Compatible peer sockets

ZMQ_PAIR

Direction

Bidirectional

Send/receive pattern

Unrestricted

Incoming routing strategy

N/A

Outgoing routing strategy

N/A

ZMQ_HWM option action

Block

RETURN VALUE

The zmq_socket() function shall return an opaque handle to the newly created socket if successful. Otherwise, it shall return NULL and set errno to one of the values defined below.

ERRORS

EINVAL

The requested socket type is invalid.

EMTHREAD

The maximum number of sockets within this context has been exceeded.

SEE ALSO

AUTHORS

The ØMQ documentation was written by Martin Sustrik <sustrik@250bpm.com> and Martin Lucina <mato@kotelna.sk>.