zmq_connect (3) Linux Manual Page
zmq_connect – create outgoing connection from socket
Synopsis
int zmq_connect(void *socket, const char *endpoint);
Description
The zmq_connect() function connects the socket to an endpoint and then accepts incoming connections on that endpoint. The endpoint is a string consisting of a transport:// followed by an address. The transport specifies the underlying protocol to use. The address specifies the transport-specific address to connect to. 0MQ provides the the following transports: tcp
- unicast transport using TCP, see
zmq_tcp(7)
ipc
- local inter-process communication transport, see
zmq_ipc(7)
inproc
- local in-process (inter-thread) communication transport, see
zmq_inproc(7)
pgm, epgm
- reliable multicast transport using PGM, see
zmq_pgm(7)
Every 0MQ socket type except ZMQ_PAIR supports one-to-many and many-to-one semantics. The precise semantics depend on the socket type and are defined in zmq_socket(3).
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Note
for most transports and socket types the connection is not performed immediately but as needed by 0MQ. Thus a successful call to zmq_connect() does not mean that the connection was or could actually be established. Because of this, for most transports and socket types the order in which a server socket is bound and a client socket is connected to it does not matter. The first exception is when using the inproc:// transport: you must call zmq_bind() before calling zmq_connect(). The second exception are ZMQ_PAIR sockets, which do not automatically reconnect to endpoints.-
Note
following a zmq_connect(), for socket types except for ZMQ_ROUTER, the socket enters its normal ready state. By contrast, following a zmq_bind() alone, the socket enters a mute state in which the socket blocks or drops messages according to the socket type, as defined inzmq_socket(3). A ZMQ_ROUTER socket enters its normal ready state for a specific peer only when handshaking is complete for that peer, which may take an arbitrary time.Return Value
The zmq_connect() function returns zero if successful. Otherwise it returns -1 and sets errno to one of the values defined below.
Errors
EINVAL- The endpoint supplied is invalid.
EPROTONOSUPPORT- The requested transport protocol is not supported.
ENOCOMPATPROTO- The requested transport protocol is not compatible with the socket type.
ETERM- The 0MQ context associated with the specified socket was terminated.
ENOTSOCK- The provided socket was invalid.
EMTHREAD- No I/O thread is available to accomplish the task.
Example
Connecting a subscriber socket to an in-process and a TCP transport./* Create a ZMQ_SUB socket */ void *socket = zmq_socket(context, ZMQ_SUB); assert(socket); /* Connect it to an in-process transport with the address 'my_publisher' */ int rc = zmq_connect(socket, "inproc://my_publisher"); assert(rc == 0); /* Connect it to the host server001, port 5555 using a TCP transport */ rc = zmq_connect(socket, "tcp://server001:5555"); assert(rc == 0);See Also
zmq_bind(3)zmq_socket(3)zmq(7)Authors
This page was written by the 0MQ community. To make a change please read the 0MQ Contribution Policy at m[blue]
http://www.zeromq.org/docs:contributingm[].
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