| .if false |
| ================================================================================== |
| Copyright (c) 2019 Nokia |
| Copyright (c) 2018-2019 AT&T Intellectual Property. |
| |
| Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); |
| you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. |
| You may obtain a copy of the License at |
| |
| http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 |
| |
| Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software |
| distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, |
| WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. |
| See the License for the specific language governing permissions and |
| limitations under the License. |
| ================================================================================== |
| .fi |
| .if false |
| Mnemonic rmr.7.xfm |
| Abstract The manual page for the whole RMr library |
| Author E. Scott Daniels |
| Date 29 January 2019 |
| .fi |
| |
| .gv e LIB lib |
| .im &{lib}/man/setup.im |
| |
| &line_len(6i) |
| |
| &h1(RMr Library) |
| &h2(NAME) |
| RMr -- Ric Message Router Library |
| |
| &h2(DESCRIPTION) |
| RMr is a library which provides a user application with the ability |
| to send and receive messages to/from other RMr based applications |
| without having to understand the underlying messaging transport environment (e.g. Nanomsg) |
| and without needing to know which other endpoint applications are currently |
| available and accepting messages. |
| To do this, RMr depends on a routing table generated by an external source. |
| This table is used to determine the destination endpoint of each message sent by mapping the |
| message type T (supplied by the user application) to an endpoint entry. |
| Once determined, the message is sent directly to the endpoint. |
| The user application is unaware of which endpoint actually receives the |
| message, and in some cases whether that message was sent to multiple |
| applications. |
| |
| &space |
| RMr functions do provide for the ability to respond to the specific source |
| instance of a message allowing for either a request response, or call |
| response relationship when needed. |
| |
| |
| &h3(The Route Table) |
| The library is supplied with a route table which maps message numbers to |
| endpoint groups such that each time a message of type T is sent, the message |
| is delivered to one member of each group associated with T. |
| For example, message type 2 might route to two different groups where |
| group A consists of worker1 and worker2, while group B consists only of |
| logger1. |
| |
| &space |
| It is the responsibility of the route table generator to know which endpoints |
| belong to which groups, and which groups accept which message types. |
| Once understood, the route table generator publishes a table that is ingested |
| by RMr and used for mapping messages to end points. |
| |
| &h3(Environment) |
| To enable configuration of the library behaviour outside of direct user application |
| control, RMr supports a number of environment variables which provide information |
| to the library. |
| The following is a list of the various environment variables, what they control |
| and the defaults which RMr uses if undefined. |
| |
| &beg_dlist(.75i : ^&bold_font ) |
| &di(RMR_BIND_IF) This provides the interface that RMr will bind listen ports to allowing |
| for a single interface to be used rather than listening across all interfaces. |
| This should be the IP address assigned to the interface that RMr should listen |
| on, and if not defined RMr will listen on all interfaces. |
| |
| &di(RMR_RTG_SVC) RMr opens a TCP listen socket using the port defined by this |
| environment variable and expects that the route table generator process |
| will connect to this port. |
| If not supplied the port 4561 is used. |
| |
| &di(RMR_RTG_ISRAW) Is set to 1 if the route table generator is sending "plain" messages |
| (not using RMr to send messages, 0 if the rtg is using RMr to send. The default |
| is 1 as we don't expect the rtg to use RMr. |
| |
| &di(RMR_SEED_RT) This is used to supply a static route table which can be used for |
| debugging, testing, or if no route table generator process is being used to |
| supply the route table. |
| If not defined, no static table is used and RMr will not report &ital(ready) |
| until a table is received. |
| &end_dlist |
| |
| |
| &h2(SEE ALSO ) |
| .ju off |
| rmr_alloc_msg(3), |
| rmr_tralloc_msg(3), |
| rmr_call(3), |
| rmr_free_msg(3), |
| rmr_init(3), |
| rmr_init_trace(3), |
| rmr_get_src(3), |
| rmr_get_srcip(3), |
| rmr_get_trace(3), |
| rmr_get_trlen(3), |
| rmr_payload_size(3), |
| rmr_rcv_msg(3), |
| rmr_rcv_specific(3), |
| rmr_rts_msg(3), |
| rmr_ready(3), |
| rmr_fib(3), |
| rmr_has_str(3), |
| rmr_tokenise(3), |
| rmr_mk_ring(3), |
| rmr_ring_free(3), |
| rmr_set_trace(3), |
| rmr_torcv_msg(3), |
| rmr_wh_open(3), |
| rmr_wh_send_msg(3) |
| .ju on |
| |
| |
| .qu |