This C++ binding is a 'high-level' library that hides most of the c-style interface core 0mq provides. It consists of a number of header and source files all residing in the zmq directory, these files are provided under the MIT license (see LICENCE for details).
They can either be included directly into any 0mq using project or used as a library. A really basic Makefile is provided for this purpose and will generate both shared and static libraries.
There is a number of unittests covering the code but in no way should the tests be considered complete.
Most of the code is now commented with doxygen style tags, and a basic configuration file to generate them is in the root directory.
To build the documentation with doxygen then use;
doxygen zmqpp.doxygen.conf
And the resulting html or latex docs will be in the docs/html or docs/latex directories.
There is a Makefile provided which will build, test and install the binding on a GNU Linux system. I have not tested it on anything other than Ubuntu 11.04 and Centos 5.5.
The install process will only install headers and the shared object to the system. The archive will remain in the build directory.
The tests for the binding (make check) require the boost unittest framework to have been installed however these do not need to be built or run to install the library.
ZeroMQ 2.2.x or later C++0x compliant compiler (g++ 4.6.x, g++ 4.4.x with compatability.hpp)
Installation can be done by the standard make && make install. If the boost unittest framework is install check and installcheck can be run for sanity checking.
make
make check
sudo make install
make installcheck
The most commonly useful overrides are setting CXX, to change the compiler used, and PREFIX to change install location. The CXX prefix should be used on all targets as the compiler version is used in the build path. PREFIX is only relevant for the install target.
The makefile defaults to a production ready build, however a debug version can be build by passing CONFIG=debug to the make command. In debug mode there is less optimisations and a number of sanity check assert statements. If you are not using the installed library the sanity check effect is governed by the defining of NDEBUG.
The make file can also build and install a client tool called zmqpp. To build this tool add the step;
make client
Before the install stage. The install target will install the client to the binaries directory if it has been built.
The client is a command line tool that can be used to listen or send to 0mq sockets. Its very basic so don't expect anything clever. zmqpp --help will list details about the five possible flags it can take;
Usage: zmqpp [options] SOCKETTYPE ENDPOINT
0mq command line client tool.
SOCKETTYPE is one of the supported 0mq socket types.
pub, pull, push, rep, req, sub
ENDPOINT is any valid 0mq endpoint.
Connection Options:
-b [ --bind ] arg bind to specified endpoint
-c [ --connect ] arg connect to specified endpoint
-m [ --multipart ] enable multipart message sending
Miscellaneous Options:
--version display version
--help show this help page
Multiple uses of -c or -b are allowed to connect or bind to multiple endpoints, if neither is specified the connect is assumed for endpoint ENDPOINT. Multipart messages are for sending only, received messages always support multiple parts.
For send capable sockets entering text on standard in and pressing return will send, if multipart is enabled then the message is only sent on an empty return otherwise message parts are generated.