SYNOPSIS
#include <nng/nng.h>
#include <nng/protocol/survey0/survey.h>
DESCRIPTION
The surveyor protocol is one half of a survey pattern. In this pattern, a surveyor sends a survey, which is broadcast to all peer respondents. The respondents then have a chance to reply (but are not obliged to reply). The survey itself is a timed event, so that responses received after the survey has finished are discarded.
This protocol is useful in solving voting problems, such as leader election in cluster configurations, as well as certain kinds of service discovery problems. |
The surveyor protocol is the surveyor side, and the respondent protocol is the respondent side.
Socket Operations
The nng_surveyor0_open()
functions create a surveyor socket.
This socket may be used to send messages (surveys), and then to receive replies.
A reply can only be received after sending a survey.
A surveyor can normally expect to receive at most one reply from each responder.
(Messages can be duplicated in some topologies,
so there is no guarantee of this.)
Attempts to receive on a socket with no outstanding survey will result
in NNG_ESTATE
.
If the survey times out while the surveyor is waiting
for replies, then the result will be NNG_ETIMEDOUT
.
Only one survey can be outstanding at a time; sending another survey will cancel the prior one, and any responses from respondents from the prior survey that arrive after this will be discarded.
Raw mode sockets ignore all these restrictions.
Context Operations
This protocol supports the creation of contexts for concurrent
use cases using nng_ctx_open()
.
Each context can initiate its own surveys, and it will receive only responses to its own outstanding surveys. Other contexts on the same socket may have overlapping surveys operating at the same time.
Each of these may have their own timeouts established with
NNG_OPT_SURVEYOR_SURVEYTIME
.
Additionally, sending a survey on a context will only cancel an outstanding survey on the same context.
Due to the best-effort nature of this protocol, if too may contexts are attempting to perform surveys simultaneously, it is possible for either individual outgoing surveys or incoming responses to be lost. |
Protocol Versions
Only version 0 of this protocol is supported. (At the time of writing, no other versions of this protocol have been defined. An earlier and incompatible version of the protocol was used in older pre-releases of nanomsg, but was not released in any production version.)
Protocol Options
The following protocol-specific options is available.
NNG_OPT_SURVEYOR_SURVEYTIME
-
(
nng_duration
) Duration of surveys. When a new survey is started, a timer of this duration is also started. Any responses arriving this time will be discarded. Attempts to receive after the timer expires with no other surveys started will result inNNG_ESTATE
. Attempts to receive when this timer expires will result inNNG_ETIMEDOUT
.
Protocol Headers
This form uses a “stack” of 32-bit big-endian identifiers. There must be at least one identifier, the survey ID, which will be the last element in the array, and must have the most significant bit set.
There may be additional peer IDs preceding the survey ID. These will be distinguishable from the survey ID by having their most significant bit clear.
When a survey message is received by a forwarding node (see
nng_device()
), the forwarding node prepends a
32-bit peer ID (which must have the most significant bit clear),
which is the forwarder’s way of identifying the directly connected
peer from which it received the message.
(This peer ID, except for the
most significant bit, has meaning only to the forwarding node itself.)
It may help to think of prepending a peer ID as “pushing” a peer ID onto the front of the stack of headers for the message. (It will use the peer ID it popped from the front to determine the next intermediate destination for the response.)
When a response message is created, it is created using the same headers that the survey contained.
A forwarding node can “pop” the peer ID it originally pushed on the message, stripping it from the front of the message as it does so.
When the response finally arrives back at the initiating surveyor, it should have only a single element in the message, which will be the survey ID it originally used for the request.