[zeromq-dev] Fundamental question on ZMQ. How to determine message fail/success without HWM-arking?

artemv zmq artemv.zmq at gmail.com
Fri Dec 6 14:02:25 CET 2013


2Matt:

>> Sending a message may take some time (connection latency, etc) so how
long do you think it will take to send the message before you assume it has
been sent or not?
Sure thing -- I can go with some reasonable timeout specified via
properties/cmdline. Not a problem.

>> If you want send() to return false
The only way I found ZMQ can give me false on .send()  -- is to set hwm=1
 and send two messages everytime:

--send_dummy_scout_msg-->
--send_bet_msg-->
--send_dummy_scout_msg-->
-- X

Got idea?  If "dummy_scout"  stucked in a queue, then "bet_msg" will not be
sent , so .send() will return me "false". Pretty stupid... Not sure I can
seriously explain this to chief architects :)   Is there other way?



2013/12/6 Diego Duclos <diego.duclos at palmstonegames.com>

> If ALL you need is to know is "has message left NIC on sending process or
> not", there is a socket option for that. It's called
> ZMQ_ROUTER_MANDATORY.
>
>
> On Fri, Dec 6, 2013 at 1:07 PM, Matt Connolly <matt.connolly at me.com>wrote:
>
>> Could you use the socket monitoring to check the connected state of the
>> dealer socket?
>>
>> Sending a message may take some time (connection latency, etc) so how
>> long do you think it will take to send the message before you assume it has
>> been sent or not?
>>
>> If you want send() to return false, you would need it to be a blocking
>> synchronous call which against the idea of queuing messages to be sent (as
>> far as I understand)
>>
>> Good luck
>>
>> Cheers,
>> Matt.
>>
>> On 6 Dec 2013, at 9:19 pm, artemv zmq <artemv.zmq at gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> Sorry for confusion.
>>
>> When I said out-of-control -- I meant they do have ZMQ but they may have
>> different release cycle and QoS. It's just a service on ZMQ, on a ROUTER.
>>
>> Our application is aimed to take a message, get its headers, decide on
>> what service ROUTER to send  and that's it. W/o waiting for reply.
>> Essentially we are a DEALER.
>> Replies are important, but as long as they coming back. If they not. Not
>> a problem. Client application (iPhone game)  by itself  checking replies
>> and correlation,
>> and keep watching: "ahha, I didn't receive ack for betting.  hmmm. Let's
>> try again".  Now it's more clear?
>>
>> I really don't need PUB/SUB. I need DEALER/ROUTER. Here, in my company,
>> the only biggest concern so far with ZMQ -- misleading behaviour:
>> when .send()  returns "true"  that should mean that message "sent",
>> whatever that means:   left our PID, left our NIC and so on, we have to
>> guarantee that message is not on us.
>> I know what's PUB/SUB. And again, telling you that it's not suitable. The
>> problem statement is simple:
>>
>> - don't use HWM for DEALER/ROUTER (prohibit message queueing).
>> - raise immediately if you can't .send()  (don't collect in internal
>> queue)
>>
>>
>> Is it possible?
>>
>>
>> BR
>> -artemv
>>
>>
>> 2013/12/6 Justin Cook <jhcook at gmail.com>
>>
>>> Ok, this is confusing. If you are sending a message to a service that is
>>> out of your control, either they use 0MQ or not. I assume they do not. If
>>> that’s the case, it should not be a part of the use case.
>>>
>>> You say you need to know if a message has been received. But, then you
>>> say no ACKs or timeouts. I’m even more confused. If you are making a
>>> request to a foreign service over — I assume — HTTP which uses TCP, you are
>>> very well getting HTTP return codes with the TCP session doing all the hard
>>> work. You already have what you are looking for there.
>>>
>>> As far as your system — going out to mobile devices — using PUB/SUB and
>>> ACKing messages, this is something you will have to do in another channel
>>> with 0MQ. Multicast uses UDP; because, it is not feasible to send TCP ACKs
>>> from every single subscriber. It’s simply not scalable.
>>>
>>> You very well may need to develop your own application protocol to send
>>> ACKs or the publisher retransmits. I highly suggest you have a look at this:
>>>
>>>
>>> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/12956685/what-are-the-retransmission-rules-for-tcp
>>>
>>> It may be something you will want to mimic in your implementation.
>>> Someone else has already suggested a timeout for resending unacknowledged
>>> messages. As you can see, this is one of the ways TCP retransmissions work.
>>> You also may have corrupt data that fail a CRC or hash.
>>>
>>> I will finish by saying that if you do have a PUB/SUB design using
>>> another channel for unicast communication, you will need to be very aware
>>> of scalability issues. You may need to use a lockstep pattern such as
>>> REQ/REP if you need guarantee of communication.
>>>
>>> --
>>> Justin Cook
>>>
>>>
>>> On Friday, 6 December 2013 at 09:46, artemv zmq wrote:
>>>
>>> > Thanks for heads up.
>>> >
>>> > 2crocket:
>>> > No acks. No timeouts. Nothing should be kept. Messages should just
>>> flowing back and forth. But for every message we have to answer a question:
>>> "has message left NIC on sending process or not". Let me give example with
>>> betting: game on iPhone sending us a message "make-a-bet", then we send
>>> this to BettingService which isn't in our control,
>>> > so all we have to guarantee -- "make-a-bet" message has left our NIC
>>> and been "sent" to BettingService. If "make-a-bet" has been droped on a
>>> network - ok, if BettingService itself drops it - ok.
>>> >
>>> > Back to HWM. Let's consider that we send to unavaliable peer.
>>> > hwm=1. It means you can send 1 message "blindly" and .send() function
>>> returns success. Of course sending second time will fail. But... the trick
>>> is -- we need answer first time.
>>> > hwm=0. It means you can send any number of messages and .send()
>>> function _always_ returns success :(( Again, isn't this a bug?
>>> >
>>> >
>>> > So let me re-phrase the original question -- how to fail at .send()
>>> function in ZMQ?
>>> >
>>> >
>>> > BR
>>> > -artemv
>>> >
>>> >
>>> >
>>> > 2013/12/6 crocket <crockabiscuit at gmail.com (mailto:
>>> crockabiscuit at gmail.com)>
>>> > > Why don't you set a timeout for asynchronous ACKs?
>>> > > You receive ACKs asynchronously and keep associated messages until
>>> ACKs come or a timeout occurs.
>>> > > A timeout of 20 seconds is a reasonable estimate.
>>> > > After a timeout, if a message doesn't have a corresponding ACK, it
>>> is determined that the message wasn't delievered, and the message is sent
>>> again or discarded.
>>> > >
>>> > >
>>> > >
>>> > > On Fri, Dec 6, 2013 at 3:19 AM, artemv zmq <artemv.zmq at gmail.com(mailto:
>>> artemv.zmq at gmail.com)> wrote:
>>> > > > Hi,
>>> > > >
>>> > > > My name is Artem. I stay with ZMQ (on java) a year or so. Got a
>>> cool question for you, ppl!
>>> > > >
>>> > > > Here's my story. Recently I entered a new company (gambling
>>> games), after working few weeks, after getting accustomed with a code, I
>>> found that they are building
>>> very-unnecessarly-complex-distibuted-application ... I was unhappy few
>>> days, because couldn't even imagine how to support ALL THAT CRAP in an
>>> upcoming future. So I suggested ZMQ hoping that ZMQ will "open eyes" to
>>> others. But, as a feedback I got one big fundamental concern (from chief
>>> architects):
>>> > > >
>>> > > > - we have to know only one thing about every message: it has been
>>> delivered onto remote peer or not
>>> > > >
>>> > > > And few additional comments:
>>> > > > -we don't care if message will get lost on a network
>>> > > > - we don't need guarantee deliveri
>>> > > > - no RPC / everything is asynchronous
>>> > > > - we don't need HWM
>>> > > >
>>> > > >
>>> > > > So I'm here, because I really can't address this question: "for
>>> every single message how to know : whether it was delivered or not" .
>>> > > >
>>> > > > Thanks in advance. And appreciate for your help.
>>> > > > _______________________________________________
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>>> > >
>>> > >
>>> > >
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