NAME
Net::STOMP::Client - STOMP object oriented client module
SYNOPSIS
#
# simple producer
#
use Net::STOMP::Client;
$stomp = Net::STOMP::Client->new(host => "127.0.0.1", port => 61613);
$stomp->connect(login => "guest", passcode => "guest");
$stomp->send(destination => "/queue/test", body => "hello world!");
$stomp->disconnect();
#
# consumer with client side acknowledgment
#
use Net::STOMP::Client;
$stomp = Net::STOMP::Client->new(host => "127.0.0.1", port => 61613);
$stomp->connect(login => "guest", passcode => "guest");
# declare a callback to be called for each received message frame
$stomp->message_callback(sub {
my($self, $frame) = @_;
$self->ack(frame => $frame);
printf("received: %s\n", $frame->body());
return($self);
});
# subscribe to the given queue
$stomp->subscribe(
destination => "/queue/test",
id => "testsub", # required in STOMP 1.1
ack => "client", # client side acknowledgment
);
# wait for a specified message frame
$stomp->wait_for_frames(callback => sub {
my($self, $frame) = @_;
if ($frame->command() eq "MESSAGE") {
# stop waiting for new frames if body is "quit"
return(1) if $frame->body() eq "quit";
}
# continue to wait for more frames
return(0);
});
$stomp->unsubscribe(id => "testsub");
$stomp->disconnect();
DESCRIPTION
This module provides an object oriented client interface to interact with servers supporting STOMP (Streaming Text Orientated Messaging Protocol). It supports the major features of modern messaging brokers: SSL, asynchronous I/O, receipts and transactions.
CONSTRUCTOR
The new() method can be used to create a Net::STOMP::Client object that will later be used to interact with a server. The following attributes are supported:
accept_version
-
the STOMP version to use (string) or versions to use (reference to a list of strings); this defaults to the list of all supported versions
version
-
this attribute is obsolete and should not be used anymore, use
accept_version
instead; it is left here only to provide backward compatibility with Net::STOMP::Client 1.x uri
-
the Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) specifying where the STOMP service is and how to connect to it, this can be for instance
tcp://msg01:6163
or something more complex, see Net::STOMP::Client::Connection for more information host
-
the server name or IP address
port
-
the port number of the STOMP service
sockopts
-
arbitrary socket options (as a hash reference) that will be passed to IO::Socket::INET->new() or IO::Socket::SSL->new()
client_heart_beat
-
the desired client-side heart-beat setting, see Net::STOMP::Client::HeartBeat for more information
server_heart_beat
-
the desired server-side heart-beat setting, see Net::STOMP::Client::HeartBeat for more information
debug
-
the debugging flags for this object, see the "DEBUGGING" section for more information
timeout
-
the maximum time (in seconds) for various operations, see the "TIMEOUTS" section for more information
Upon object creation, a TCP connection is made to the server but no data (i.e. STOMP frame) is exchanged.
DEBUGGING
Net::STOMP::Client uses No::Worries::Log's log_debug() to log debugging information. In addition, to avoid useless data massaging, it also uses a debug string to specify what will be logged using log_debug().
The debug string should contain a list of words describing what to log. For instance, "io" logs I/O information while "io connection" logs both I/O and connection information.
Here are the supported debug words that can be used:
all
-
everything
api
-
high-level API calls
body
-
frame bodies
command
-
frame commands
connection
-
connection establishment
header
-
frame headers
io
-
I/O as bytes sent/received
To enable debugging, you must first configure No::Worries::Log so that it indeed reports debugging messages. This can be done with something like:
log_filter("debug");
or, to enable logging only from Net::STOMP::Client modules:
log_filter("debug caller=~^Net::STOMP::Client");
See the No::Worries::Log documentation for more information.
Then, you have to tell Net::STOMP::Client to indeed log what you want to see. This can be done globally for all connections by setting the global variable $Net::STOMP::Client::Debug:
$Net::STOMP::Client::Debug = "connection api";
or per connection via the new() method:
$stomp = Net::STOMP::Client->new(
uri => "stomp://mybroker:6163",
debug => "connection api",
);
TIMEOUTS
By default, when sending STOMP frames, the module waits until the frame indeed has been sent (from the socket point of view). In case the server is stuck or unusable, the module can therefore hang.
When creating the Net::STOMP::Client object, you can pass a timeout
attribute to better control how certain operations handle timeouts.
This attribute should contain a reference to hash with the following keys:
- connect
-
TCP-level timeout that will be given to the underlying IO::Socket::INET or IO::Socket::SSL object (default: none)
- connected
-
timeout used while waiting for the initial
CONNECTED
frame from the broker (default: 10) - disconnect
-
timeout specifying how long the disconnect() method should wait for a
RECEIPT
frame back in case theDISCONNECT
frame contained a receipt (default: 10) - receive
-
timeout used while trying to receive any frame (default: none)
- send
-
timeout used while trying to send any frame (default: none)
All values are in seconds. No timeout means wait until the operation succeeds.
As a shortcut, the timeout
attribute can also be a scalar. In this case, only the connect
and connected
operations use this value.
STOMP METHODS
With a Net::STOMP::Client object, the following methods can be used to interact with the server. They match one-to-one the different commands that a client frame can hold:
- connect()
-
connect to server
- disconnect()
-
disconnect from server
- subscribe()
-
subscribe to something
- unsubscribe()
-
unsubscribe from something
- send()
-
send a message somewhere
- ack()
-
acknowledge the reception of a message
- nack()
-
acknowledge the rejection of a message (STOMP >=1.1 only)
- begin()
-
begin/start a transaction
- commit()
-
commit a transaction
- abort()
-
abort/rollback a transaction
All these methods can receive options that will be passed directly as frame headers. For instance:
$stomp->subscribe(
destination => "/queue/test",
id => "testsub",
ack => "client",
);
Some methods also support additional options:
- send()
-
body
orbody_reference
: holds the body or body reference of the message to be sent - ack()
-
frame
: holds theMESSAGE
frame object to ack - nack()
-
frame
: holds theMESSAGE
frame object to nack
Finally, all methods support debug
and timeout
options that will be given to the send_frame() method called internally to send the crafted frame.
OTHER METHODS
In addition to the STOMP methods, the following ones are also available:
- new(OPTIONS)
-
return a new Net::STOMP::Client object (constructor)
- peer()
-
return a Net::STOMP::Client::Peer object containing information about the connected STOMP server
- socket()
-
return the file handle of the socket connecting the client and the server
- server()
-
return the server header seen on the
CONNECTED
frame (if any) - session()
-
return the session identifier if connected or false otherwise
- uuid()
-
return a universal pseudo-unique identifier to be used for instance in receipts and transactions
- wait_for_frames()
-
wait for frames coming from the server, see the next section for more information
- noop([timeout => TIMEOUT])
-
send an empty/noop frame i.e. a single newline byte, using send_frame() underneath
CALLBACKS
Since STOMP is asynchronous (for instance, MESSAGE
frames could be sent by the server at any time), Net::STOMP::Client uses callbacks to handle frames. There are in fact two levels of callbacks.
First, there are per-command callbacks that will be called each time a frame is handled (via the internal dispatch_frame() method). Net::STOMP::Client implements default callbacks that should be sufficient for all frames except MESSAGE
frames, which should really be handled by the coder. These callbacks should return undef on error, something else on success.
Here is an example with a callback counting the messages received:
$stomp->message_callback(sub {
my($self, $frame) = @_;
$MessageCount++;
return($self);
});
Here are the methods that can be used to get or set these per-command callbacks:
- connected_callback([SUBREF])
- error_callback([SUBREF])
- message_callback([SUBREF])
- receipt_callback([SUBREF])
These callbacks are somehow global and it is good practice not to change them during a session. If you do not need a global message callback, you can supply the dummy:
$stomp->message_callback(sub { return(1) });
Then, the wait_for_frames() method takes an optional callback argument holding some code to be called for each received frame, after the per-command callback has been called. This can be seen as a local callback, only valid for the call to wait_for_frames(). This callback must return undef on error, false if more frames are expected or true if wait_for_frames() can now stop waiting for new frames and return.
Here are all the options that can be given to wait_for_frames():
- callback
-
code to be called for each received frame (see above)
- timeout
-
time to wait before giving up, undef means wait forever, this is the default
- once
-
wait only for one frame, within the given timeout
The return value of wait_for_frames() can be: false if no suitable frame has been received, the received frame if there is no user callback or the user callback return value otherwise.
TRANSACTIONS
Here is an example using transactions:
# create a unique transaction id
$tid = $stomp->uuid();
# begin the transaction
$stomp->begin(transaction => $tid);
# send two messages as part of this transaction
$stomp->send(
destination => "/queue/test1",
body => "message 1",
transaction => $tid,
);
$stomp->send(
destination => "/queue/test2",
body => "message 2",
transaction => $tid,
);
# commit the transaction
$stomp->commit(transaction => $tid);
LOW-LEVEL API
It should be enough to use the high-level API and use, for instance, the send() method to create a MESSAGE
frame and send it in one go.
If you need lower level interaction, you can manipulate frames with the Net::STOMP::Client::Frame module.
You can also use:
- $stomp->dispatch_frame(FRAME, [OPTIONS])
-
dispatch one received frame by calling the appropriate callback; supported options:
debug
- $stomp->send_frame(FRAME, [OPTIONS])
-
try to send the given frame object; supported options:
timeout
anddebug
- $stomp->queue_frame(FRAME, [OPTIONS])
-
add the given frame to the outgoing buffer queue; supported options:
debug
- $stomp->send_data([OPTIONS])
-
send all the queued data; supported options:
timeout
anddebug
- $stomp->receive_frame([OPTIONS])
-
try to receive a frame; supported options:
timeout
anddebug
- $stomp->receive_data([OPTIONS])
-
try to receive data (this data will be appended to the incoming buffer); supported options:
timeout
anddebug
- $stomp->outgoing_buffer_length()
-
return the length (in bytes) of the outgoing buffer
- $stomp->incoming_buffer_reference()
-
return a reference to the incoming buffer
In these methods, the timeout
option can either be undef
(meaning block until it's done) or 0
(meaning do not block at all) or a positive number (meaning block at most this number of seconds).
COMPATIBILITY
This module has been successfully tested against ActiveMQ, Apollo, HornetQ and RabbitMQ brokers.
See Net::STOMP::Client::Version for the list of supported STOMP protocol versions.
SEE ALSO
Net::STOMP::Client::Connection, Net::STOMP::Client::Frame, Net::STOMP::Client::HeartBeat, Net::STOMP::Client::Peer, Net::STOMP::Client::Receipt, Net::STOMP::Client::Tutorial, Net::STOMP::Client::Version, No::Worries::Log.
AUTHOR
Lionel Cons http://cern.ch/lionel.cons
Copyright CERN 2010-2012