send {nanonext} | R Documentation |
Send
Description
Send data over a connection (Socket, Context or Stream).
Usage
send(con, data, mode = c("serial", "raw", "next"), block = NULL)
Arguments
con |
a Socket, Context or Stream. |
data |
an object (a vector, if mode = ‘raw’). |
mode |
[default 'serial'] character value or integer equivalent - one of ‘serial’ (1L) to send serialised R objects, ‘raw’ (2L) to send atomic vectors of any type as a raw byte vector, or ‘next’ (3L) - see ‘Send Modes’ section below. For Streams, ‘raw’ is the only option and this argument is ignored. |
block |
[default NULL] which applies the connection default (see section ‘Blocking’ below). Specify logical TRUE to block until successful or FALSE to return immediately even if unsuccessful (e.g. if no connection is available), or else an integer value specifying the maximum time to block in milliseconds, after which the operation will time out. |
Value
Integer exit code (zero on success).
Blocking
For Sockets and Contexts: the default behaviour is non-blocking with
block = FALSE
. This will return immediately with an error if the
message could not be queued for sending. Certain protocol / transport
combinations may limit the number of messages that can be queued if they
have yet to be received.
For Streams: the default behaviour is blocking with block = TRUE
.
This will wait until the send has completed. Set a timeout to ensure that
the function returns under all scenarios. As the underlying
implementation uses an asynchronous send with a wait, it is recommended
to set a small positive value for block
rather than FALSE.
Send Modes
The default mode ‘serial’ sends serialised R objects to ensure perfect reproducibility within R. When receiving, the corresponding mode ‘serial’ should be used.
Mode ‘raw’ sends atomic vectors of any type as a raw byte vector, and must be used when interfacing with external applications or raw system sockets, where R serialization is not in use. When receiving, the mode corresponding to the vector sent should be used.
Mode ‘next’ sends serialised R objects, with native extensions
enabled by next_config
. This configures custom
serialization and unserialization functions for reference objects. When
receiving, mode ‘serial’ should be used as ‘next’ sends are
fully compatible.
See Also
send_aio
for asynchronous send.
Examples
pub <- socket("pub", dial = "inproc://nanonext")
send(pub, data.frame(a = 1, b = 2))
send(pub, c(10.1, 20.2, 30.3), mode = "raw", block = 100)
close(pub)
req <- socket("req", listen = "inproc://nanonext")
rep <- socket("rep", dial = "inproc://nanonext")
ctx <- context(req)
send(ctx, data.frame(a = 1, b = 2), block = 100)
msg <- recv_aio(rep, timeout = 100)
send(ctx, c(1.1, 2.2, 3.3), mode = "raw", block = 100)
close(req)
close(rep)