2 releases
0.4.1 | Sep 28, 2024 |
---|---|
0.4.0 | Sep 28, 2024 |
#25 in #publish-subscribe
1,069 downloads per month
Used in 15 crates
(2 directly)
80KB
896 lines
iceoryx2 - Zero-Copy Lock-Free IPC Purely Written In Rust
- Introduction
- Documentation
- Performance
- Getting Started
- Supported Platforms
- Language Bindings
- Commercial Support
- Thanks To All Contributors
Introduction
Welcome to iceoryx2, the efficient, and ultra-low latency inter-process communication middleware. This library is designed to provide you with fast and reliable zero-copy and lock-free inter-process communication mechanisms.
So if you want to communicate efficiently between multiple processes or applications iceoryx2 is for you. With iceoryx2, you can:
- Send huge amounts of data using a publish/subscribe, request/response (planned), pipeline (planned) or blackboard pattern (planned), making it ideal for scenarios where large datasets need to be shared.
- Exchange signals through events, enabling quick and reliable signaling between processes.
iceoryx2 is based on a service-oriented architecture (SOA) and facilitates seamless inter-process communication (IPC).
It is all about providing a seamless experience for inter-process communication, featuring versatile messaging patterns. Whether you're diving into publish-subscribe, events, or the promise of upcoming features like request-response, pipelines, and blackboard, iceoryx2 has you covered.
One of the features of iceoryx2 is its consistently low transmission latency regardless of payload size, ensuring a predictable and reliable communication experience.
iceoryx2's origins can be traced back to iceoryx. By overcoming past technical debts and refining the architecture, iceoryx2 enables the modularity we've always desired.
In the near future, iceoryx2 is poised to support at least the same feature set and platforms as iceoryx, ensuring a seamless transition and offering enhanced capabilities for your inter-process communication needs. So, if you're looking for lightning-fast, cross-platform communication that doesn't compromise on performance or modularity, iceoryx2 is your answer.
Documentation
The documentation can be found at:
language | documentation link |
---|---|
C | https://iceoryx2.readthedocs.io |
C++ | https://iceoryx2.readthedocs.io |
Rust | https://docs.rs/iceoryx2/latest/iceoryx2/ |
Performance
Comparision Of Mechanisms
Benchmark-System
- CPU: Intel i7 13700h
- OS: Linux 6.10.10-arch1-1 #1 SMP PREEMPT_DYNAMIC
- Compiler:
- rustc 1.81.0
- gcc 14.2.1 20240910
Comparision Of Architectures
Getting Started
Publish Subscribe
This minimal example showcases a publisher sending the number 1234 every second, while a subscriber efficiently receives and prints the data.
publisher.rs
use core::time::Duration;
use iceoryx2::prelude::*;
const CYCLE_TIME: Duration = Duration::from_secs(1);
fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> {
let node = NodeBuilder::new().create::<ipc::Service>()?;
let service = node.service_builder(&"My/Funk/ServiceName".try_into()?)
.publish_subscribe::<usize>()
.open_or_create()?;
let publisher = service.publisher_builder().create()?;
while let NodeEvent::Tick = node.wait(CYCLE_TIME) {
let sample = publisher.loan_uninit()?;
let sample = sample.write_payload(1234);
sample.send()?;
}
Ok(())
}
subscriber.rs
use core::time::Duration;
use iceoryx2::prelude::*;
const CYCLE_TIME: Duration = Duration::from_secs(1);
fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> {
let node = NodeBuilder::new().create::<ipc::Service>()?;
let service = node.service_builder(&"My/Funk/ServiceName".try_into()?)
.publish_subscribe::<usize>()
.open_or_create()?;
let subscriber = service.subscriber_builder().create()?;
while let NodeEvent::Tick = node.wait(CYCLE_TIME) {
while let Some(sample) = subscriber.receive()? {
println!("received: {:?}", *sample);
}
}
Ok(())
}
This example is a simplified version of the publish-subscribe example. You can execute it by opening two terminals and calling:
Terminal 1:
cargo run --example publish_subscribe_publisher
Terminal 2:
cargo run --example publish_subscribe_subscriber
Events
This minimal example showcases how push-notifications can be realized by using
services with event messaging pattern between two processes. The listener.rs
hereby waits for a notification from the notifier.rs
.
notifier.rs
use core::time::Duration;
use iceoryx2::prelude::*;
const CYCLE_TIME: Duration = Duration::from_secs(1);
fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> {
let node = NodeBuilder::new().create::<ipc::Service>()?;
let event = node.service_builder(&"MyEventName".try_into()?)
.event()
.open_or_create()?;
let notifier = event.notifier_builder().create()?;
let id = EventId::new(12);
while let NodeEvent::Tick = node.wait(CYCLE_TIME) {
notifier.notify_with_custom_event_id(id)?;
println!("Trigger event with id {:?} ...", id);
}
Ok(())
}
listener.rs
use core::time::Duration;
use iceoryx2::prelude::*;
const CYCLE_TIME: Duration = Duration::from_secs(1);
fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> {
let node = NodeBuilder::new().create::<ipc::Service>()?;
let event = node.service_builder(&"MyEventName".try_into()?)
.event()
.open_or_create()?;
let listener = event.listener_builder().create()?;
while let NodeEvent::Tick = node.wait(Duration::ZERO) {
if let Ok(Some(event_id)) = listener.timed_wait_one(CYCLE_TIME) {
println!("event was triggered with id: {:?}", event_id);
}
}
Ok(())
}
listener.rs (grabbing all events at once)
use core::time::Duration;
use iceoryx2::prelude::*;
const CYCLE_TIME: Duration = Duration::from_secs(1);
fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> {
let node = NodeBuilder::new().create::<ipc::Service>()?;
let event = node.service_builder(&"MyEventName".try_into()?)
.event()
.open_or_create()?;
let listener = event.listener_builder().create()?;
while let NodeEvent::Tick = node.wait(Duration::ZERO) {
listener.timed_wait_all(
|event_id| {
println!("event was triggered with id: {:?}", event_id);
},
CYCLE_TIME,
)?;
}
Ok(())
}
This example is a simplified version of the event example. You can execute it by opening two terminals and calling:
Terminal 1:
cargo run --example event_notifier
Terminal 2:
cargo run --example event_listener
Custom Configuration
It is possible to configure default quality of service settings, paths and file suffixes in a custom configuration file. For more details visit the configuration directory.
Supported Platforms
The support levels can be adjusted when required.
Operating System | State | Current Support Level | Target Support Level |
---|---|---|---|
Android | planned | - | tier 1 |
FreeBSD | done | tier 2 | tier 1 |
FreeRTOS | planned | - | tier 2 |
iOS | planned | - | tier 2 |
Linux (x86_64) | done | tier 2 | tier 1 |
Linux (aarch64) | done | tier 2 | tier 1 |
Linux (32-bit) | done | tier 2 | tier 1 |
Mac OS | done | tier 2 | tier 2 |
QNX | planned | - | tier 1 |
VxWorks | planned | - | tier 1 |
WatchOS | planned | - | tier 2 |
Windows | done | tier 2 | tier 2 |
- tier 1 - All safety and security features are working.
- tier 2 - Works with a restricted security and safety feature set.
- tier 3 - Work in progress. Might compile and run or not.
Language Bindings
Language | State |
---|---|
C / C++ | beta |
C# | planned |
Go | planned |
Java | planned |
Kotlin | planned |
Lua | planned |
Python | planned |
Swift | planned |
Zig | planned |
Commercial Support
info@ekxide.io |
|
Thanks To All Contributors
Christian »elfenpiff« Eltzschig |
Mathias »elBoberido« Kraus |
»orecham« |
Dependencies
~255–700KB
~17K SLoC