// :vim ts=4 sw=4 noet: /* Mnemonic: rmr_rcvr.c Abstract: This is a very simple receiver that does nothing but listen for messages and write stats every so often to the tty. Define these environment variables to have some control: RMR_SEED_RT -- path to the static routing table RMR_RTG_SVC -- host:port of the route table generator Parms: Two positional parameters are recognised on the command line: [port [stats-freq]] where port is the port number to listen on and the stats frequency is the number of messages received which causes stats to be generated. If not supplied the listen port default is 4560 and the stats frequency is every 10 messages. Date: 1 April 2019 Author: E. Scott Daniels */ #include #include #include #include #include #include int main( int argc, char** argv ) { void* mrc; // msg router context long long total = 0; rmr_mbuf_t* msg = NULL; // message received int stat_freq = 10; // write stats after reciving this many messages int i; char* listen_port; long long count = 0; long long bad = 0; long long empty = 0; if( argc > 1 ) { listen_port = argv[1]; } if( argc > 2 ) { stat_freq = atoi( argv[2] ); } fprintf( stderr, " listening on port: %s\n", listen_port ); fprintf( stderr, " stats will be reported every %d messages\n", stat_freq ); mrc = rmr_init( listen_port, RMR_MAX_RCV_BYTES, RMRFL_NONE ); // start your engines! if( mrc == NULL ) { fprintf( stderr, " ABORT: unable to initialise RMr\n" ); exit( 1 ); } while( ! rmr_ready( mrc ) ) { // wait for RMr to load a route table fprintf( stderr, " waiting for ready\n" ); sleep( 3 ); } fprintf( stderr, " rmr now shows ready\n" ); while( 1 ) { // forever; ctl-c, kill -15, etc to end msg = rmr_rcv_msg( mrc, msg ); // block until one arrives if( msg ) { if( msg->state == RMR_OK ) { count++; // messages received for stats output } else { bad++; } } else { empty++; } if( (count % stat_freq) == 0 ) { fprintf( stderr, " total msg received: %lld errors: %lld empty: %lld\n", count, bad, empty ); } } }