When Zenoh is built in release mode:
./target/release/example/<example_name>
Each example accepts the -h
or --help
option that provides a description of its arguments and their default values.
If you run the tests against the Zenoh router running in a Docker container, you need to add the
-e tcp/localhost:7447
option to your examples. That's because Docker doesn't support UDP multicast
transport, and therefore the Zenoh scouting and discovery mechanism cannot work with.
Scouts for Zenoh peers and routers available on the network.
Typical usage:
z_scout
Gets information about the Zenoh session.
Typical usage:
z_info
Puts a path/value into Zenoh. The path/value will be received by all matching subscribers, for instance the z_sub and z_storage examples.
Typical usage:
z_put
or
z_put -k demo/example/test -v 'Hello World'
Declares a key expression and a publisher. Then writes values periodically on the declared key expression. The published value will be received by all matching subscribers, for instance the z_sub and z_storage examples.
Typical usage:
z_pub
or
z_pub -k demo/example/test -v 'Hello World'
Declares a key expression and a subscriber.
The subscriber will be notified of each put
or delete
made on any key expression matching the subscriber key expression, and will print this notification.
Typical usage:
z_sub
or
z_sub -k 'demo/**'
Declares a key expression and a pull subscriber.
On each pull, the pull subscriber will be notified of the last N put
or delete
made on each key expression matching the subscriber key expression, and will print this notification.
Typical usage:
z_pull
or
z_pull -k demo/** --size 3
Sends a query message for a selector. The queryables with a matching path or selector (for instance z_queryable and z_storage) will receive this query and reply with paths/values that will be received by the receiver stream.
Typical usage:
z_get
or
z_get -s 'demo/**'
Declares a queryable function with a path. This queryable function will be triggered by each call to get with a selector that matches the path, and will return a value to the querier.
Typical usage:
z_queryable
or
z_queryable -k demo/example/queryable -v 'This is the result'
Trivial implementation of a storage in memory. This example declares a subscriber and a queryable on the same selector. The subscriber callback will store the received paths/values in a hashmap. The queryable callback will answer to queries with the paths/values stored in the hashmap and that match the queried selector.
Typical usage:
z_storage
or
z_storage -k 'demo/**'
A pub/sub example involving the shared-memory feature.
Note that on subscriber side, the same z_sub
example than for non-shared-memory example is used.
Typical Subscriber usage:
z_sub
Typical Publisher usage:
z_pub_shm
Pub/Sub throughput test. This example allows performing throughput measurements between a publisher performing put operations and a subscriber receiving notifications of those puts.
Typical Subscriber usage:
z_sub_thr
Typical Publisher usage:
z_pub_thr 1024
Pub/Sub roundtrip time test. This example allows performing roundtrip time measurements. The z_ping example performs a put operation on a first key expression, waits for a reply from the pong example on a second key expression and measures the time between the two. The pong application waits for samples on the first key expression and replies by writing back the received data on the second key expression.
Typical Pong usage:
z_pong
Typical Ping usage:
z_ping 1024
Pub/Sub throughput test involving the shared-memory feature.
This example allows performing throughput measurements between a publisher performing
put operations with the shared-memory feature and a subscriber receiving notifications
of those puts.
Note that on subscriber side, the same z_sub_thr
example than for non-shared-memory example is used.
Typical Subscriber usage:
z_sub_thr
Typical Publisher usage:
z_pub_shm_thr
Declares a liveliness token on a given key expression (group1/zenoh-rs
by default).
This token will be seen alive by the z_get_liveliness
and z_sub_liveliness
until
user explicitly drops the token by pressing 'd'
or implicitly dropped by terminating
or killing the z_liveliness
example.
Typical usage:
z_liveliness
or
z_liveliness -k 'group1/member1'
Queries all the currently alive liveliness tokens that match a given key expression
(group1/**
by default). Those tokens could be declared by the z_liveliness
example.
Typical usage:
z_get_liveliness
or
z_get_liveliness -k 'group1/**'
Subscribe to all liveliness changes (liveliness tokens getting alive or
liveliness tokens being dropped) that match a given key expression
(group1/**
by default). Those tokens could be declared by the z_liveliness
example.
Note: the z_sub_liveliness
example will not receive information about
matching liveliness tokens that were alive before it's start.
Typical usage:
z_sub_liveliness
or
z_sub_liveliness -k 'group1/**'
Show how to serialize different message types into ZBytes, and then deserialize from ZBytes to the original message types.