% posix-mq-rb(1) posix-mq-rb User Manual % Ruby POSIX MQ hackers % Jan 1, 2010 # NAME posix-mq-rb - command-line interface for POSIX message queues # SYNOPSIS MQUEUE=/name posix-mq-rb COMMAND [*OPTIONS*] [*ARGUMENTS*] # DESCRIPTION A command-line interface for manipulating POSIX message queues. It is useful for testing and debugging applications using POSIX message queues. # COMMANDS *create* - create a new message queue *attr* - output attributes of the message queue *send* - insert a message into the queue from stdin or the command-line *receive* - take a message from the queue and outputs it to stdout *wait* - sleep until a message is available in the queue *unlink* - unlink the message queue # CREATE USAGE The *create* command accepts the following options: -x, \--exclusive : This causes queue creation to fail if the queue exists. -m, \--mode MODE : The MODE to open the file under, the actual mode of the queue will be AND-ed with the current umask (like open(2)). -c, \--maxmsg COUNT : The maximum messages in the queue. The default and limit of this value is system-dependent. This must be specified if \--msgsize is also specified. -s, \--msgsize BYTES : The maximum size of an individual message. The default and limit of this value is system-dependent. This must be specified if \--maxmsg is also specified. # ATTR USAGE The *attr* command takes no special options nor command-line arguments. The output format of this command is suitable for "eval" in shell scripts. Sample output is below: flags=0 maxmsg=10 msgsize=8192 curmsgs=3 See mq_getattr(3) for information on the meaning of the fields. # SEND USAGE The *send* command will read a message from standard input if no command-line arguments are given. If command-line arguments are given, each argument is considered its own message and will be inserted into the queue separately. The following command-line arguments are accepted: -n, \--nonblock : Exit immediately with error if the message queue is full. Normally posix-mq-rb(1) will block until the queue is writable or interrupted. This may not be used in conjunction with \--timeout . -t, \--timeout SECONDS : Timeout and exit with error after SECONDS if the message queue is full. This may not be used in conjunction with \--nonblock. -p, \--priority PRIORITY : Specify an integer PRIORITY, this value should be 0 through 31 (inclusive) for portability across POSIX-compliant systems. The default priority is 0. # RECEIVE USAGE The *receive* command will output message to standard output. It will read a message from standard input if no command-line arguments are given. If command-line arguments are given, each argument is considered its own message and will be inserted into the queue separately. The following command-line arguments are accepted: -n, \--nonblock : Exit immediately with error if the message queue is empty. Normally posix-mq-rb(1) will block until the queue is readable or interrupted. This may not be used in conjunction with \--timeout . -t, \--timeout SECONDS : Timeout and exit with error after SECONDS if the message queue is empty. This may not be used in conjunction with \--nonblock. -p, \--priority : Output the priority of the received message to stderr in the following format: priority=3 The priority is an unsigned integer. # WAIT USAGE The *wait* command will cause posix-mq-rb(1) to sleep until a message is available in the queue. Only one process may wait on an empty queue, posix-mq-rb(1) will exit with an error if there is another waiting process. It takes no arguments and accepts the following options: -t, \--timeout SECONDS : Timeout and exit with error after SECONDS if the message queue is empty. # UNLINK USAGE The *unlink* command prevents further opening and use of the current queue. Existing processes with the queue open may continue to operate on the queue indefinitely. If a new queue is created with the same name, the created queue is a different queue from the unlinked queue. See mq_unlink(3) for more information. # GENERAL OPTIONS -q : Do not show warning/error messages, suitable for scripting. \-h, \--help : Show summary usage # ENVIRONMENT All commands rely on the MQUEUE environment variable. The value of MQUEUE should always be prefixed with a slash ("/") for portability. # DIAGNOSTICS Exit status is normally 0. Exit status is 2 if a timeout occurs, 1 for all other errors. Under FreeBSD, the mq_* system calls are not available unless you load the mqueuefs(5) kernel module: kldload mqueuefs # SEE ALSO * [mq_overview(7)][1] * [mqueuefs(5)][2] [1]: http://kernel.org/doc/man-pages/online/pages/man7/mq_overview.7.html [2]: http://freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=mqueuefs