Well, about the inproc restriction, I have to admit that I am going to use PAIR between processes in a Python multiprocessing application (thread-like, but with processes)
If it is not possible anymore, PAIR is not so interesting. 2011/3/19 Pieter Hintjens <[email protected]>: > On Sat, Mar 19, 2011 at 9:11 AM, Martin Sustrik <[email protected]> wrote: > >>> It does seem to work. What are the bugs and unfinished areas you're >>> thinking of? >> See following issues... > > They're old issues, suggesting that part of the problem is circular. > People won't use broken code that doesn't evolve, thus no-one is using > PAIR, thus we see no use cases for it... > > Afaics all these issues can be solved by documenting (and maybe > enforcing) that PAIR should only be used for inproc work, which > at least matches documented experience of its usefulness. > > -Pieter > _______________________________________________ > zeromq-dev mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.zeromq.org/mailman/listinfo/zeromq-dev > -- Antoine Boegli software engineer & linux expert _______________________________________________ zeromq-dev mailing list [email protected] http://lists.zeromq.org/mailman/listinfo/zeromq-dev
