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Top Forums Programming Best IPC mechanism to be used Post 302597798 by rupeshkp728 on Sunday 12th of February 2012 08:17:14 AM
Old 02-12-2012
Best IPC mechanism to be used

Suppose I have 5 independent process divided in two imaginay sets:

set1set2
--------------------- 
p1p3
||
p2p4
 |
 p5

The processes inside each set communicate mutually quite often.
I mean p1 and p2 communicate mutually quite often
Similarly p3, p4 and p5 communicate mutually quite often.

But the two sets communicate less often with each other
I mean set of p1 and p2 communicate occasionally and rarely with other set of p3, p4 and p5.

Which IPC mechanism will be best to use inside each set for process in them and why?
Which IPC mechanism will be best to use for communication between the set and why?

Last edited by rupeshkp728; 02-12-2012 at 09:19 AM.. Reason: improve question
 

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IPC::Run::IO(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation					 IPC::Run::IO(3pm)

NAME
IPC::Run::IO -- I/O channels for IPC::Run. SYNOPSIS
NOT IMPLEMENTED YET ON Win32! Win32 does not allow select() on normal file descriptors; IPC::RUN::IO needs to use IPC::Run::Win32Helper to do this. use IPC::Run qw( io ); ## The sense of '>' and '<' is opposite of perl's open(), ## but agrees with IPC::Run. $io = io( "filename", '>', $recv ); $io = io( "filename", 'r', $recv ); ## Append to $recv: $io = io( "filename", '>>', $recv ); $io = io( "filename", 'ra', $recv ); $io = io( "filename", '<', $send ); $io = io( "filename", 'w', $send ); $io = io( "filename", '<<', $send ); $io = io( "filename", 'wa', $send ); ## Handles / IO objects that the caller opens: $io = io( *HANDLE, '<', $send ); $f = IO::Handle->new( ... ); # Any subclass of IO::Handle $io = io( $f, '<', $send ); require IPC::Run::IO; $io = IPC::Run::IO->new( ... ); ## Then run(), harness(), or start(): run $io, ...; ## You can, of course, use io() or IPC::Run::IO->new() as an ## argument to run(), harness, or start(): run io( ... ); DESCRIPTION
This class and module allows filehandles and filenames to be harnessed for I/O when used IPC::Run, independent of anything else IPC::Run is doing (except that errors & exceptions can affect all things that IPC::Run is doing). SUBCLASSING
INCOMPATIBLE CHANGE: due to the awkwardness introduced in ripping pseudohashes out of Perl, this class no longer uses the fields pragma. SUBROUTINES
new I think it takes >> or << along with some other data. TODO: Needs more thorough documentation. Patches welcome. filename Gets/sets the filename. Returns the value after the name change, if any. init Does initialization required before this can be run. This includes open()ing the file, if necessary, and clearing the destination scalar if necessary. open If a filename was passed in, opens it. Determines if the handle is open via fileno(). Throws an exception on error. open_pipe If this is a redirection IO object, this opens the pipe in a platform independent manner. close Closes the handle. Throws an exception on failure. fileno Returns the fileno of the handle. Throws an exception on failure. mode Returns the operator in terms of 'r', 'w', and 'a'. There is a state 'ra', unlike Perl's open(), which indicates that data read from the handle or file will be appended to the output if the output is a scalar. This is only meaningful if the output is a scalar, it has no effect if the output is a subroutine. The redirection operators can be a little confusing, so here's a reference table: > r Read from handle in to process < w Write from process out to handle >> ra Read from handle in to process, appending it to existing data if the destination is a scalar. << wa Write from process out to handle, appending to existing data if IPC::Run::IO opened a named file. op Returns the operation: '<', '>', '<<', '>>'. See "mode" if you want to spell these 'r', 'w', etc. binmode Sets/gets whether this pipe is in binmode or not. No effect off of Win32 OSs, of course, and on Win32, no effect after the harness is start()ed. dir Returns the first character of $self->op. This is either "<" or ">". poll TODO: Needs confirmation that this is correct. Was previously undocumented. I believe this is polling the IO for new input and then returns undef if there will never be any more input, 0 if there is none now, but there might be in the future, and TRUE if more input was gotten. AUTHOR
Barrie Slaymaker <barries@slaysys.com> TODO
Implement bidirectionality. perl v5.14.2 2012-01-16 IPC::Run::IO(3pm)
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