An nng_pipe
is a handle to a pipe object, which can be thought of as a single
connection.
(In most cases this is actually the case — the pipe is an abstraction for a
single TCP or IPC connection.)
Pipes are associated with either the listener or dialer that created them,
and therefore are also automatically associated with a single socket.
Important
|
The nng_pipe structure is always passed by value (both
for input parameters and return values), and should be treated opaquely.
Passing structures this way gives the compiler a chance to perform
accurate type checks in functions passing values of this type.
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Tip
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Most applications should never concern themselves with individual pipes. However it is possible to access a pipe when more information about the source of a message is needed, or when more control is required over message delivery. |
Pipe objects are created by dialers (nng_dialer
objects)
and listeners (nng_listener
objects).
Pipe objects may be destroyed by the
nng_pipe_close()
function.
They are also closed when the dialer or listener that created them is closed,
or when the remote peer closes the underlying connection.