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UR::Service::RPC::Message(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation UR::Service::RPC::Message(3pm)
 

NAME

UR::Service::RPC::Message - Serializable object appropriate for sending RPC messages

SYNOPSIS

  my $msg = UR::Service::RPC::Message->create(
                           target_class => 'URT::RPC::Thingy',
                           method_name  => 'join',
                           params       => ['-', @join_args],
                           'wantarray'  => 0,
                         );
  $msg->send($fh);
  my $resp = UR::Service::RPC::Message->recv($fh, 5);

DESCRIPTION

This class is used as a message-passing interface by the RPC service modules.

PROPERTIES

These properties should be filled in by the initiating caller
method_name => Text
The name of the subroutine the initiator whishes to call.
target_class => Text
The namespace the initiator wants the subroutine to be called in
params => ARRAY
List of parameters to pass to the subroutine
wantarray => Boolean
What wantarray() context the subroutine should be called in.
These properties are assigned after the RPC call to the subroutine
return_values => ARRAY
List of values returned by the subroutine
exception
On the receiving side, the subroutine is called within an eval. If there was an exception, "exception" stores the value of $@, or the empty string. The receiving side should also fill-in "exception" if there was an authentication failure.
fh
"recv" fills this in with the file handle the message was read from.

METHODS

send
  $bytes = $msg->send($fh);
    
Serializes the Message object with FreezeThaw and writes the data to the filehandle $fh. Returns the number of bytes written. $bytes will be false if there was an error.
recv
  $response = UR::Service::RPC::Message->recv($fh,$timeout);
  $response = $msg->recv();
    
Reads a serialized Message from the filehandle and constructs a Message object that is then returned to the caller. In the first case, it reads from the given filehandle, waiting a maximum of $timeout seconds with select before giving up. In the second case, it reads from whatever filehandle is stored in $msg to read data from.

SEE ALSO

UR::Service::RPC::Server, UR::Service::RPC::Executor
2014-07-04 perl v5.18.2