ZeroMQ is a lightweight wrapper around TCP connections, inter-process communication, and shared-memory, providing various message-oriented semantics such as publish/subscribe, request/reply, and push/pull.
The Bitcoin Core daemon can be configured to act as a trusted "border router", implementing the bitcoin wire protocol and relay, making consensus decisions, maintaining the local blockchain database, broadcasting locally generated transactions into the network, and providing a queryable RPC interface to interact on a polled basis for requesting blockchain related data. However, there exists only a limited service to notify external software of events like the arrival of new blocks or transactions.
The ZeroMQ facility implements a notification interface through a set of specific notifiers. Currently there are notifiers that publish blocks and transactions. This read-only facility requires only the connection of a corresponding ZeroMQ subscriber port in receiving software; it is not authenticated nor is there any two-way protocol involvement. Therefore, subscribers should validate the received data since it may be out of date, incomplete or even invalid.
ZeroMQ sockets are self-connecting and self-healing; that is, connections made between two endpoints will be automatically restored after an outage, and either end may be freely started or stopped in any order.
Because ZeroMQ is message oriented, subscribers receive transactions and blocks all-at-once and do not need to implement any sort of buffering or reassembly.
The ZeroMQ feature in Bitcoin Core requires the ZeroMQ API >= 4.0.0 libzmq. For version information, see dependencies.md. Typically, it is packaged by distributions as something like libzmq3-dev. The C++ wrapper for ZeroMQ is not needed.
In order to run the example Python client scripts in the contrib/zmq/
directory, one must also install PyZMQ
(generally with pip install pyzmq
), though this is not necessary for daemon
operation.
By default, the ZeroMQ feature is automatically compiled in if the necessary prerequisites are found. To disable, use --disable-zmq during the configure step of building bitcoind:
$ ./configure --disable-zmq (other options)
To actually enable operation, one must set the appropriate options on the command line or in the configuration file.
Currently, the following notifications are supported:
-zmqpubhashtx=address
-zmqpubhashblock=address
-zmqpubrawblock=address
-zmqpubrawtx=address
-zmqpubsequence=address
The socket type is PUB and the address must be a valid ZeroMQ socket address. The same address can be used in more than one notification. The same notification can be specified more than once.
The option to set the PUB socket's outbound message high water mark (SNDHWM) may be set individually for each notification:
-zmqpubhashtxhwm=n
-zmqpubhashblockhwm=n
-zmqpubrawblockhwm=n
-zmqpubrawtxhwm=n
-zmqpubsequencehwm=address
The high water mark value must be an integer greater than or equal to 0.
For instance:
$ bitcoind -zmqpubhashtx=tcp://127.0.0.1:28332 \
-zmqpubhashtx=tcp://192.168.1.2:28332 \
-zmqpubhashblock="tcp://[::1]:28333" \
-zmqpubrawtx=ipc:///tmp/bitcoind.tx.raw \
-zmqpubhashtxhwm=10000
Each PUB notification has a topic and body, where the header
corresponds to the notification type. For instance, for the
notification -zmqpubhashtx
the topic is hashtx
(no null
terminator) and the body is the transaction hash (32
bytes) for all but sequence
topic. For sequence
, the body
is structured as the following based on the type of message:
<32-byte hash>C : Blockhash connected
<32-byte hash>D : Blockhash disconnected
<32-byte hash>R<8-byte LE uint> : Transactionhash removed from mempool for non-block inclusion reason
<32-byte hash>A<8-byte LE uint> : Transactionhash added mempool
Where the 8-byte uints correspond to the mempool sequence number.
These options can also be provided in bitcoin.conf.
ZeroMQ endpoint specifiers for TCP (and others) are documented in the ZeroMQ API.
Client side, then, the ZeroMQ subscriber socket must have the
ZMQ_SUBSCRIBE option set to one or either of these prefixes (for
instance, just hash
); without doing so will result in no messages
arriving. Please see contrib/zmq/zmq_sub.py
for a working example.
The ZMQ_PUB socket's ZMQ_TCP_KEEPALIVE option is enabled. This means that the underlying SO_KEEPALIVE option is enabled when using a TCP transport. The effective TCP keepalive values are managed through the underlying operating system configuration and must be configured prior to connection establishment.
For example, when running on GNU/Linux, one might use the following to lower the keepalive setting to 10 minutes:
sudo sysctl -w net.ipv4.tcp_keepalive_time=600
Setting the keepalive values appropriately for your operating environment may improve connectivity in situations where long-lived connections are silently dropped by network middle boxes.
Also, the socket's ZMQ_IPV6 option is enabled to accept connections from IPv6 hosts as well. If needed, this option has to be set on the client side too.
From the perspective of bitcoind, the ZeroMQ socket is write-only; PUB sockets don't even have a read function. Thus, there is no state introduced into bitcoind directly. Furthermore, no information is broadcast that wasn't already received from the public P2P network.
No authentication or authorization is done on connecting clients; it is assumed that the ZeroMQ port is exposed only to trusted entities, using other means such as firewalling.
Note that for *block
topics, when the block chain tip changes,
a reorganisation may occur and just the tip will be notified.
It is up to the subscriber to retrieve the chain from the last known
block to the new tip. Also note that no notification will occur if the tip
was in the active chain--as would be the case after calling invalidateblock RPC.
In contrast, the sequence
topic publishes all block connections and
disconnections.
There are several possibilities that ZMQ notification can get lost during transmission depending on the communication type you are using. Bitcoind appends an up-counting sequence number to each notification which allows listeners to detect lost notifications.
The sequence
topic refers specifically to the mempool sequence
number, which is also published along with all mempool events. This
is a different sequence value than in ZMQ itself in order to allow a total
ordering of mempool events to be constructed.