This is the command qpidd that can be run in the OnWorks free hosting provider using one of our multiple free online workstations such as Ubuntu Online, Fedora Online, Windows online emulator or MAC OS online emulator
PROGRAM:
NAME
qpidd - the Qpid AMQP Message Broker Daemon
SYNOPSIS
qpidd [-p port] [--config config_file] [--data-dir directory]
DESCRIPTION
An AMQP message broker daemon that stores, routes and forwards messages using the Advanced
Message Queueing Protocol (AMQP).
OPTIONS
The options below are built-in to qpidd. Installing add-on modules provides additional
options. To see the full set of options available type "qpidd --help"
Options may be specified via command line, environment variable or configuration file. See
FILES and ENVIRONMENT below for details.
-h [ --help ]
Displays the help message
-v [ --version ]
Displays version information
--config FILE (/etc/qpidd.conf)
Reads configuration from FILE
Module options:
--module-dir DIR (/usr/lib/qpid/daemon)
Load all shareable modules in this directory
--load-module FILE
Specifies additional module(s) to be loaded
--no-module-dir
Don't load modules from module directory
Broker Options:
--data-dir DIR (/home/buildd/.qpidd)
Directory to contain persistent data generated by the broker
--no-data-dir
Don't use a data directory. No persistent configuration will be loaded or stored
-p [ --port ] PORT (5672)
Tells the broker to listen on PORT
--worker-threads N (5)
Sets the broker thread pool size
--max-connections N (500)
Sets the maximum allowed connections
--connection-backlog N (10)
Sets the connection backlog limit for the server socket
-m [ --mgmt-enable ] yes|no (1)
Enable Management
--mgmt-publish yes|no (1)
Enable Publish of Management Data ('no' implies query-only)
--mgmt-qmf2 yes|no (1)
Enable broadcast of management information over QMF v2
--mgmt-qmf1 yes|no (1)
Enable broadcast of management information over QMF v1
--mgmt-pub-interval SECONDS (10)
Management Publish Interval
--queue-purge-interval SECONDS (600)
Interval between attempts to purge any expired messages from queues
--auth yes|no (1)
Enable authentication, if disabled all incoming connections will be trusted
--realm REALM (QPID)
Use the given realm when performing authentication
--default-queue-limit BYTES (104857600)
Default maximum size for queues (in bytes)
--tcp-nodelay
Set TCP_NODELAY on TCP connections
--require-encryption
Only accept connections that are encrypted
--known-hosts-url URL or 'none'
URL to send as 'known-hosts' to clients ('none' implies empty list)
--sasl-config DIR
gets sasl config info from nonstandard location
--async-queue-events yes|no (0)
Set Queue Events async, used for services like replication
--default-flow-stop-threshold PERCENT (80)
Percent of queue's maximum capacity at which flow control is activated.
--default-flow-resume-threshold PERCENT (70)
Percent of queue's maximum capacity at which flow control is de-activated.
--default-event-threshold-ratio %age of limit (80)
The ratio of any specified queue limit at which an event will be raised
--default-message-group GROUP-IDENTIFER (qpid.no-group)
Group identifier to assign to messages delivered to a message group queue that do
not contain an identifier.
--enable-timestamp yes|no (0)
Add current time to each received message.
--link-maintenace-interval SECONDS (2)
Logging options:
-t [ --trace ]
Enables all logging
--log-enable RULE (notice+)
Enables logging for selected levels and components. RULE is in the form
'LEVEL[+][:PATTERN]' Levels are one of:
trace debug info notice warning error
critical For example: '--log-enable warning+' logs all warning, error and critical
messages. '--log-enable debug:framing' logs debug messages from the framing
namespace. This option can be used multiple times
--log-time yes|no (1)
Include time in log messages
--log-level yes|no (1)
Include severity level in log messages
--log-source yes|no (0)
Include source file:line in log messages
--log-thread yes|no (0)
Include thread ID in log messages
--log-function yes|no (0)
Include function signature in log messages
--log-hires-timestamp yes|no (0)
Use hi-resolution timestamps in log messages
--log-prefix STRING
Prefix to append to all log messages
Logging sink options:
--log-to-stderr yes|no (1)
Send logging output to stderr
--log-to-stdout yes|no (0)
Send logging output to stdout
--log-to-file FILE
Send log output to FILE.
--log-to-syslog yes|no (0)
Send logging output to syslog; customize using --syslog-name and --syslog-facility
--syslog-name NAME (lt-qpidd)
Name to use in syslog messages
--syslog-facility LOG_XXX (LOG_DAEMON)
Facility to use in syslog messages
Daemon options:
-d [ --daemon ]
Run as a daemon. Logs to syslog by default in this mode.
--transport TRANSPORT (tcp)
The transport for which to return the port
--pid-dir DIR (/home/buildd/.qpidd)
Directory where port-specific PID file is stored
-w [ --wait ] SECONDS (600)
Sets the maximum wait time to initialize the daemon. If the daemon fails to
initialize, prints an error and returns 1
-c [ --check ]
Prints the daemon's process ID to stdout and returns 0 if the daemon is running,
otherwise returns 1
-q [ --quit ]
Tells the daemon to shut down
ENVIRONMENT
QPID_<option>
There is an environment variable for each option.
The environment variable is the option name in uppercase, prefixed with QPID_ and '.' or
'-' are replaced with '_'. Environment settings are over-ridden by command line settings.
For example:
export QPID_PORT=6000
export QPID_MAX_CONNECTIONS=10
export QPID_LOG_TO_FILE=/tmp/qpidd.log
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