Inspired by Erlang's simple message-passing facilities, courier provides roughly similar
capabilities. Applications simply create one or more endpoints,
bind each to a transport using a given name, then can freely
send / receive messages to other endpoints just by referencing the name each endpoint
bound to its transport.
A primary driver of this package's design is separation of concerns: many algorithms
(especially for distributed applications) depend upon a message-passing foundation,
but the algorithms are sufficiently complex that the details of how those messages
are transmitted among nodes are best hidden away and solved separately from
the distributed algorithm itself. With this in mind, this package aims
to provide a variety of transports as well as support for common communication
idioms (e.g., in order message delivery, selective out of order message delivery,
synchronous RPC, etc.).
Applications may process messages in the order received at an endpoint, or use
selective message reception to process the first message arriving at an endpoint
that also matches a provided selection function. Through selective message reception,
applications may approximate the style of an Erlang application, and enjoy better
composability of message reception with multiple independent dispatch routines or
message pumps.