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Home/ Questions/Q 8869577
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 14, 20262026-06-14T17:30:40+00:00 2026-06-14T17:30:40+00:00

I am looking into using ZeroMQ as the messaging/transport layer for a fairly large

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I am looking into using ZeroMQ as the messaging/transport layer for a fairly large distributed system, mainly targeting monitoring and data collection (many producers, a few consumers).

As far as I can see there are currently two different implementations of the same concept; ZeroMQ and Crossroads I/O, the latter being a fork of ZeroMQ (in 2012?).

I am trying to figure out which one to use and wonder about the differences between them, but have so far not found much information regarding this.

For example:

  • Are they compatible on the wire?
  • Are they API compatible, i.e. some kind of common base API, possibly with different add-ons?
  • Do they both implement support for ZMTP (ZeroMQ Message Transport Protocol)?
  • Do they share some kind of common understanding of future development or will they continue in two separate and possible different directions?
  • What are the pros/cons in relation to the other?

Basically, how do one choose one over the other?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-14T17:30:42+00:00Added an answer on June 14, 2026 at 5:30 pm

    Crossroads.io is pretty dead since Martin Sustrik has started on a new stack, in C, called nano: https://github.com/250bpm/nanomsg

    Crossroads.io does not, afaik, implement ZMTP/1.0 nor ZMTP/2.0 but its own version of the protocol.

    Nano has pluggable transports and we’ll probably make a ZMTP transport for that. Nano is really nice, a rethinking of the original libzmq library, and if it’s successful would make a good new kernel.

    Ideally, Nano would interoperate both at the API and the protocol level, so be a pluggable replacement for libzmq. It does have quite a long way to go, though.

    Note that there are now several rewrites of libzmq emerging, including JeroMQ (Java) and NetMQ (C#). These two do implement ZMTP/1.0 and ZMTP/2.0 properly. There are also other libraries like Axon (https://github.com/visionmedia/axon) which are heavily inspired by 0MQ but not compatible.

    Based on experience, users value interoperability more than almost anything else, so it’s quite likely that different 0MQ-like stacks will end up speaking the same protocols.

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