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author | Mattias Andrée <maandree@operamail.com> | 2014-04-22 02:51:24 +0200 |
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committer | Mattias Andrée <maandree@operamail.com> | 2014-04-22 02:51:24 +0200 |
commit | 807f4e9b6e238ed5efe46e78e20a6bcc4354fe6c (patch) | |
tree | 960ac2c9bec290962bbc18cd4ad1a478821bfda1 | |
parent | m + accept incoming connections (diff) | |
download | mds-807f4e9b6e238ed5efe46e78e20a6bcc4354fe6c.tar.gz mds-807f4e9b6e238ed5efe46e78e20a6bcc4354fe6c.tar.bz2 mds-807f4e9b6e238ed5efe46e78e20a6bcc4354fe6c.tar.xz |
add documentation of the basic protocol
Signed-off-by: Mattias Andrée <maandree@operamail.com>
Diffstat (limited to '')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/messages | 112 |
1 files changed, 112 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/doc/messages b/doc/messages new file mode 100644 index 0000000..debcd71 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/messages @@ -0,0 +1,112 @@ +Messages in mds are text based, in UTF-8, with LF for +line separation. + +Each headers is contained to exactly one line. + +All header names are in sentence case. + +A colon followed by a blank space separates the header +name from its associated value. + +One blank line separates the headers from the payload. + +If the message does not have a payload it most still +have a blank line after the headers. It marks the end +of the message. + +The payload of the message may be in binary format. + +A message with a payload must have a ‘Length’ header +that specifies the byte length of the message. Their +most not an additional LF, or any other symbol, after +the payload that is not inside the range specified +by the ‘Length’ header. + + +All clients have an ID that consists of two unsigned +32-bit integers. When a client is created its ID is +automatically 0:0, this is a special ID: it is the +only non-unique ID and client with this ID cannot +get responses. It can however ask for interceptions, +which it would receive. To get a real ID it must +ask the master server (which is the only server that +can communicate with it when it does not have an UD) +for an ID, this can only be done when it does not +have an ID. To do this, it sends an message with +two headers and no payload. One of headers is +‘Command’ and its value should be ‘assign-id’, +the other header is ‘Message ID’ and its value is +an unsigned 32-bit integer of the index of the +message starting at 0. In response the server sends +a message with two headers and no payload, one of +the headers is ‘ID assignment’ and its value is +two unsigned 32-bit integers joined together +with a colon, for example ‘0:1’, the other header +is ‘In response to’ and its value is the message +ID that the client sent. + + +When a client closes the server multicasts a single +header message with no payload. The header is ‘Client +closed’ with the client's ID. Be aware that the ID +may be 0:0, which is not unique. + + +Multicasts are sent by to clients that have ask for +the type of message this is being sent. This technique +is also used to intercept message or receive message +as part of a service that a server provides. Servers +that implement the ability to connect from another +computer are encouraged to reject this time of message +if it could be used for spying. To tell the server +that you want to intercept a type of message the client +sends a message with the header and value +‘Command: intercept’. It can also specify a priority +that is an signed 64-bit integer, the default value is +zero. This is done by using the header ‘Priority’. A +higher priority means that the message is sent earlier. +If the client wishes to be able to modify the message +it most the header ‘Modifying’ with the value ‘yes’. +If the client wishes to receive all messages it should +not include a payload, otherwise it which send a +LF delimited list of headers that it is interested it. +In this list it is possible to limit to exact values +byte appending a colon and blank space (‘: ’) followed +by the value to the header name. You can also request +that the interception stops by including the header +and value ‘Stop: yes’. + +For ‘Command: intercept’ and all other messages, the +client should include the ‘Message ID’ header. + +A client that as requested to be able to modify +messages will receive the header ‘Modify ID’. This +header may be include even for clients that has +not requested to be able to modify the message. +The ID is only necessary unique for the message +and does not necessary increase when the message +is modified. The client most respond if it has +requested to be able to modify the message. This +is done by sending the header ‘Modify’ and the +header ‘Modify ID’ with the same value as for the +message is is responding to. The value of the +‘Modify’ header should be ‘no’ it the message +is not modified. If the message should be modify +it the value of the ‘Modify’ header should be +‘yes’ and the payload should be the new message +with all the, possibly modified, headers the new +payload. + + +Unless a client's ID is 0:0 (allowed even if it is +0:0) it should always include the header ‘Client ID’ +and its ID as the headers value. Otherwise it is +assumed that the client's ID is 0:0. + + +Clients automatically receives messages that is +addressed to them with priority zero and mark that +it will not modify the message. To address a message +to client include the header ‘To’ with the client's +ID [that the message is addressed to] as the value. + |