Make real URL links, and fix homepage link.
[doldaconnect.git] / doc / protocol / protocol.tex
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1\documentclass[twoside,a4paper,11pt]{article}
2
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3\usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
4\usepackage[utf8x]{inputenc}
f6d0f511 5\usepackage[ps2pdf]{hyperref}
66e1551f 6\usepackage{reqlist}
f7932303 7\usepackage{longtable}
66e1551f 8
75053ec3 9\newcommand{\urlink}[1]{\texttt{<\url{#1}>}}
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10\newcommand{\unix}{\textsc{Unix}}
11
12\title{Dolda Connect protocol}
13\author{Fredrik Tolf\\\texttt{<fredrik@dolda2000.com>}}
14
15\begin{document}
16
17\maketitle
18
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19\tableofcontents
20
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21\section{Introduction}
22Dolda Connect consists partly of a daemon (a.k.a. server) that runs in
23the background and carries out all the actual work, and a number of
24client programs (a.k.a. user interfaces) that connect to the daemon in
25order to tell it what to do. In order for the daemon and the clients
26to be able to talk to each other, a protocol is needed. This document
27intends to document that protocol, so that third parties can write
28their own client programs.
29
30It is worthy of note that there exists a library, called
03c10091 31\texttt{libdcui}, that carries out much of the low level work of
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32speaking the protocol, facilitating the creation of new client
33programs. In itself, \texttt{libdcui} is written in the C programming
34language and is intended to be used by other programs written in C,
35but there also exist wrapper libraries for both GNU Guile (the GNU
36project's Scheme interpreter) and for Python. The former is
37distributed with the main Dolda Connect source tree, while the latter
38is distributed separately (for technical reasons). To get a copy,
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39please refer to Dolda Connect's homepage:
40
41\urlink{http://www.dolda2000.com/~fredrik/doldaconnect/}
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42
43\section{Transport format}
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44Note: Everything covered in this section is handled by the
45\texttt{libdcui} library. Thus, if you read this because you just want
46to write a client, and are using the library (or any of the wrapper
47libraries), you can safely skip over this section. It may still be
48interesting to read in order to understand the semantics of the
49protocol, however.
50
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51The protocol can be spoken over any channel that features a
52byte-oriented, reliable virtual (or not) circuit. Usually, it is
53spoken over a TCP connection or a byte-oriented \unix\ socket. The
54usual port number for TCP connections is 1500, but any port could be
55used\footnote{However, port 1500 is what the \texttt{libdcui} library
56 uses if no port is explicitly stated, so it is probably to be
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57 preferred}.
58
59\subsection{Informal description}
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60
61On top of the provided byte-oriented connection, the most basic level
62of the protocol is a stream of Unicode characters, encoded with
63UTF-8. The Unicode stream is then grouped in two levels: lines
64consisting of words (a.k.a. tokens). Lines are separated by CRLF
65sequences (\emph{not} just CR or LF), and words are separated by
66whitespace. Both whitespace and CRLFs can be quoted, however,
67overriding their normal interpretation of separators and allowing them
68to be parts of words. NUL characters are not allowed to be transferred
69at all, but all other Unicode codepoints are allowed.
70
71Lines transmitted from the daemon to the client are slightly
72different, however. They all start with a three-digit code, followed
73by either a space or a dash\footnote{Yes, this is inspired by FTP and
74 SMTP.}, followed by the normal sequence of words. The three-digit
75code identifies that type of line. Overall, the protocol is a
76lock-step protocol, where the clients sends one line that is
77interpreted as a request, and the daemon replies with one or more
78lines. In a multi-line response, all lines except the last have the
79three-digit code followed by a dash. The last line of a multi-line
80response and the only line of a single-line response have the
81three-digit code followed by a space. All lines of a multi-line
82response have the same three-digit code. The client is not allowed to
83send another request until the last line of the previous response has
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84been received. The exception is that the daemon might send (but only
85if the client has requested it to do so) sporadic lines of
86asynchronous notification messages. Notification message lines are
87distinguished by having their three-digit codes always begin with the
88digit 6. Otherwise, the first digit of the three-digit code indicates
89the overall success or failure of a request. Codes beginning with 2
90indicate the the request to which they belong succeeded. Codes
91beginning with 3 indicate that the request succeeded in itself, but
92that it is considered part of a sequence of commands, and that the
93sequence still requires additional interaction before considered
94successful. Codes beginning with 5 are indication of errors. The
95remaining two digits merely distinguish between different
96outcomes. Note that notification message lines may come at \emph{any}
97time, even in the middle of multiline responses (though not in the
98middle of another line). There are no multiline notifications.
99
100The act of connecting to the daemon is itself considered a request,
101solicitating a success or failure response, so it is the daemon that
102first transmits actual data. A failure response may be provoked by a
103client connecting from a prohibited source.
104
105Quoting of special characters in words may be done in two ways. First,
106the backslash character escapes any special interpretation of the
107character that comes after it, no matter where or what the following
108character is (it is not required even to be a special
109character). Thus, the only way to include a backslash in a word is to
110escape it with another backslash. Second, any interpretation of
111whitespace may be escaped using the citation mark character (only the
112ASCII one, U+0022 -- not any other Unicode quotes), by enclosing a
113string containing whitespace in citation marks. (Note that the citation
114marks need not necessarily be placed at the word boundaries, so the
115string ``\texttt{a"b c"d}'' is parsed as a single word ``\texttt{ab
116 cd}''.) Technically, this dual layer of quoting may seem like a
117liability when implementing the protocol, but it is quite convenient
118when talking directly to the daemon with a program such as
119\texttt{telnet}.
120
121\subsection{Formal description}
122
123Formally, the syntax of the protocol may be defined with the following
124BNF rules. Note that they all operate on Unicode characters, not bytes.
125
f7932303 126\begin{longtable}{lcl}
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127<session> & ::= & <SYN> <response> \\
128 & & | <session> <transaction> \\
129 & & | <session> <notification> \\
130<transaction> & ::= & <request> <response> \\
131<request> & ::= & <line> \\
132<response> & ::= & <resp-line-last> \\
133 & & | <resp-line-not-last> <response> \\
134 & & | <notification> <response> \\
135<resp-line-last> & ::= & <resp-code> <SPACE> <line> \\
136<resp-line-not-last> & ::= & <resp-code> <DASH> <line> \\
137<notification> & ::= & <notification-code> <SPACE> <line> \\
138<resp-code> & ::= & ``\texttt{2}'' <digit> <digit> \\
139 & & | ``\texttt{3}'' <digit> <digit> \\
140 & & | ``\texttt{5}'' <digit> <digit> \\
141<notification-code> & ::= & ``\texttt{6}'' <digit> <digit> \\
142<line> & ::= & <CRLF> \\
143 & & | <word> <ws> <line> \\
144<word> & ::= & <COMMON-CHAR> \\
145 & & | ``\texttt{$\backslash$}'' <CHAR> \\
146 & & | ``\texttt{"}'' <quoted-word> ``\texttt{"}'' \\
147 & & | <word> <word> \\
148<quoted-word> & ::= & ``'' \\
149 & & | <COMMON-CHAR> <quoted-word> \\
150 & & | <ws> <quoted-word> \\
151 & & | ``\texttt{$\backslash$}'' <CHAR> <quoted-word> \\
152<ws> & ::= & <1ws> | <1ws> <ws> \\
153<1ws> & ::= & <SPACE> | <TAB> \\
154<digit> & ::= & ``\texttt{0}'' |
155``\texttt{1}'' | ``\texttt{2}'' |
156``\texttt{3}'' | ``\texttt{4}'' \\
157& & | ``\texttt{5}'' | ``\texttt{6}'' |
158``\texttt{7}'' | ``\texttt{8}'' |
159``\texttt{9}''
f7932303 160\end{longtable}
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161
162As for the terminal symbols, <SPACE> is U+0020, <TAB> is U+0009,
163<CRLF> is the sequence of U+000D and U+000A, <DASH> is U+002D, <CHAR>
164is any Unicode character except U+0000, <COMMON-CHAR> is any
165Unicode character except U+0000, U+0009, U+000A, U+000D, U+0020,
166U+0022 and U+005C, and <SYN> is the out-of-band message that
167establishes the communication channel\footnote{This means that the
168 communication channel must support such a message. For example, raw
169 RS-232 would be hard to support.}. The following constraints also
170apply:
171\begin{itemize}
172\item <SYN> and <request> must be sent from the client to the daemon.
173\item <response> and <notification> must be sent from the daemon to
174 the client.
175\end{itemize}
176Note that the definition of <word> means that the only way to
177represent an empty word is by a pair of citation marks.
178
179In each request line, there should be at least one word, but it is not
180considered a syntax error if there is not. The first word in each
181request line is considered the name of the command to be carried out
182by the daemon. An empty line is a valid request as such, but since no
183matching command, it will provoke the same kind of error response as
184if a request with any other non-existing command were sent. Any
185remaining words on the line are considered arguments to the command.
186
187\section{Requests}
188For each arriving request, the daemon checks so that the request
189passes a number of tests before carrying it out. First, it matches the
190name of the command against the list of known commands to see if the
191request calls a valid command. If the command is not valid, the daemon
192sends a reponse with code 500. Then, it checks so that the request has
193the minimum required number of parameters for the given command. If it
194does not, it responds with a 501 code. Last, it checks so that the
195user account issuing the request has the necessary permissions to have
196the request carried out. If it does not, it responds with a 502
197code. After that, any responses are individual to the command in
198question. The intention of this section is to list them all.
199
200\subsection{Permissions}
201
202As for the permissions mentioned above, it is outside the scope of
203this document to describe the administration of
204permissions\footnote{Please see the \texttt{doldacond.conf(5)} man
205 page for more information on that topic.}, but some commands require
206certain permission, they need at least be specified. When a connection
207is established, it is associated with no permissions. At that point,
208only requests that do not require any permissions can be successfully
209issued. Normally, the first thing a client would do is to authenticate
210to the daemon. At the end of a successful authentication, the daemon
211associates the proper permissions with the connection over which
212authentication took place. The possible permissions are listed in
213table \ref{tab:perm}.
214
215\begin{table}
216 \begin{tabular}{rl}
217 Name & General description \\
218 \hline
219 \texttt{admin} & Required for all commands that administer the
220 daemon. \\
221 \texttt{fnetctl} & Required for all commands that alter the state of
222 connected hubs. \\
223 \texttt{trans} & Required for all commands that alter the state of
224 file transfers. \\
225 \texttt{transcu} & Required specifically for cancelling uploads. \\
226 \texttt{chat} & Required for exchanging chat messages. \\
227 \texttt{srch} & Required for issuing and querying searches. \\
228 \end{tabular}
229 \caption{The list of available permissions}
230 \label{tab:perm}
231\end{table}
232
233\subsection{Protocol revisions}
03ee2e4a 234\label{rev}
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235Since Dolda Connect is developing, its command set may change
236occasionally. Sometimes new commands are added, sometimes commands
237change argument syntax, and sometimes commands are removed. In order
238for clients to be able to cleanly cope with such changes, the protocol
239is revisioned. When a client connects to the daemon, the daemon
240indicates in the first response it sends the range of protocol
241revisions it supports, and each command listed below specifies the
242revision number from which its current specification is valid. A
243client should should check the revision range from the daemon so that
244it includes the revision that incorporates all commands that it wishes
245to use.
246
247Whenever the protocol changes at all, it is given a new revision
248number. If the entire protocol is backwards compatible with the
249previous version, the revision range sent by the server is updated to
250extend forward to the new revision. If the protocol in any way is not
251compatible with the previous revision, the revision range is moved
252entirely to the new revision. Therefore, a client can check for a
253certain revision and be sure that everything it wants is supported by
254the daemon.
255
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256At the time of this writing, the latest protocol revision is 2. Please
257see the file \texttt{doc/protorev} that comes with the Dolda Connect
258source tree for a full list of revisions and what changed between
259them.
260
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261\subsection{List of commands}
262
263Follows does a (hopefully) exhaustive listing of all commands valid
264for a request. For each possible request, it includes the name of the
03ee2e4a 265command for the request, the permissions required, the syntax for the
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266entire request line, and the possible responses.
267
268The syntax of the request and response lines is described in a format
269like that traditional of \unix\ man pages, with a number of terms,
270each corresponding to a word in the line. Each term in the syntax
271description is either a literal string, written in lower case; an
272argument, written in uppercase and meant to be replaced by some other
273text as described; an optional term, enclosed in brackets
274(``\texttt{[}'' and ``\texttt{]}''); or a list of alternatives,
275enclosed in braces (``\texttt{\{}'' and ``\texttt{\}}'') and separated
276by pipes (``\texttt{|}''). Possible repetition of a term is indicated
277by three dots (``\texttt{...}''), and, for the purpose of repition,
278terms may be groups with parentheses (``\texttt{(}'' and
279``\texttt{)}'').
280
281Two things should be noted regarding the responses. First, in the
282syntax description of responses, the response code is given as the
283first term, even though it is not actually considered a word. Second,
284more words may follow after the specified syntax, and should be
285discarded by a client. Many responses use that to include a human
286readable string to indicate the conclusion of the request.
287
288\subsubsection{Connection}
289As mentioned above, the act of connecting to the daemon is itself
290considered a request, soliciting a response. Such a request obviously
291has no command name and no syntax, but needs a description
292nonetheless.
293
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294\revision{1}
295
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296\noperm
297
298\begin{responses}
299 \response{200}
300 The old response given by daemons not yet using the revisioned
301 protocol. Clients receiving this response should consider it an
302 error.
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303 \response{201 LOREV HIREV}
304 Indicates that the connection is accepted. The \param{LOREV} and
305 \param{HIREV} parameters specify the range of supported protocol
306 revisions, as described in section \ref{rev}.
307 \response{502 REASON}
308 The connection is refused by the daemon and will be closed. The
309 \param{REASON} parameter states the reason for the refusal in
310 English\footnote{So it is probably not suitable for localized
311 programs}.
66e1551f 312\end{responses}
4ae8ca60 313
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314\input{commands}
315
4ae8ca60 316\end{document}