116 KiB
WireProto Specification
1. License
WireProto Specification
by
Brent Saner
is licensed under
Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International
(License in full)
Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International ======================================================================= Creative Commons Corporation ("Creative Commons") is not a law firm and does not provide legal services or legal advice. Distribution of Creative Commons public licenses does not create a lawyer-client or other relationship. Creative Commons makes its licenses and related information available on an "as-is" basis. Creative Commons gives no warranties regarding its licenses, any material licensed under their terms and conditions, or any related information. Creative Commons disclaims all liability for damages resulting from their use to the fullest extent possible. Using Creative Commons Public Licenses Creative Commons public licenses provide a standard set of terms and conditions that creators and other rights holders may use to share original works of authorship and other material subject to copyright and certain other rights specified in the public license below. The following considerations are for informational purposes only, are not exhaustive, and do not form part of our licenses. Considerations for licensors: Our public licenses are intended for use by those authorized to give the public permission to use material in ways otherwise restricted by copyright and certain other rights. Our licenses are irrevocable. Licensors should read and understand the terms and conditions of the license they choose before applying it. Licensors should also secure all rights necessary before applying our licenses so that the public can reuse the material as expected. Licensors should clearly mark any material not subject to the license. This includes other CC- licensed material, or material used under an exception or limitation to copyright. More considerations for licensors: wiki.creativecommons.org/Considerations_for_licensors Considerations for the public: By using one of our public licenses, a licensor grants the public permission to use the licensed material under specified terms and conditions. If the licensor's permission is not necessary for any reason--for example, because of any applicable exception or limitation to copyright--then that use is not regulated by the license. Our licenses grant only permissions under copyright and certain other rights that a licensor has authority to grant. Use of the licensed material may still be restricted for other reasons, including because others have copyright or other rights in the material. A licensor may make special requests, such as asking that all changes be marked or described. Although not required by our licenses, you are encouraged to respect those requests where reasonable. More considerations for the public: wiki.creativecommons.org/Considerations_for_licensees ======================================================================= Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International Public License By exercising the Licensed Rights (defined below), You accept and agree to be bound by the terms and conditions of this Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International Public License ("Public License"). To the extent this Public License may be interpreted as a contract, You are granted the Licensed Rights in consideration of Your acceptance of these terms and conditions, and the Licensor grants You such rights in consideration of benefits the Licensor receives from making the Licensed Material available under these terms and conditions. Section 1 -- Definitions. a. Adapted Material means material subject to Copyright and Similar Rights that is derived from or based upon the Licensed Material and in which the Licensed Material is translated, altered, arranged, transformed, or otherwise modified in a manner requiring permission under the Copyright and Similar Rights held by the Licensor. For purposes of this Public License, where the Licensed Material is a musical work, performance, or sound recording, Adapted Material is always produced where the Licensed Material is synched in timed relation with a moving image. b. Adapter's License means the license You apply to Your Copyright and Similar Rights in Your contributions to Adapted Material in accordance with the terms and conditions of this Public License. c. BY-SA Compatible License means a license listed at creativecommons.org/compatiblelicenses, approved by Creative Commons as essentially the equivalent of this Public License. d. Copyright and Similar Rights means copyright and/or similar rights closely related to copyright including, without limitation, performance, broadcast, sound recording, and Sui Generis Database Rights, without regard to how the rights are labeled or categorized. For purposes of this Public License, the rights specified in Section 2(b)(1)-(2) are not Copyright and Similar Rights. e. Effective Technological Measures means those measures that, in the absence of proper authority, may not be circumvented under laws fulfilling obligations under Article 11 of the WIPO Copyright Treaty adopted on December 20, 1996, and/or similar international agreements. f. Exceptions and Limitations means fair use, fair dealing, and/or any other exception or limitation to Copyright and Similar Rights that applies to Your use of the Licensed Material. g. License Elements means the license attributes listed in the name of a Creative Commons Public License. The License Elements of this Public License are Attribution and ShareAlike. h. Licensed Material means the artistic or literary work, database, or other material to which the Licensor applied this Public License. i. Licensed Rights means the rights granted to You subject to the terms and conditions of this Public License, which are limited to all Copyright and Similar Rights that apply to Your use of the Licensed Material and that the Licensor has authority to license. j. Licensor means the individual(s) or entity(ies) granting rights under this Public License. k. Share means to provide material to the public by any means or process that requires permission under the Licensed Rights, such as reproduction, public display, public performance, distribution, dissemination, communication, or importation, and to make material available to the public including in ways that members of the public may access the material from a place and at a time individually chosen by them. l. Sui Generis Database Rights means rights other than copyright resulting from Directive 96/9/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 11 March 1996 on the legal protection of databases, as amended and/or succeeded, as well as other essentially equivalent rights anywhere in the world. m. You means the individual or entity exercising the Licensed Rights under this Public License. Your has a corresponding meaning. Section 2 -- Scope. a. License grant. 1. Subject to the terms and conditions of this Public License, the Licensor hereby grants You a worldwide, royalty-free, non-sublicensable, non-exclusive, irrevocable license to exercise the Licensed Rights in the Licensed Material to: a. reproduce and Share the Licensed Material, in whole or in part; and b. produce, reproduce, and Share Adapted Material. 2. Exceptions and Limitations. For the avoidance of doubt, where Exceptions and Limitations apply to Your use, this Public License does not apply, and You do not need to comply with its terms and conditions. 3. Term. The term of this Public License is specified in Section 6(a). 4. Media and formats; technical modifications allowed. The Licensor authorizes You to exercise the Licensed Rights in all media and formats whether now known or hereafter created, and to make technical modifications necessary to do so. The Licensor waives and/or agrees not to assert any right or authority to forbid You from making technical modifications necessary to exercise the Licensed Rights, including technical modifications necessary to circumvent Effective Technological Measures. For purposes of this Public License, simply making modifications authorized by this Section 2(a) (4) never produces Adapted Material. 5. Downstream recipients. a. Offer from the Licensor -- Licensed Material. Every recipient of the Licensed Material automatically receives an offer from the Licensor to exercise the Licensed Rights under the terms and conditions of this Public License. b. Additional offer from the Licensor -- Adapted Material. Every recipient of Adapted Material from You automatically receives an offer from the Licensor to exercise the Licensed Rights in the Adapted Material under the conditions of the Adapter's License You apply. c. No downstream restrictions. You may not offer or impose any additional or different terms or conditions on, or apply any Effective Technological Measures to, the Licensed Material if doing so restricts exercise of the Licensed Rights by any recipient of the Licensed Material. 6. No endorsement. Nothing in this Public License constitutes or may be construed as permission to assert or imply that You are, or that Your use of the Licensed Material is, connected with, or sponsored, endorsed, or granted official status by, the Licensor or others designated to receive attribution as provided in Section 3(a)(1)(A)(i). b. Other rights. 1. Moral rights, such as the right of integrity, are not licensed under this Public License, nor are publicity, privacy, and/or other similar personality rights; however, to the extent possible, the Licensor waives and/or agrees not to assert any such rights held by the Licensor to the limited extent necessary to allow You to exercise the Licensed Rights, but not otherwise. 2. Patent and trademark rights are not licensed under this Public License. 3. To the extent possible, the Licensor waives any right to collect royalties from You for the exercise of the Licensed Rights, whether directly or through a collecting society under any voluntary or waivable statutory or compulsory licensing scheme. In all other cases the Licensor expressly reserves any right to collect such royalties. Section 3 -- License Conditions. Your exercise of the Licensed Rights is expressly made subject to the following conditions. a. Attribution. 1. If You Share the Licensed Material (including in modified form), You must: a. retain the following if it is supplied by the Licensor with the Licensed Material: i. identification of the creator(s) of the Licensed Material and any others designated to receive attribution, in any reasonable manner requested by the Licensor (including by pseudonym if designated); ii. a copyright notice; iii. a notice that refers to this Public License; iv. a notice that refers to the disclaimer of warranties; v. a URI or hyperlink to the Licensed Material to the extent reasonably practicable; b. indicate if You modified the Licensed Material and retain an indication of any previous modifications; and c. indicate the Licensed Material is licensed under this Public License, and include the text of, or the URI or hyperlink to, this Public License. 2. You may satisfy the conditions in Section 3(a)(1) in any reasonable manner based on the medium, means, and context in which You Share the Licensed Material. For example, it may be reasonable to satisfy the conditions by providing a URI or hyperlink to a resource that includes the required information. 3. If requested by the Licensor, You must remove any of the information required by Section 3(a)(1)(A) to the extent reasonably practicable. b. ShareAlike. In addition to the conditions in Section 3(a), if You Share Adapted Material You produce, the following conditions also apply. 1. The Adapter's License You apply must be a Creative Commons license with the same License Elements, this version or later, or a BY-SA Compatible License. 2. You must include the text of, or the URI or hyperlink to, the Adapter's License You apply. You may satisfy this condition in any reasonable manner based on the medium, means, and context in which You Share Adapted Material. 3. You may not offer or impose any additional or different terms or conditions on, or apply any Effective Technological Measures to, Adapted Material that restrict exercise of the rights granted under the Adapter's License You apply. Section 4 -- Sui Generis Database Rights. Where the Licensed Rights include Sui Generis Database Rights that apply to Your use of the Licensed Material: a. for the avoidance of doubt, Section 2(a)(1) grants You the right to extract, reuse, reproduce, and Share all or a substantial portion of the contents of the database; b. if You include all or a substantial portion of the database contents in a database in which You have Sui Generis Database Rights, then the database in which You have Sui Generis Database Rights (but not its individual contents) is Adapted Material, including for purposes of Section 3(b); and c. You must comply with the conditions in Section 3(a) if You Share all or a substantial portion of the contents of the database. For the avoidance of doubt, this Section 4 supplements and does not replace Your obligations under this Public License where the Licensed Rights include other Copyright and Similar Rights. Section 5 -- Disclaimer of Warranties and Limitation of Liability. a. UNLESS OTHERWISE SEPARATELY UNDERTAKEN BY THE LICENSOR, TO THE EXTENT POSSIBLE, THE LICENSOR OFFERS THE LICENSED MATERIAL AS-IS AND AS-AVAILABLE, AND MAKES NO REPRESENTATIONS OR WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND CONCERNING THE LICENSED MATERIAL, WHETHER EXPRESS, IMPLIED, STATUTORY, OR OTHER. THIS INCLUDES, WITHOUT LIMITATION, WARRANTIES OF TITLE, MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, NON-INFRINGEMENT, ABSENCE OF LATENT OR OTHER DEFECTS, ACCURACY, OR THE PRESENCE OR ABSENCE OF ERRORS, WHETHER OR NOT KNOWN OR DISCOVERABLE. WHERE DISCLAIMERS OF WARRANTIES ARE NOT ALLOWED IN FULL OR IN PART, THIS DISCLAIMER MAY NOT APPLY TO YOU. b. TO THE EXTENT POSSIBLE, IN NO EVENT WILL THE LICENSOR BE LIABLE TO YOU ON ANY LEGAL THEORY (INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, NEGLIGENCE) OR OTHERWISE FOR ANY DIRECT, SPECIAL, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE, EXEMPLARY, OR OTHER LOSSES, COSTS, EXPENSES, OR DAMAGES ARISING OUT OF THIS PUBLIC LICENSE OR USE OF THE LICENSED MATERIAL, EVEN IF THE LICENSOR HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH LOSSES, COSTS, EXPENSES, OR DAMAGES. WHERE A LIMITATION OF LIABILITY IS NOT ALLOWED IN FULL OR IN PART, THIS LIMITATION MAY NOT APPLY TO YOU. c. The disclaimer of warranties and limitation of liability provided above shall be interpreted in a manner that, to the extent possible, most closely approximates an absolute disclaimer and waiver of all liability. Section 6 -- Term and Termination. a. This Public License applies for the term of the Copyright and Similar Rights licensed here. However, if You fail to comply with this Public License, then Your rights under this Public License terminate automatically. b. Where Your right to use the Licensed Material has terminated under Section 6(a), it reinstates: 1. automatically as of the date the violation is cured, provided it is cured within 30 days of Your discovery of the violation; or 2. upon express reinstatement by the Licensor. For the avoidance of doubt, this Section 6(b) does not affect any right the Licensor may have to seek remedies for Your violations of this Public License. c. For the avoidance of doubt, the Licensor may also offer the Licensed Material under separate terms or conditions or stop distributing the Licensed Material at any time; however, doing so will not terminate this Public License. d. Sections 1, 5, 6, 7, and 8 survive termination of this Public License. Section 7 -- Other Terms and Conditions. a. The Licensor shall not be bound by any additional or different terms or conditions communicated by You unless expressly agreed. b. Any arrangements, understandings, or agreements regarding the Licensed Material not stated herein are separate from and independent of the terms and conditions of this Public License. Section 8 -- Interpretation. a. For the avoidance of doubt, this Public License does not, and shall not be interpreted to, reduce, limit, restrict, or impose conditions on any use of the Licensed Material that could lawfully be made without permission under this Public License. b. To the extent possible, if any provision of this Public License is deemed unenforceable, it shall be automatically reformed to the minimum extent necessary to make it enforceable. If the provision cannot be reformed, it shall be severed from this Public License without affecting the enforceability of the remaining terms and conditions. c. No term or condition of this Public License will be waived and no failure to comply consented to unless expressly agreed to by the Licensor. d. Nothing in this Public License constitutes or may be interpreted as a limitation upon, or waiver of, any privileges and immunities that apply to the Licensor or You, including from the legal processes of any jurisdiction or authority. ======================================================================= Creative Commons is not a party to its public licenses. Notwithstanding, Creative Commons may elect to apply one of its public licenses to material it publishes and in those instances will be considered the “Licensor.” The text of the Creative Commons public licenses is dedicated to the public domain under the CC0 Public Domain Dedication. Except for the limited purpose of indicating that material is shared under a Creative Commons public license or as otherwise permitted by the Creative Commons policies published at creativecommons.org/policies, Creative Commons does not authorize the use of the trademark "Creative Commons" or any other trademark or logo of Creative Commons without its prior written consent including, without limitation, in connection with any unauthorized modifications to any of its public licenses or any other arrangements, understandings, or agreements concerning use of licensed material. For the avoidance of doubt, this paragraph does not form part of the public licenses. Creative Commons may be contacted at creativecommons.org.
In a nutshell, means you can:
-
Use it in commercial/proprietary/internal works…
-
Expand upon/change the specification…
-
(As long as it is released under the same Creative Commons license)
-
As long as you attribute the original (this document). This can be as simple as something like:
Based on WireProto version <protocol version> as found at https://wireproto.io/.
More details certainly helps, though; you may want to mention the exact date you "forked" it, etc.
Please see the full text as collapsed above or the online version of the license for full legal copy.
Note
|
In the event of the embedded text in this document differing from the online version, the online version is assumed to take precedence as the valid license applicable to this work. |
2. Protocol
The WireProto data packing API is a custom wire protocol//message format designed for incredibly performant, unambiguous, predictable, platform-agnostic, client-agnostic communication. It is based heavily on the OpenSSH "v1" key format (example/details) packing method.
It supports arbitrary binary values, which means they can be anything according to the implementation-specific details; a common practice is to encode ("marshal") a Go struct to JSON bytes, and set that as a WireProto field’s value.
It supports both static construction/parsing/dissection and stream approaches in a single format, as well as multiple commands per request message/multiple answers per response message.
All packed uint32 values are big-endian.
This specification Protocol Version is 1
(0x00000001
).
2.1. Library
This protocol specification is accompanied with a reference library for Golang, "WireProto" (source):
2.2. Why a Custom Message Format?
Because existing ones (e.g. JSON, XML, YAML) are slow/bloaty, inaccurate, and/or inflexible. They struggle with binary or abritrary data (or in e.g. XML’s case requiring intermediate conditional encoding/decoding).
If it can be represented as bytes (which all digital data can), WireProto can send and receive it.
Additionally:
-
Protobuf has performance issues (yes, really; protobufs have large overhead) and is restrictive on data types for future-proofing.
-
Gob is very language-limiting and does not support e.g. nil pointers and cyclical values.
-
Cap’n Proto has wide language support and excellent performance but is terribly non-idiomatic, requiring the code to be generated from the schema and not vice versa (which is only ideal if you have only one communication interface).
-
JSON streams have no delimiters defined, and thus this makes it an inconvenience if using a parser that does not know when the message ends/is complete, or if it is expecting a standalone JSON object.
Tip
|
WireProto is only used for binary packing/unpacking; this means it can be used with any e.g. Thus it is transport/storage-agnostic, and can be used with a TCP socket, UDP socket, IPC (InterProcess Communication)/UDS (UNIX Domain Socket) handle, TLS-tunneled TCP socket, etc. |
3. Message Format
Tip
|
Throughout this document, you may see references to things like These refer to ASCII control characters. You will also see many values represented in hex. You can find more details about this (along with a full ASCII reference) here. Note that the socket API fully supports UTF-8 — just be sure that your Size Allocator are aligned to the byte count, not character count. |
Each message is generally composed of:
-
The Response Status[1]
-
One (or more) Record Group(s), each of which contain:
-
One (or more) Record(s), each of which contain:
-
One (or more) Field/Value pair(s), each of which contain:
-
A Copy Record[1]
-
-
3.1. Response Status
For responses, their messages have an additional byte prepended; a status indicator. This allows client programs to quickly bail in the case of an error if no further parsing is desired.
The status will be indicated by one of two values: an ASCII ACK
(0x06
) for all requests being returned successfully or an ASCII NAK
(0x15
) if one or more errors were encountered across all records.
3.2. Protocol Version
The protocol version is a packed uint32 that denotes which version of this protocol specification is being used.
It is maintained seperately from the library version/repo tags.
The current protocol version (as demonstrated in this document) is 1
(0x00000001
).
Note
|
Version 0 is reserved for current HEAD of the master branch of this specification and should be considered experimental.
|
3.3. Record Group
A record group contains multiple related Records. It is common to only have a single Record Group.
Its structure is:
-
One (or more) Records
3.3.1. Record
A record contains multiple related Field/Value Pairs (FVP). It is typical to only have a single Record.
Its structure is:
Important
|
For response messages, the record’s size allocator (but NOT the count allocator) includes the Copy Record size for each response record copy![1] |
3.3.1.1. Field/Value Pair (Key/Value Pair)
A field/value pair (also referred to as a key/value pair) contains a matched Field Name and its Field Value.
Its structure is:
-
A single Field Name
-
A single matching Field Value
Important
|
Unlike most/all other Allocators for other sections/levels, the field name and value allocators are consecutive Size Allocators! This is because there is only one field name and value per record. |
3.3.1.1.1. Field Name
The field name is usually from a finite set of allowed names. The Field Value, while written as bytes, often contains a data structure defined by the field name. (A field name is closer to a "value type".) It must be a UTF-8 string.
Its structure is:
-
The name in bytes
3.3.1.1.2. Field Value
A field’s value is, on the wire, just a series of bytes. The actual content of those bytes, including any structure or encoding, is likely to/probably depends on the paired Field Name.
Its structure is:
-
The value in bytes
3.3.1.2. Copy Record (Response Copy of Request)
This contains a "copy" of the original/request’s Record that this record is in response to.
It is a variant of a Record used exclusively in responses, and is tied to (included in) each response’s FVP.
Its structure is:
3.3.1.2.1. Field/Value Pair (Key/Value Pair) (Response Copy)
A field/value pair (also referred to as a key/value pair) contains a matched Field Name and its Field Value.
It is a variant of a Field/Value Pair used exclusively in response copies of the original request’s FVP.
Its structure is:
-
A single Field Name
-
A single matching Field Value
Important
|
Unlike most/all other Allocators for other sections/levels, the field name and value allocators are consecutive Size Allocators! This is because there is only one field name and value per record. |
4. Checksums
Checksums are optional for the client but the server will always send them. If present in the request, the server will validate to ensure the checksum matches the message body (body start to body end, headers included). If the checksum does not match, an error will be returned.
They are represented as a big-endian-packed uint32.
The checksum must be prefixed with a CKSUM
Header Prefix. If no checksum is provided, this prefix must not be included in the sequence.
Tip
|
You can quickly check if a checksum is present by checking the first byte in requests or the second byte in responses. If it is |
The checksum method used is the IEEE 802.3 CRC-32, which should be natively available for all/most client implementations as it is perhaps the most ubiquitous of CRC-32 variants. (Polynomial 0x04c11db7
, reversed polynomial 0xedb88320
.)
To confirm you are using the correct CRC32 implementation (as there are a ton of "CRC-32" algorithms and methods out there), use the following validations:
String | Bytes | Checksum (integer) | Checksum (bytes, little-endian) | Checksum (bytes, big-endian) |
---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
5. Headers
Certain sections are wrapped with an identifying header. Those headers are included below for reference.
5.1. RESPSTART
Byte Sequence
Responses have a Response Status.[1]
It is either an ACK
(0x06
) or NAK
(0x15
).
5.2. CKSUM
Header Prefix
A checksum, if provided, will have a prefix header of ESC
(0x1b
).
5.3. MSGSTART
Header Prefix
The message start header indicates a start of a message.
It is an SOH
(0x01
).
5.4. BODYSTART
Header Prefix
The body start header indicates that actual data/records follows.
It is an STX
(0x02
).
5.6. MSGEND
Sequence
The message end prefix indicates that a message in its entirety has ended.
It is an EOT
(0x04
).
6. Allocators
There are two type of allocators included for each following sequence of bytes: count allocators
and size allocators
.
They can be used by clients to determine the size of destination buffers, and are used by the server to efficiently unpack requests.
They are usually paired together with the count allocator preceding the size allocator, but not always (e.g. Field/Value Pair (Key/Value Pair) have two Size Allocator).
All allocators are unsigned 32-bit integers, little-endian-packed.
6.1. Count Allocator
Count allocators indicate how many children objects are contained.
6.2. Size Allocator
Size allocators indicate how much (in bytes) all children objects are combined together. It includes e.g. separators, etc.
7. Reference Model and Examples
For a more visual explanation, given the following e.g. Golang structs from the Golang reference library (wireproto.Request{}
and wireproto.Response{}
):
7.1. Single/Simple
7.1.1. Single/Simple Request
Example Message Structure (Simple Request)
package wireproto
var (
// REQUEST (Simple)
testSimpleReq *Request = &Request{
ProtocolVersion: ProtoVersion,
RecordGroups: []*RequestRecordGroup{
&RequestRecordGroup{
Records: []*RequestRecord{
&RequestRecord{
Pairs: []*FieldValuePair{
&FieldValuePair{
Name: []byte("field1"),
Value: []byte("value1"),
},
&FieldValuePair{
Name: []byte("field2"),
Value: []byte("value2"),
},
},
},
},
},
},
}
)
Would then serialize as (in hex):
Annotated Hex
// REQUEST (Simple)
-------- // (No Checksum Present)
01 // HDR:MSGSTART
00000001 // Protocol Version (1)
02 // HDR:BODYSTART
00000001 // Record Group Count (1)
00000038 // Record Groups Size (56)
// Record Group 1 (56 bytes)
00000001 // Record Count (1)
00000030 // Record Group Size (48)
// Record Group 1, Record 1 (48 bytes)
00000002 // Field/Value Count (2)
00000028 // Record Size (40)
// Record Group 1, Record 1, Field/Value 1 (20 bytes)
00000006 // Field Name Size (6)
00000006 // Field Value Size (6)
6669656c6431 // "field1"
76616c756531 // "value1"
// Record Group 1, Record 1, Field/Value 2 (20 bytes)
00000006 // Field Name Size (6)
00000006 // Field Value Size (6)
6669656c6432 // "field2"
76616c756532 // "value2"
03 // HDR:BODYEND
04 // HDR:MSGEND
Or, non-annotated:
01000000010200000001000000380000000100000030000000020000002800000006000000066669
656c643176616c75653100000006000000066669656c643276616c7565320304
7.1.2. Single/Simple Response
Example Message Structure (Simple Response)
package wireproto
var (
// RESPONSE (Simple)
testSimpleResp *Response = &Response{
Status: AsciiACK,
Checksum: 4005376897, // 0xeebd3381
ProtocolVersion: ProtoVersion,
RecordGroups: []*ResponseRecordGroup{
&ResponseRecordGroup{
Records: []*ResponseRecord{
&ResponseRecord{
Pairs: []*FieldValuePair{
&FieldValuePair{
Name: []byte("data1"),
Value: []byte("<arbitrary data>"),
},
},
OriginalRecord: testSimpleReq.RecordGroups[0].Records[0],
},
},
},
},
}
)
Would then serialize as (in hex):
Annotated Hex
// RESPONSE (Simple)
06 // HDR:RESPSTART (Status: OK)
1b // HDR:CKSUM
5fde82e5 // Checksum Value (1608418021)
01 // HDR:MSGSTART
00000001 // Protocol Version (1)
02 // HDR:BODYSTART
00000001 // Record Group Count (1)
00000061 // Record Groups Size (97)
// Record Group 1 (97)
00000001 // Record Count (1)
00000059 // Record Group Size (89)
// Record Group 1, Record 1 (89 bytes)
00000001 // Field/Value Count (1)
0000001d // Record Size (29)
00000030 // Request Record Size (48)
// Record Group 1, Record 1, Field/Value 1 (29 bytes)
00000005 // Field Name Size (5)
00000010 // Field Value Size (16)
6461746131 // "data1"
3c6172626974726172792064 // "<arbitrary data>"
6174613e
// Record Group 1, Record 1 (REQUEST RECORD) (48 bytes)
00000002 // Field/Value Count (2)
00000028 // Record Size (40)
// Record Group 1, Record 1, Field/Value 1 (20 bytes)
00000006 // Field Name Size (6)
00000006 // Field Value Size (6)
6669656c6431 // "field1"
76616c756531 // "value1"
// Record Group 1, Record 1, Field/Value 2 (20 bytes)
00000006 // Field Name Size (6)
00000006 // Field Value Size (6)
6669656c6432 // "field2"
76616c756532 // "value2"
03 // HDR:BODYEND
04 // HDR:MSGEND
Or, non-annotated:
061b5fde82e501000000010200000001000000610000000100000059000000010000001d00000030
000000050000001064617461313c61726269747261727920646174613e0000000200000028000000
06000000066669656c643176616c75653100000006000000066669656c643276616c7565320304
7.2. Multiple/Many/Complex
Multiple commands, parameters, etc. can be specified in one message.
7.2.1. Complex Request
Example Message Structure (Multiple/Many Requests, Single Message)
package wireproto
var (
// REQUEST (Complex)
testMultiReq *Request = &Request{
ProtocolVersion: ProtoVersion,
RecordGroups: []*RequestRecordGroup{
&RequestRecordGroup{
Records: []*RequestRecord{
&RequestRecord{
Pairs: []*FieldValuePair{
&FieldValuePair{
Name: []byte("fieldA1A"),
Value: []byte("valueA1A"),
},
&FieldValuePair{
Name: []byte("fieldA1B"),
Value: []byte("valueA1B"),
},
},
},
&RequestRecord{
Pairs: []*FieldValuePair{
&FieldValuePair{
Name: []byte("fieldA2A"),
Value: []byte("valueA2A"),
},
&FieldValuePair{
Name: []byte("fieldA2B"),
Value: []byte("valueA2B"),
},
},
},
},
},
&RequestRecordGroup{
Records: []*RequestRecord{
&RequestRecord{
Pairs: []*FieldValuePair{
&FieldValuePair{
Name: []byte("fieldB1A"),
Value: []byte("valueB1A"),
},
&FieldValuePair{
Name: []byte("fieldB1B"),
Value: []byte("valueB1B"),
},
},
},
&RequestRecord{
Pairs: []*FieldValuePair{
&FieldValuePair{
Name: []byte("fieldB2A"),
Value: []byte("valueB2A"),
},
&FieldValuePair{
Name: []byte("fieldB2B"),
Value: []byte("valueB2B"),
},
},
},
},
},
},
}
)
Would then serialize as (in hex):
Annotated Hex
// REQUEST (Complex)
-------- // (No Checksum Present)
01 // HDR:MSGSTART
00000001 // Protocol Version (1)
02 // HDR:BODYSTART
00000002 // Record Group Count (2)
000000f0 // Record Groups Size (240)
// Record Group 1 (120 bytes)
00000002 // Record Count (2)
00000070 // Record Group Size (112)
// Record Group 1, Record 1 (56 bytes)
00000002 // Field/Value Count (2)
00000030 // Record Size (48)
// Record Group 1, Record 1, Field/Value 1 (24 bytes)
00000008 // Field Name Size (8)
00000008 // Field Value Size (8)
6669656c64413141 // "fieldA1A"
76616c7565413141 // "valueA1A"
// Record Group 1, Record 1, Field/Value 2 (24 bytes)
00000008 // Field Name Size (8)
00000008 // Field Value Size (8)
6669656c64413142 // "fieldA1B"
76616c7565413142 // "valueA1B"
// Record Group 1, Record 2 (56 bytes)
00000002 // Field/Value Count (2)
00000030 // Record Size (48)
// Record Group 1, Record 2, Field/Value 1 (24 bytes)
00000008 // Field Name Size (8)
00000008 // Field Value Size (8)
6669656c64413241 // "fieldA2A"
76616c7565413241 // "valueA2A"
// Record Group 1, Record 2, Field/Value 2 (24 bytes)
00000008 // Field Name Size (8)
00000008 // Field Value Size (8)
6669656c64413242 // "fieldA2B"
76616c7565413242 // "valueA2B"
// Record Group 2 (120 bytes)
00000002 // Record Count (2)
00000070 // Record Group Size (112)
// Record Group 2, Record 1 (56 bytes)
00000002 // Field/Value Count (2)
00000030 // Record Size (48)
// Record Group 2, Record 1, Field/Value 1 (24 bytes)
00000008 // Field Name Size (8)
00000008 // Field Value Size (8)
6669656c64423141 // "fieldB1A"
76616c7565423141 // "valueB1A"
// Record Group 2, Record 1, Field/Value 2 (24 bytes)
00000008 // Field Name Size (8)
00000008 // Field Value Size (8)
6669656c64423142 // "fieldB1B"
76616c7565423142 // "valueB1B"
// Record Group 2, Record 2 (56 bytes)
00000002 // Field/Value Count (2)
00000030 // Record Size (48)
// Record Group 2, Record 2, Field/Value 1 (24 bytes)
00000008 // Field Name Size (8)
00000008 // Field Value Size (8)
6669656c64423241 // "fieldB2A"
76616c7565423241 // "valueB2A"
// Record Group 2, Record 2, Field/Value 2 (24 bytes)
00000008 // Field Name Size (8)
00000008 // Field Value Size (8)
6669656c64423242 // "fieldB2B"
76616c7565423242 // "valueB2B"
03 // HDR:BODYEND
04 // HDR:MSGEND
Or, non-annotated:
01000000010200000002000000f00000000200000070000000020000003000000008000000086669
656c6441314176616c756541314100000008000000086669656c6441314276616c75654131420000
00020000003000000008000000086669656c6441324176616c756541324100000008000000086669
656c6441324276616c75654132420000000200000070000000020000003000000008000000086669
656c6442314176616c756542314100000008000000086669656c6442314276616c75654231420000
00020000003000000008000000086669656c6442324176616c756542324100000008000000086669
656c6442324276616c75654232420304
7.2.2. Complex Response
Example Message Structure (Response to Multiple/Many Requests, Single Message)
package wireproto
var (
// RESPONSE (Complex)
testMultiResp *Response = &Response{
Status: AsciiACK,
Checksum: 2563794802, // 98d06772
ProtocolVersion: ProtoVersion,
RecordGroups: []*ResponseRecordGroup{
&ResponseRecordGroup{
Records: []*ResponseRecord{
&ResponseRecord{
Pairs: []*FieldValuePair{
&FieldValuePair{
Name: []byte("dataA1"),
Value: []byte("<arbitrary data>"),
},
},
OriginalRecord: testMultiReq.RecordGroups[0].Records[0],
},
&ResponseRecord{
Pairs: []*FieldValuePair{
&FieldValuePair{
Name: []byte("dataA2"),
Value: []byte("<arbitrary data>"),
},
},
OriginalRecord: testMultiReq.RecordGroups[0].Records[1],
},
},
},
&ResponseRecordGroup{
Records: []*ResponseRecord{
&ResponseRecord{
Pairs: []*FieldValuePair{
&FieldValuePair{
Name: []byte("dataB1"),
Value: []byte("<arbitrary data>"),
},
},
OriginalRecord: testMultiReq.RecordGroups[1].Records[0],
},
&ResponseRecord{
Pairs: []*FieldValuePair{
&FieldValuePair{
Name: []byte("dataB2"),
Value: []byte("<arbitrary data>"),
},
},
OriginalRecord: testMultiReq.RecordGroups[1].Records[1],
},
},
},
},
}
)
Would then serialize as (in hex):
Annotated Hex
// RESPONSE (Complex)
06 // HDR:RESPSTART (Status: OK)
1b // HDR:CKSUM
d0ba719f // Checksum Value (3501879711)
01 // HDR:MSGSTART
00000001 // Protocol Version (1)
02 // HDR:BODYSTART
00000002 // Record Group Count (2)
00000198 // Record Groups Size (408)
// Record Group 1 (204)
00000002 // Record Count (2)
000000c4 // Record Group Size (196)
// Record Group 1, Record 1 (98 bytes)
00000001 // Field/Value Count (1)
0000001e // Record Size (30)
00000038 // Request Record Size (56)
// Record Group 1, Record 1, Field/Value 1 (30 bytes)
00000006 // Field Name Size (6)
00000010 // Field Value Size (16)
646174614131 // "dataA1"
3c6172626974726172792064 // "<arbitrary data>"
6174613e
// Record Group 1, Record 1 (REQUEST RECORD) (56 bytes)
00000002 // Field/Value Count (2)
00000030 // Record Size (48)
// Record Group 1, Record 1, Field/Value 1 (24 bytes)
00000008 // Field Name Size (8)
00000008 // Field Value Size (8)
6669656c64413141 // "fieldA1A"
76616c7565413141 // "valueA1A"
// Record Group 1, Record 1, Field/Value 2 (24 bytes)
00000008 // Field Name Size (8)
00000008 // Field Value Size (8)
6669656c64413142 // "fieldA1B"
76616c7565413142 // "valueA1B"
// Record Group 1, Record 2 (98 bytes)
00000001 // Field/Value Count (1)
0000001e // Record Size (30)
00000038 // Request Record Size (56)
// Record Group 1, Record 2, Field/Value 1 (30 bytes)
00000006 // Field Name Size (6)
00000010 // Field Value Size (16)
646174614132 // "dataA2"
3c6172626974726172792064 // "<arbitrary data>"
6174613e
// Record Group 1, Record 2 (REQUEST RECORD) (56 bytes)
00000002 // Field/Value Count (2)
00000030 // Record Size (48)
// Record Group 1, Record 2, Field/Value 1 (24 bytes)
00000008 // Field Name Size (8)
00000008 // Field Value Size (8)
6669656c64413241 // "fieldA2A"
76616c7565413241 // "valueA2A"
// Record Group 1, Record 2, Field/Value 2 (24 bytes)
00000008 // Field Name Size (8)
00000008 // Field Value Size (8)
6669656c64413242 // "fieldA2B"
76616c7565413242 // "valueA2B"
// Record Group 2 (204)
00000002 // Record Count (2)
000000c4 // Record Group Size (196)
// Record Group 2, Record 1 (98 bytes)
00000001 // Field/Value Count (1)
0000001e // Record Size (30)
00000038 // Request Record Size (56)
// Record Group 2, Record 1, Field/Value 1 (30 bytes)
00000006 // Field Name Size (6)
00000010 // Field Value Size (16)
646174614231 // "dataB1"
3c6172626974726172792064 // "<arbitrary data>"
6174613e
// Record Group 2, Record 1 (REQUEST RECORD) (56 bytes)
00000002 // Field/Value Count (2)
00000030 // Record Size (48)
// Record Group 2, Record 1, Field/Value 1 (24 bytes)
00000008 // Field Name Size (8)
00000008 // Field Value Size (8)
6669656c64423141 // "fieldB1A"
76616c7565423141 // "valueB1A"
// Record Group 2, Record 1, Field/Value 2 (24 bytes)
00000008 // Field Name Size (8)
00000008 // Field Value Size (8)
6669656c64423142 // "fieldB1B"
76616c7565423142 // "valueB1B"
// Record Group 2, Record 2 (98 bytes)
00000001 // Field/Value Count (1)
0000001e // Record Size (30)
00000038 // Request Record Size (56)
// Record Group 2, Record 2, Field/Value 1 (30 bytes)
00000006 // Field Name Size (6)
00000010 // Field Value Size (16)
646174614232 // "dataB2"
3c6172626974726172792064 // "<arbitrary data>"
6174613e
// Record Group 2, Record 2 (REQUEST RECORD) (56 bytes)
00000002 // Field/Value Count (2)
00000030 // Record Size (48)
// Record Group 2, Record 2, Field/Value 1 (24 bytes)
00000008 // Field Name Size (8)
00000008 // Field Value Size (8)
6669656c64423241 // "fieldB2A"
76616c7565423241 // "valueB2A"
// Record Group 2, Record 2, Field/Value 2 (24 bytes)
00000008 // Field Name Size (8)
00000008 // Field Value Size (8)
6669656c64423242 // "fieldB2B"
76616c7565423242 // "valueB2B"
03 // HDR:BODYEND
04 // HDR:MSGEND
Or, non-annotated:
061bd0ba719f010000000102000000020000019800000002000000c4000000010000001e00000038
00000006000000106461746141313c61726269747261727920646174613e00000002000000300000
0008000000086669656c6441314176616c756541314100000008000000086669656c644131427661
6c7565413142000000010000001e0000003800000006000000106461746141323c61726269747261
727920646174613e000000020000003000000008000000086669656c6441324176616c7565413241
00000008000000086669656c6441324276616c756541324200000002000000c4000000010000001e
0000003800000006000000106461746142313c61726269747261727920646174613e000000020000
003000000008000000086669656c6442314176616c756542314100000008000000086669656c6442
314276616c7565423142000000010000001e0000003800000006000000106461746142323c617262
69747261727920646174613e000000020000003000000008000000086669656c6442324176616c75
6542324100000008000000086669656c6442324276616c75654232420304