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1 | 1 | The Mercurial wire protocol is a request-response based protocol |
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2 | 2 | with multiple wire representations. |
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3 | 3 | |
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4 | 4 | Each request is modeled as a command name, a dictionary of arguments, and |
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5 | 5 | optional raw input. Command arguments and their types are intrinsic |
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6 | 6 | properties of commands. So is the response type of the command. This means |
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7 | 7 | clients can't always send arbitrary arguments to servers and servers can't |
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8 | 8 | return multiple response types. |
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9 | 9 | |
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10 | 10 | The protocol is synchronous and does not support multiplexing (concurrent |
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11 | 11 | commands). |
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12 | 12 | |
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13 | 13 | Handshake |
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14 | 14 | ========= |
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15 | 15 | |
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16 | 16 | It is required or common for clients to perform a *handshake* when connecting |
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17 | 17 | to a server. The handshake serves the following purposes: |
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18 | 18 | |
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19 | 19 | * Negotiating protocol/transport level options |
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20 | 20 | * Allows the client to learn about server capabilities to influence |
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21 | 21 | future requests |
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22 | 22 | * Ensures the underlying transport channel is in a *clean* state |
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23 | 23 | |
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24 | 24 | An important goal of the handshake is to allow clients to use more modern |
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25 | 25 | wire protocol features. By default, clients must assume they are talking |
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26 | 26 | to an old version of Mercurial server (possibly even the very first |
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27 | 27 | implementation). So, clients should not attempt to call or utilize modern |
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28 | 28 | wire protocol features until they have confirmation that the server |
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29 | 29 | supports them. The handshake implementation is designed to allow both |
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30 | 30 | ends to utilize the latest set of features and capabilities with as |
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31 | 31 | few round trips as possible. |
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32 | 32 | |
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33 | 33 | The handshake mechanism varies by transport and protocol and is documented |
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34 | 34 | in the sections below. |
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35 | 35 | |
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36 | 36 | HTTP Protocol |
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37 | 37 | ============= |
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38 | 38 | |
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39 | 39 | Handshake |
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40 | 40 | --------- |
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41 | 41 | |
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42 | 42 | The client sends a ``capabilities`` command request (``?cmd=capabilities``) |
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43 | 43 | as soon as HTTP requests may be issued. |
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44 | 44 | |
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45 | 45 | By default, the server responds with a version 1 capabilities string, which |
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46 | 46 | the client parses to learn about the server's abilities. The ``Content-Type`` |
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47 | 47 | for this response is ``application/mercurial-0.1`` or |
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48 | 48 | ``application/mercurial-0.2`` depending on whether the client advertised |
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49 | 49 | support for version ``0.2`` in its request. (Clients aren't supposed to |
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50 | 50 | advertise support for ``0.2`` until the capabilities response indicates |
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51 | 51 | the server's support for that media type. However, a client could |
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52 | 52 | conceivably cache this metadata and issue the capabilities request in such |
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53 | 53 | a way to elicit an ``application/mercurial-0.2`` response.) |
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54 | 54 | |
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55 | 55 | Clients wishing to switch to a newer API service may send an |
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56 | 56 | ``X-HgUpgrade-<X>`` header containing a space-delimited list of API service |
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57 | 57 | names the client is capable of speaking. The request MUST also include an |
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58 | 58 | ``X-HgProto-<X>`` header advertising a known serialization format for the |
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59 | 59 | response. ``cbor`` is currently the only defined serialization format. |
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60 | 60 | |
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61 | 61 | If the request contains these headers, the response ``Content-Type`` MAY |
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62 | 62 | be for a different media type. e.g. ``application/mercurial-cbor`` if the |
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63 | 63 | client advertises support for CBOR. |
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64 | 64 | |
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65 | 65 | The response MUST be deserializable to a map with the following keys: |
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66 | 66 | |
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67 | 67 | apibase |
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68 | 68 | URL path to API services, relative to the repository root. e.g. ``api/``. |
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69 | 69 | |
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70 | 70 | apis |
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71 | 71 | A map of API service names to API descriptors. An API descriptor contains |
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72 | 72 | more details about that API. In the case of the HTTP Version 2 Transport, |
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73 | 73 | it will be the normal response to a ``capabilities`` command. |
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74 | 74 | |
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75 | 75 | Only the services advertised by the client that are also available on |
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76 | 76 | the server are advertised. |
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77 | 77 | |
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78 | 78 | v1capabilities |
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79 | 79 | The capabilities string that would be returned by a version 1 response. |
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80 | 80 | |
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81 | 81 | The client can then inspect the server-advertised APIs and decide which |
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82 | 82 | API to use, including continuing to use the HTTP Version 1 Transport. |
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83 | 83 | |
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84 | 84 | HTTP Version 1 Transport |
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85 | 85 | ------------------------ |
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86 | 86 | |
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87 | 87 | Commands are issued as HTTP/1.0 or HTTP/1.1 requests. Commands are |
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88 | 88 | sent to the base URL of the repository with the command name sent in |
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89 | 89 | the ``cmd`` query string parameter. e.g. |
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90 | 90 | ``https://example.com/repo?cmd=capabilities``. The HTTP method is ``GET`` |
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91 | 91 | or ``POST`` depending on the command and whether there is a request |
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92 | 92 | body. |
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93 | 93 | |
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94 | 94 | Command arguments can be sent multiple ways. |
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95 | 95 | |
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96 | 96 | The simplest is part of the URL query string using ``x-www-form-urlencoded`` |
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97 | 97 | encoding (see Python's ``urllib.urlencode()``. However, many servers impose |
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98 | 98 | length limitations on the URL. So this mechanism is typically only used if |
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99 | 99 | the server doesn't support other mechanisms. |
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100 | 100 | |
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101 | 101 | If the server supports the ``httpheader`` capability, command arguments can |
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102 | 102 | be sent in HTTP request headers named ``X-HgArg-<N>`` where ``<N>`` is an |
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103 | 103 | integer starting at 1. A ``x-www-form-urlencoded`` representation of the |
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104 | 104 | arguments is obtained. This full string is then split into chunks and sent |
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105 | 105 | in numbered ``X-HgArg-<N>`` headers. The maximum length of each HTTP header |
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106 | 106 | is defined by the server in the ``httpheader`` capability value, which defaults |
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107 | 107 | to ``1024``. The server reassembles the encoded arguments string by |
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108 | 108 | concatenating the ``X-HgArg-<N>`` headers then URL decodes them into a |
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109 | 109 | dictionary. |
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110 | 110 | |
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111 | 111 | The list of ``X-HgArg-<N>`` headers should be added to the ``Vary`` request |
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112 | 112 | header to instruct caches to take these headers into consideration when caching |
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113 | 113 | requests. |
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114 | 114 | |
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115 | 115 | If the server supports the ``httppostargs`` capability, the client |
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116 | 116 | may send command arguments in the HTTP request body as part of an |
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117 | 117 | HTTP POST request. The command arguments will be URL encoded just like |
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118 | 118 | they would for sending them via HTTP headers. However, no splitting is |
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119 | 119 | performed: the raw arguments are included in the HTTP request body. |
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120 | 120 | |
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121 | 121 | The client sends a ``X-HgArgs-Post`` header with the string length of the |
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122 | 122 | encoded arguments data. Additional data may be included in the HTTP |
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123 | 123 | request body immediately following the argument data. The offset of the |
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124 | 124 | non-argument data is defined by the ``X-HgArgs-Post`` header. The |
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125 | 125 | ``X-HgArgs-Post`` header is not required if there is no argument data. |
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126 | 126 | |
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127 | 127 | Additional command data can be sent as part of the HTTP request body. The |
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128 | 128 | default ``Content-Type`` when sending data is ``application/mercurial-0.1``. |
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129 | 129 | A ``Content-Length`` header is currently always sent. |
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130 | 130 | |
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131 | 131 | Example HTTP requests:: |
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132 | 132 | |
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133 | 133 | GET /repo?cmd=capabilities |
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134 | 134 | X-HgArg-1: foo=bar&baz=hello%20world |
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135 | 135 | |
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136 | 136 | The request media type should be chosen based on server support. If the |
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137 | 137 | ``httpmediatype`` server capability is present, the client should send |
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138 | 138 | the newest mutually supported media type. If this capability is absent, |
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139 | 139 | the client must assume the server only supports the |
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140 | 140 | ``application/mercurial-0.1`` media type. |
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141 | 141 | |
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142 | 142 | The ``Content-Type`` HTTP response header identifies the response as coming |
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143 | 143 | from Mercurial and can also be used to signal an error has occurred. |
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144 | 144 | |
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145 | 145 | The ``application/mercurial-*`` media types indicate a generic Mercurial |
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146 | 146 | data type. |
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147 | 147 | |
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148 | 148 | The ``application/mercurial-0.1`` media type is raw Mercurial data. It is the |
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149 | 149 | predecessor of the format below. |
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150 | 150 | |
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151 | 151 | The ``application/mercurial-0.2`` media type is compression framed Mercurial |
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152 | 152 | data. The first byte of the payload indicates the length of the compression |
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153 | 153 | format identifier that follows. Next are N bytes indicating the compression |
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154 | 154 | format. e.g. ``zlib``. The remaining bytes are compressed according to that |
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155 | 155 | compression format. The decompressed data behaves the same as with |
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156 | 156 | ``application/mercurial-0.1``. |
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157 | 157 | |
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158 | 158 | The ``application/hg-error`` media type indicates a generic error occurred. |
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159 | 159 | The content of the HTTP response body typically holds text describing the |
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160 | 160 | error. |
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161 | 161 | |
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162 | 162 | The ``application/mercurial-cbor`` media type indicates a CBOR payload |
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163 | 163 | and should be interpreted as identical to ``application/cbor``. |
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164 | 164 | |
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165 | 165 | Behavior of media types is further described in the ``Content Negotiation`` |
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166 | 166 | section below. |
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167 | 167 | |
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168 | 168 | Clients should issue a ``User-Agent`` request header that identifies the client. |
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169 | 169 | The server should not use the ``User-Agent`` for feature detection. |
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170 | 170 | |
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171 | 171 | A command returning a ``string`` response issues a |
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172 | 172 | ``application/mercurial-0.*`` media type and the HTTP response body contains |
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173 | 173 | the raw string value (after compression decoding, if used). A |
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174 | 174 | ``Content-Length`` header is typically issued, but not required. |
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175 | 175 | |
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176 | 176 | A command returning a ``stream`` response issues a |
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177 | 177 | ``application/mercurial-0.*`` media type and the HTTP response is typically |
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178 | 178 | using *chunked transfer* (``Transfer-Encoding: chunked``). |
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179 | 179 | |
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180 | 180 | HTTP Version 2 Transport |
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181 | 181 | ------------------------ |
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182 | 182 | |
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183 | 183 | **Experimental - feature under active development** |
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184 | 184 | |
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185 | 185 | Version 2 of the HTTP protocol is exposed under the ``/api/*`` URL space. |
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186 | 186 | It's final API name is not yet formalized. |
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187 | 187 | |
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188 | 188 | Commands are triggered by sending HTTP POST requests against URLs of the |
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189 | 189 | form ``<permission>/<command>``, where ``<permission>`` is ``ro`` or |
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190 | 190 | ``rw``, meaning read-only and read-write, respectively and ``<command>`` |
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191 | 191 | is a named wire protocol command. |
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192 | 192 | |
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193 | 193 | Non-POST request methods MUST be rejected by the server with an HTTP |
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194 | 194 | 405 response. |
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195 | 195 | |
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196 | 196 | Commands that modify repository state in meaningful ways MUST NOT be |
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197 | 197 | exposed under the ``ro`` URL prefix. All available commands MUST be |
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198 | 198 | available under the ``rw`` URL prefix. |
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199 | 199 | |
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200 | 200 | Server adminstrators MAY implement blanket HTTP authentication keyed |
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201 | 201 | off the URL prefix. For example, a server may require authentication |
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202 | 202 | for all ``rw/*`` URLs and let unauthenticated requests to ``ro/*`` |
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203 | 203 | URL proceed. A server MAY issue an HTTP 401, 403, or 407 response |
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204 | 204 | in accordance with RFC 7235. Clients SHOULD recognize the HTTP Basic |
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205 | 205 | (RFC 7617) and Digest (RFC 7616) authentication schemes. Clients SHOULD |
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206 | 206 | make an attempt to recognize unknown schemes using the |
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207 | 207 | ``WWW-Authenticate`` response header on a 401 response, as defined by |
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208 | 208 | RFC 7235. |
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209 | 209 | |
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210 | 210 | Read-only commands are accessible under ``rw/*`` URLs so clients can |
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211 | 211 | signal the intent of the operation very early in the connection |
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212 | 212 | lifecycle. For example, a ``push`` operation - which consists of |
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213 | 213 | various read-only commands mixed with at least one read-write command - |
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214 | 214 | can perform all commands against ``rw/*`` URLs so that any server-side |
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215 | 215 | authentication requirements are discovered upon attempting the first |
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216 | 216 | command - not potentially several commands into the exchange. This |
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217 | 217 | allows clients to fail faster or prompt for credentials as soon as the |
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218 | 218 | exchange takes place. This provides a better end-user experience. |
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219 | 219 | |
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220 | 220 | Requests to unknown commands or URLS result in an HTTP 404. |
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221 | 221 | TODO formally define response type, how error is communicated, etc. |
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222 | 222 | |
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223 | 223 | HTTP request and response bodies use the *Unified Frame-Based Protocol* |
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224 | 224 | (defined below) for media exchange. The entirety of the HTTP message |
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225 | 225 | body is 0 or more frames as defined by this protocol. |
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226 | 226 | |
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227 | 227 | Clients and servers MUST advertise the ``TBD`` media type via the |
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228 | 228 | ``Content-Type`` request and response headers. In addition, clients MUST |
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229 | 229 | advertise this media type value in their ``Accept`` request header in all |
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230 | 230 | requests. |
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231 | 231 | TODO finalize the media type. For now, it is defined in wireprotoserver.py. |
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232 | 232 | |
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233 | 233 | Servers receiving requests without an ``Accept`` header SHOULD respond with |
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234 | 234 | an HTTP 406. |
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235 | 235 | |
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236 | 236 | Servers receiving requests with an invalid ``Content-Type`` header SHOULD |
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237 | 237 | respond with an HTTP 415. |
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238 | 238 | |
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239 | 239 | The command to run is specified in the POST payload as defined by the |
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240 | 240 | *Unified Frame-Based Protocol*. This is redundant with data already |
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241 | 241 | encoded in the URL. This is by design, so server operators can have |
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242 | 242 | better understanding about server activity from looking merely at |
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243 | 243 | HTTP access logs. |
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244 | 244 | |
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245 | 245 | In most circumstances, the command specified in the URL MUST match |
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246 | 246 | the command specified in the frame-based payload or the server will |
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247 | 247 | respond with an error. The exception to this is the special |
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248 | 248 | ``multirequest`` URL. (See below.) In addition, HTTP requests |
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249 | 249 | are limited to one command invocation. The exception is the special |
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250 | 250 | ``multirequest`` URL. |
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251 | 251 | |
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252 | 252 | The ``multirequest`` command endpoints (``ro/multirequest`` and |
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253 | 253 | ``rw/multirequest``) are special in that they allow the execution of |
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254 | 254 | *any* command and allow the execution of multiple commands. If the |
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255 | 255 | HTTP request issues multiple commands across multiple frames, all |
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256 | 256 | issued commands will be processed by the server. Per the defined |
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257 | 257 | behavior of the *Unified Frame-Based Protocol*, commands may be |
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258 | 258 | issued interleaved and responses may come back in a different order |
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259 | 259 | than they were issued. Clients MUST be able to deal with this. |
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260 | 260 | |
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261 | 261 | SSH Protocol |
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262 | 262 | ============ |
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263 | 263 | |
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264 | 264 | Handshake |
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265 | 265 | --------- |
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266 | 266 | |
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267 | 267 | For all clients, the handshake consists of the client sending 1 or more |
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268 | 268 | commands to the server using version 1 of the transport. Servers respond |
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269 | 269 | to commands they know how to respond to and send an empty response (``0\n``) |
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270 | 270 | for unknown commands (per standard behavior of version 1 of the transport). |
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271 | 271 | Clients then typically look for a response to the newest sent command to |
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272 | 272 | determine which transport version to use and what the available features for |
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273 | 273 | the connection and server are. |
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274 | 274 | |
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275 | 275 | Preceding any response from client-issued commands, the server may print |
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276 | 276 | non-protocol output. It is common for SSH servers to print banners, message |
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277 | 277 | of the day announcements, etc when clients connect. It is assumed that any |
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278 | 278 | such *banner* output will precede any Mercurial server output. So clients |
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279 | 279 | must be prepared to handle server output on initial connect that isn't |
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280 | 280 | in response to any client-issued command and doesn't conform to Mercurial's |
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281 | 281 | wire protocol. This *banner* output should only be on stdout. However, |
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282 | 282 | some servers may send output on stderr. |
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283 | 283 | |
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284 | 284 | Pre 0.9.1 clients issue a ``between`` command with the ``pairs`` argument |
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285 | 285 | having the value |
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286 | 286 | ``0000000000000000000000000000000000000000-0000000000000000000000000000000000000000``. |
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287 | 287 | |
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288 | 288 | The ``between`` command has been supported since the original Mercurial |
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289 | 289 | SSH server. Requesting the empty range will return a ``\n`` string response, |
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290 | 290 | which will be encoded as ``1\n\n`` (value length of ``1`` followed by a newline |
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291 | 291 | followed by the value, which happens to be a newline). |
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292 | 292 | |
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293 | 293 | For pre 0.9.1 clients and all servers, the exchange looks like:: |
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294 | 294 | |
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295 | 295 | c: between\n |
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296 | 296 | c: pairs 81\n |
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297 | 297 | c: 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000-0000000000000000000000000000000000000000 |
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298 | 298 | s: 1\n |
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299 | 299 | s: \n |
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300 | 300 | |
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301 | 301 | 0.9.1+ clients send a ``hello`` command (with no arguments) before the |
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302 | 302 | ``between`` command. The response to this command allows clients to |
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303 | 303 | discover server capabilities and settings. |
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304 | 304 | |
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305 | 305 | An example exchange between 0.9.1+ clients and a ``hello`` aware server looks |
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306 | 306 | like:: |
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307 | 307 | |
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308 | 308 | c: hello\n |
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309 | 309 | c: between\n |
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310 | 310 | c: pairs 81\n |
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311 | 311 | c: 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000-0000000000000000000000000000000000000000 |
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312 | 312 | s: 324\n |
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313 | 313 | s: capabilities: lookup changegroupsubset branchmap pushkey known getbundle ...\n |
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314 | 314 | s: 1\n |
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315 | 315 | s: \n |
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316 | 316 | |
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317 | 317 | And a similar scenario but with servers sending a banner on connect:: |
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318 | 318 | |
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319 | 319 | c: hello\n |
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320 | 320 | c: between\n |
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321 | 321 | c: pairs 81\n |
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322 | 322 | c: 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000-0000000000000000000000000000000000000000 |
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323 | 323 | s: welcome to the server\n |
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324 | 324 | s: if you find any issues, email someone@somewhere.com\n |
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325 | 325 | s: 324\n |
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326 | 326 | s: capabilities: lookup changegroupsubset branchmap pushkey known getbundle ...\n |
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327 | 327 | s: 1\n |
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328 | 328 | s: \n |
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329 | 329 | |
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330 | 330 | Note that output from the ``hello`` command is terminated by a ``\n``. This is |
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331 | 331 | part of the response payload and not part of the wire protocol adding a newline |
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332 | 332 | after responses. In other words, the length of the response contains the |
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333 | 333 | trailing ``\n``. |
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334 | 334 | |
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335 | 335 | Clients supporting version 2 of the SSH transport send a line beginning |
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336 | 336 | with ``upgrade`` before the ``hello`` and ``between`` commands. The line |
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337 | 337 | (which isn't a well-formed command line because it doesn't consist of a |
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338 | 338 | single command name) serves to both communicate the client's intent to |
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339 | 339 | switch to transport version 2 (transports are version 1 by default) as |
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340 | 340 | well as to advertise the client's transport-level capabilities so the |
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341 | 341 | server may satisfy that request immediately. |
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342 | 342 | |
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343 | 343 | The upgrade line has the form: |
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344 | 344 | |
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345 | 345 | upgrade <token> <transport capabilities> |
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346 | 346 | |
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347 | 347 | That is the literal string ``upgrade`` followed by a space, followed by |
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348 | 348 | a randomly generated string, followed by a space, followed by a string |
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349 | 349 | denoting the client's transport capabilities. |
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350 | 350 | |
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351 | 351 | The token can be anything. However, a random UUID is recommended. (Use |
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352 | 352 | of version 4 UUIDs is recommended because version 1 UUIDs can leak the |
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353 | 353 | client's MAC address.) |
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354 | 354 | |
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355 | 355 | The transport capabilities string is a URL/percent encoded string |
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356 | 356 | containing key-value pairs defining the client's transport-level |
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357 | 357 | capabilities. The following capabilities are defined: |
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358 | 358 | |
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359 | 359 | proto |
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360 | 360 | A comma-delimited list of transport protocol versions the client |
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361 | 361 | supports. e.g. ``ssh-v2``. |
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362 | 362 | |
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363 | 363 | If the server does not recognize the ``upgrade`` line, it should issue |
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364 | 364 | an empty response and continue processing the ``hello`` and ``between`` |
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365 | 365 | commands. Here is an example handshake between a version 2 aware client |
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366 | 366 | and a non version 2 aware server: |
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367 | 367 | |
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368 | 368 | c: upgrade 2e82ab3f-9ce3-4b4e-8f8c-6fd1c0e9e23a proto=ssh-v2 |
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369 | 369 | c: hello\n |
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370 | 370 | c: between\n |
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371 | 371 | c: pairs 81\n |
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372 | 372 | c: 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000-0000000000000000000000000000000000000000 |
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373 | 373 | s: 0\n |
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374 | 374 | s: 324\n |
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375 | 375 | s: capabilities: lookup changegroupsubset branchmap pushkey known getbundle ...\n |
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376 | 376 | s: 1\n |
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377 | 377 | s: \n |
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378 | 378 | |
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379 | 379 | (The initial ``0\n`` line from the server indicates an empty response to |
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380 | 380 | the unknown ``upgrade ..`` command/line.) |
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381 | 381 | |
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382 | 382 | If the server recognizes the ``upgrade`` line and is willing to satisfy that |
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383 | 383 | upgrade request, it replies to with a payload of the following form: |
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384 | 384 | |
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385 | 385 | upgraded <token> <transport name>\n |
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386 | 386 | |
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387 | 387 | This line is the literal string ``upgraded``, a space, the token that was |
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388 | 388 | specified by the client in its ``upgrade ...`` request line, a space, and the |
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389 | 389 | name of the transport protocol that was chosen by the server. The transport |
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390 | 390 | name MUST match one of the names the client specified in the ``proto`` field |
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391 | 391 | of its ``upgrade ...`` request line. |
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392 | 392 | |
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393 | 393 | If a server issues an ``upgraded`` response, it MUST also read and ignore |
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394 | 394 | the lines associated with the ``hello`` and ``between`` command requests |
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395 | 395 | that were issued by the server. It is assumed that the negotiated transport |
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396 | 396 | will respond with equivalent requested information following the transport |
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397 | 397 | handshake. |
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398 | 398 | |
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399 | 399 | All data following the ``\n`` terminating the ``upgraded`` line is the |
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400 | 400 | domain of the negotiated transport. It is common for the data immediately |
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401 | 401 | following to contain additional metadata about the state of the transport and |
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402 | 402 | the server. However, this isn't strictly speaking part of the transport |
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403 | 403 | handshake and isn't covered by this section. |
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404 | 404 | |
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405 | 405 | Here is an example handshake between a version 2 aware client and a version |
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406 | 406 | 2 aware server: |
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407 | 407 | |
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408 | 408 | c: upgrade 2e82ab3f-9ce3-4b4e-8f8c-6fd1c0e9e23a proto=ssh-v2 |
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409 | 409 | c: hello\n |
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410 | 410 | c: between\n |
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411 | 411 | c: pairs 81\n |
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412 | 412 | c: 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000-0000000000000000000000000000000000000000 |
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413 | 413 | s: upgraded 2e82ab3f-9ce3-4b4e-8f8c-6fd1c0e9e23a ssh-v2\n |
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414 | 414 | s: <additional transport specific data> |
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415 | 415 | |
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416 | 416 | The client-issued token that is echoed in the response provides a more |
|
417 | 417 | resilient mechanism for differentiating *banner* output from Mercurial |
|
418 | 418 | output. In version 1, properly formatted banner output could get confused |
|
419 | 419 | for Mercurial server output. By submitting a randomly generated token |
|
420 | 420 | that is then present in the response, the client can look for that token |
|
421 | 421 | in response lines and have reasonable certainty that the line did not |
|
422 | 422 | originate from a *banner* message. |
|
423 | 423 | |
|
424 | 424 | SSH Version 1 Transport |
|
425 | 425 | ----------------------- |
|
426 | 426 | |
|
427 | 427 | The SSH transport (version 1) is a custom text-based protocol suitable for |
|
428 | 428 | use over any bi-directional stream transport. It is most commonly used with |
|
429 | 429 | SSH. |
|
430 | 430 | |
|
431 | 431 | A SSH transport server can be started with ``hg serve --stdio``. The stdin, |
|
432 | 432 | stderr, and stdout file descriptors of the started process are used to exchange |
|
433 | 433 | data. When Mercurial connects to a remote server over SSH, it actually starts |
|
434 | 434 | a ``hg serve --stdio`` process on the remote server. |
|
435 | 435 | |
|
436 | 436 | Commands are issued by sending the command name followed by a trailing newline |
|
437 | 437 | ``\n`` to the server. e.g. ``capabilities\n``. |
|
438 | 438 | |
|
439 | 439 | Command arguments are sent in the following format:: |
|
440 | 440 | |
|
441 | 441 | <argument> <length>\n<value> |
|
442 | 442 | |
|
443 | 443 | That is, the argument string name followed by a space followed by the |
|
444 | 444 | integer length of the value (expressed as a string) followed by a newline |
|
445 | 445 | (``\n``) followed by the raw argument value. |
|
446 | 446 | |
|
447 | 447 | Dictionary arguments are encoded differently:: |
|
448 | 448 | |
|
449 | 449 | <argument> <# elements>\n |
|
450 | 450 | <key1> <length1>\n<value1> |
|
451 | 451 | <key2> <length2>\n<value2> |
|
452 | 452 | ... |
|
453 | 453 | |
|
454 | 454 | Non-argument data is sent immediately after the final argument value. It is |
|
455 | 455 | encoded in chunks:: |
|
456 | 456 | |
|
457 | 457 | <length>\n<data> |
|
458 | 458 | |
|
459 | 459 | Each command declares a list of supported arguments and their types. If a |
|
460 | 460 | client sends an unknown argument to the server, the server should abort |
|
461 | 461 | immediately. The special argument ``*`` in a command's definition indicates |
|
462 | 462 | that all argument names are allowed. |
|
463 | 463 | |
|
464 | 464 | The definition of supported arguments and types is initially made when a |
|
465 | 465 | new command is implemented. The client and server must initially independently |
|
466 | 466 | agree on the arguments and their types. This initial set of arguments can be |
|
467 | 467 | supplemented through the presence of *capabilities* advertised by the server. |
|
468 | 468 | |
|
469 | 469 | Each command has a defined expected response type. |
|
470 | 470 | |
|
471 | 471 | A ``string`` response type is a length framed value. The response consists of |
|
472 | 472 | the string encoded integer length of a value followed by a newline (``\n``) |
|
473 | 473 | followed by the value. Empty values are allowed (and are represented as |
|
474 | 474 | ``0\n``). |
|
475 | 475 | |
|
476 | 476 | A ``stream`` response type consists of raw bytes of data. There is no framing. |
|
477 | 477 | |
|
478 | 478 | A generic error response type is also supported. It consists of a an error |
|
479 | 479 | message written to ``stderr`` followed by ``\n-\n``. In addition, ``\n`` is |
|
480 | 480 | written to ``stdout``. |
|
481 | 481 | |
|
482 | 482 | If the server receives an unknown command, it will send an empty ``string`` |
|
483 | 483 | response. |
|
484 | 484 | |
|
485 | 485 | The server terminates if it receives an empty command (a ``\n`` character). |
|
486 | 486 | |
|
487 | 487 | If the server announces support for the ``protocaps`` capability, the client |
|
488 | 488 | should issue a ``protocaps`` command after the initial handshake to annonunce |
|
489 | 489 | its own capabilities. The client capabilities are persistent. |
|
490 | 490 | |
|
491 | 491 | SSH Version 2 Transport |
|
492 | 492 | ----------------------- |
|
493 | 493 | |
|
494 | 494 | **Experimental and under development** |
|
495 | 495 | |
|
496 | 496 | Version 2 of the SSH transport behaves identically to version 1 of the SSH |
|
497 | 497 | transport with the exception of handshake semantics. See above for how |
|
498 | 498 | version 2 of the SSH transport is negotiated. |
|
499 | 499 | |
|
500 | 500 | Immediately following the ``upgraded`` line signaling a switch to version |
|
501 | 501 | 2 of the SSH protocol, the server automatically sends additional details |
|
502 | 502 | about the capabilities of the remote server. This has the form: |
|
503 | 503 | |
|
504 | 504 | <integer length of value>\n |
|
505 | 505 | capabilities: ...\n |
|
506 | 506 | |
|
507 | 507 | e.g. |
|
508 | 508 | |
|
509 | 509 | s: upgraded 2e82ab3f-9ce3-4b4e-8f8c-6fd1c0e9e23a ssh-v2\n |
|
510 | 510 | s: 240\n |
|
511 | 511 | s: capabilities: known getbundle batch ...\n |
|
512 | 512 | |
|
513 | 513 | Following capabilities advertisement, the peers communicate using version |
|
514 | 514 | 1 of the SSH transport. |
|
515 | 515 | |
|
516 | 516 | Unified Frame-Based Protocol |
|
517 | 517 | ============================ |
|
518 | 518 | |
|
519 | 519 | **Experimental and under development** |
|
520 | 520 | |
|
521 | 521 | The *Unified Frame-Based Protocol* is a communications protocol between |
|
522 | 522 | Mercurial peers. The protocol aims to be mostly transport agnostic |
|
523 | 523 | (works similarly on HTTP, SSH, etc). |
|
524 | 524 | |
|
525 | 525 | To operate the protocol, a bi-directional, half-duplex pipe supporting |
|
526 | 526 | ordered sends and receives is required. That is, each peer has one pipe |
|
527 | 527 | for sending data and another for receiving. |
|
528 | 528 | |
|
529 | 529 | All data is read and written in atomic units called *frames*. These |
|
530 | 530 | are conceptually similar to TCP packets. Higher-level functionality |
|
531 | 531 | is built on the exchange and processing of frames. |
|
532 | 532 | |
|
533 | 533 | All frames are associated with a *stream*. A *stream* provides a |
|
534 | 534 | unidirectional grouping of frames. Streams facilitate two goals: |
|
535 | 535 | content encoding and parallelism. There is a dedicated section on |
|
536 | 536 | streams below. |
|
537 | 537 | |
|
538 | 538 | The protocol is request-response based: the client issues requests to |
|
539 | 539 | the server, which issues replies to those requests. Server-initiated |
|
540 | 540 | messaging is not currently supported, but this specification carves |
|
541 | 541 | out room to implement it. |
|
542 | 542 | |
|
543 | 543 | All frames are associated with a numbered request. Frames can thus |
|
544 | 544 | be logically grouped by their request ID. |
|
545 | 545 | |
|
546 | 546 | Frames begin with an 8 octet header followed by a variable length |
|
547 | 547 | payload:: |
|
548 | 548 | |
|
549 | 549 | +------------------------------------------------+ |
|
550 | 550 | | Length (24) | |
|
551 | 551 | +--------------------------------+---------------+ |
|
552 | 552 | | Request ID (16) | Stream ID (8) | |
|
553 | 553 | +------------------+-------------+---------------+ |
|
554 | 554 | | Stream Flags (8) | |
|
555 | 555 | +-----------+------+ |
|
556 | 556 | | Type (4) | |
|
557 | 557 | +-----------+ |
|
558 | 558 | | Flags (4) | |
|
559 | 559 | +===========+===================================================| |
|
560 | 560 | | Frame Payload (0...) ... |
|
561 | 561 | +---------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
562 | 562 | |
|
563 | 563 | The length of the frame payload is expressed as an unsigned 24 bit |
|
564 | 564 | little endian integer. Values larger than 65535 MUST NOT be used unless |
|
565 | 565 | given permission by the server as part of the negotiated capabilities |
|
566 | 566 | during the handshake. The frame header is not part of the advertised |
|
567 | 567 | frame length. The payload length is the over-the-wire length. If there |
|
568 | 568 | is content encoding applied to the payload as part of the frame's stream, |
|
569 | 569 | the length is the output of that content encoding, not the input. |
|
570 | 570 | |
|
571 | 571 | The 16-bit ``Request ID`` field denotes the integer request identifier, |
|
572 | 572 | stored as an unsigned little endian integer. Odd numbered requests are |
|
573 | 573 | client-initiated. Even numbered requests are server-initiated. This |
|
574 | 574 | refers to where the *request* was initiated - not where the *frame* was |
|
575 | 575 | initiated, so servers will send frames with odd ``Request ID`` in |
|
576 | 576 | response to client-initiated requests. Implementations are advised to |
|
577 | 577 | start ordering request identifiers at ``1`` and ``0``, increment by |
|
578 | 578 | ``2``, and wrap around if all available numbers have been exhausted. |
|
579 | 579 | |
|
580 | 580 | The 8-bit ``Stream ID`` field denotes the stream that the frame is |
|
581 | 581 | associated with. Frames belonging to a stream may have content |
|
582 | 582 | encoding applied and the receiver may need to decode the raw frame |
|
583 | 583 | payload to obtain the original data. Odd numbered IDs are |
|
584 | 584 | client-initiated. Even numbered IDs are server-initiated. |
|
585 | 585 | |
|
586 | 586 | The 8-bit ``Stream Flags`` field defines stream processing semantics. |
|
587 | 587 | See the section on streams below. |
|
588 | 588 | |
|
589 | 589 | The 4-bit ``Type`` field denotes the type of frame being sent. |
|
590 | 590 | |
|
591 | 591 | The 4-bit ``Flags`` field defines special, per-type attributes for |
|
592 | 592 | the frame. |
|
593 | 593 | |
|
594 | 594 | The sections below define the frame types and their behavior. |
|
595 | 595 | |
|
596 | 596 | Command Request (``0x01``) |
|
597 | 597 | -------------------------- |
|
598 | 598 | |
|
599 | 599 | This frame contains a request to run a command. |
|
600 | 600 | |
|
601 | 601 | The payload consists of a CBOR map defining the command request. The |
|
602 | 602 | bytestring keys of that map are: |
|
603 | 603 | |
|
604 | 604 | name |
|
605 | 605 | Name of the command that should be executed (bytestring). |
|
606 | 606 | args |
|
607 | 607 | Map of bytestring keys to various value types containing the named |
|
608 | 608 | arguments to this command. |
|
609 | 609 | |
|
610 | 610 | Each command defines its own set of argument names and their expected |
|
611 | 611 | types. |
|
612 | 612 | |
|
613 | 613 | This frame type MUST ONLY be sent from clients to servers: it is illegal |
|
614 | 614 | for a server to send this frame to a client. |
|
615 | 615 | |
|
616 | 616 | The following flag values are defined for this type: |
|
617 | 617 | |
|
618 | 618 | 0x01 |
|
619 | 619 | New command request. When set, this frame represents the beginning |
|
620 | 620 | of a new request to run a command. The ``Request ID`` attached to this |
|
621 | 621 | frame MUST NOT be active. |
|
622 | 622 | 0x02 |
|
623 | 623 | Command request continuation. When set, this frame is a continuation |
|
624 | 624 | from a previous command request frame for its ``Request ID``. This |
|
625 | 625 | flag is set when the CBOR data for a command request does not fit |
|
626 | 626 | in a single frame. |
|
627 | 627 | 0x04 |
|
628 | 628 | Additional frames expected. When set, the command request didn't fit |
|
629 | 629 | into a single frame and additional CBOR data follows in a subsequent |
|
630 | 630 | frame. |
|
631 | 631 | 0x08 |
|
632 | 632 | Command data frames expected. When set, command data frames are |
|
633 | 633 | expected to follow the final command request frame for this request. |
|
634 | 634 | |
|
635 | 635 | ``0x01`` MUST be set on the initial command request frame for a |
|
636 | 636 | ``Request ID``. |
|
637 | 637 | |
|
638 | 638 | ``0x01`` or ``0x02`` MUST be set to indicate this frame's role in |
|
639 | 639 | a series of command request frames. |
|
640 | 640 | |
|
641 | 641 | If command data frames are to be sent, ``0x08`` MUST be set on ALL |
|
642 | 642 | command request frames. |
|
643 | 643 | |
|
644 | 644 | Command Data (``0x02``) |
|
645 | 645 | ----------------------- |
|
646 | 646 | |
|
647 | 647 | This frame contains raw data for a command. |
|
648 | 648 | |
|
649 | 649 | Most commands can be executed by specifying arguments. However, |
|
650 | 650 | arguments have an upper bound to their length. For commands that |
|
651 | 651 | accept data that is beyond this length or whose length isn't known |
|
652 | 652 | when the command is initially sent, they will need to stream |
|
653 | 653 | arbitrary data to the server. This frame type facilitates the sending |
|
654 | 654 | of this data. |
|
655 | 655 | |
|
656 | 656 | The payload of this frame type consists of a stream of raw data to be |
|
657 | 657 | consumed by the command handler on the server. The format of the data |
|
658 | 658 | is command specific. |
|
659 | 659 | |
|
660 | 660 | The following flag values are defined for this type: |
|
661 | 661 | |
|
662 | 662 | 0x01 |
|
663 | 663 | Command data continuation. When set, the data for this command |
|
664 | 664 | continues into a subsequent frame. |
|
665 | 665 | |
|
666 | 666 | 0x02 |
|
667 | 667 | End of data. When set, command data has been fully sent to the |
|
668 | 668 | server. The command has been fully issued and no new data for this |
|
669 | 669 | command will be sent. The next frame will belong to a new command. |
|
670 | 670 | |
|
671 | 671 | Command Response Data (``0x03``) |
|
672 | 672 | -------------------------------- |
|
673 | 673 | |
|
674 | 674 | This frame contains response data to an issued command. |
|
675 | 675 | |
|
676 | 676 | Response data ALWAYS consists of a series of 1 or more CBOR encoded |
|
677 | 677 | values. A CBOR value may be using indefinite length encoding. And the |
|
678 | 678 | bytes constituting the value may span several frames. |
|
679 | 679 | |
|
680 | 680 | The following flag values are defined for this type: |
|
681 | 681 | |
|
682 | 682 | 0x01 |
|
683 | 683 | Data continuation. When set, an additional frame containing response data |
|
684 | 684 | will follow. |
|
685 | 685 | 0x02 |
|
686 | 686 | End of data. When set, the response data has been fully sent and |
|
687 | 687 | no additional frames for this response will be sent. |
|
688 | 688 | |
|
689 | 689 | The ``0x01`` flag is mutually exclusive with the ``0x02`` flag. |
|
690 | 690 | |
|
691 |
Error |
|
|
691 | Error Occurred (``0x05``) | |
|
692 | 692 | ------------------------- |
|
693 | 693 | |
|
694 | An error occurred when processing a request. This could indicate | |
|
695 | a protocol-level failure or an application level failure depending | |
|
696 | on the flags for this message type. | |
|
694 | Some kind of error occurred. | |
|
695 | ||
|
696 | There are 3 general kinds of failures that can occur: | |
|
697 | 697 | |
|
698 | The payload for this type is an error message that should be | |
|
699 | displayed to the user. | |
|
698 | * Command error encountered before any response issued | |
|
699 | * Command error encountered after a response was issued | |
|
700 | * Protocol or stream level error | |
|
701 | ||
|
702 | This frame type is used to capture the latter cases. (The general | |
|
703 | command error case is handled by the leading CBOR map in | |
|
704 | ``Command Response`` frames.) | |
|
705 | ||
|
706 | The payload of this frame contains a CBOR map detailing the error. That | |
|
707 | map has the following bytestring keys: | |
|
700 | 708 | |
|
701 | The following flag values are defined for this type: | |
|
709 | type | |
|
710 | (bytestring) The overall type of error encountered. Can be one of the | |
|
711 | following values: | |
|
712 | ||
|
713 | protocol | |
|
714 | A protocol-level error occurred. This typically means someone | |
|
715 | is violating the framing protocol semantics and the server is | |
|
716 | refusing to proceed. | |
|
702 | 717 | |
|
703 | 0x01 | |
|
704 | The error occurred at the transport/protocol level. If set, the | |
|
705 | connection should be closed. | |
|
706 | 0x02 | |
|
707 | The error occurred at the application level. e.g. invalid command. | |
|
718 | server | |
|
719 | A server-level error occurred. This typically indicates some kind of | |
|
720 | logic error on the server, likely the fault of the server. | |
|
721 | ||
|
722 | command | |
|
723 | A command-level error, likely the fault of the client. | |
|
724 | ||
|
725 | message | |
|
726 | (array of maps) A richly formatted message that is intended for | |
|
727 | human consumption. See the ``Human Output Side-Channel`` frame | |
|
728 | section for a description of the format of this data structure. | |
|
708 | 729 | |
|
709 | 730 | Human Output Side-Channel (``0x06``) |
|
710 | 731 | ------------------------------------ |
|
711 | 732 | |
|
712 | 733 | This frame contains a message that is intended to be displayed to |
|
713 | 734 | people. Whereas most frames communicate machine readable data, this |
|
714 | 735 | frame communicates textual data that is intended to be shown to |
|
715 | 736 | humans. |
|
716 | 737 | |
|
717 | 738 | The frame consists of a series of *formatting requests*. Each formatting |
|
718 | 739 | request consists of a formatting string, arguments for that formatting |
|
719 | 740 | string, and labels to apply to that formatting string. |
|
720 | 741 | |
|
721 | 742 | A formatting string is a printf()-like string that allows variable |
|
722 | 743 | substitution within the string. Labels allow the rendered text to be |
|
723 | 744 | *decorated*. Assuming use of the canonical Mercurial code base, a |
|
724 | 745 | formatting string can be the input to the ``i18n._`` function. This |
|
725 | 746 | allows messages emitted from the server to be localized. So even if |
|
726 | 747 | the server has different i18n settings, people could see messages in |
|
727 | 748 | their *native* settings. Similarly, the use of labels allows |
|
728 | 749 | decorations like coloring and underlining to be applied using the |
|
729 | 750 | client's configured rendering settings. |
|
730 | 751 | |
|
731 | 752 | Formatting strings are similar to ``printf()`` strings or how |
|
732 | 753 | Python's ``%`` operator works. The only supported formatting sequences |
|
733 | 754 | are ``%s`` and ``%%``. ``%s`` will be replaced by whatever the string |
|
734 | 755 | at that position resolves to. ``%%`` will be replaced by ``%``. All |
|
735 | 756 | other 2-byte sequences beginning with ``%`` represent a literal |
|
736 | 757 | ``%`` followed by that character. However, future versions of the |
|
737 | 758 | wire protocol reserve the right to allow clients to opt in to receiving |
|
738 | 759 | formatting strings with additional formatters, hence why ``%%`` is |
|
739 | 760 | required to represent the literal ``%``. |
|
740 | 761 | |
|
741 | 762 | The frame payload consists of a CBOR array of CBOR maps. Each map |
|
742 | 763 | defines an *atom* of text data to print. Each *atom* has the following |
|
743 | 764 | bytestring keys: |
|
744 | 765 | |
|
745 | 766 | msg |
|
746 | 767 | (bytestring) The formatting string. Content MUST be ASCII. |
|
747 | 768 | args (optional) |
|
748 | 769 | Array of bytestrings defining arguments to the formatting string. |
|
749 | 770 | labels (optional) |
|
750 | 771 | Array of bytestrings defining labels to apply to this atom. |
|
751 | 772 | |
|
752 | 773 | All data to be printed MUST be encoded into a single frame: this frame |
|
753 | 774 | does not support spanning data across multiple frames. |
|
754 | 775 | |
|
755 | 776 | All textual data encoded in these frames is assumed to be line delimited. |
|
756 | 777 | The last atom in the frame SHOULD end with a newline (``\n``). If it |
|
757 | 778 | doesn't, clients MAY add a newline to facilitate immediate printing. |
|
758 | 779 | |
|
759 | 780 | Progress Update (``0x07``) |
|
760 | 781 | -------------------------- |
|
761 | 782 | |
|
762 | 783 | This frame holds the progress of an operation on the peer. Consumption |
|
763 | 784 | of these frames allows clients to display progress bars, estimated |
|
764 | 785 | completion times, etc. |
|
765 | 786 | |
|
766 | 787 | Each frame defines the progress of a single operation on the peer. The |
|
767 | 788 | payload consists of a CBOR map with the following bytestring keys: |
|
768 | 789 | |
|
769 | 790 | topic |
|
770 | 791 | Topic name (string) |
|
771 | 792 | pos |
|
772 | 793 | Current numeric position within the topic (integer) |
|
773 | 794 | total |
|
774 | 795 | Total/end numeric position of this topic (unsigned integer) |
|
775 | 796 | label (optional) |
|
776 | 797 | Unit label (string) |
|
777 | 798 | item (optional) |
|
778 | 799 | Item name (string) |
|
779 | 800 | |
|
780 | 801 | Progress state is created when a frame is received referencing a |
|
781 | 802 | *topic* that isn't currently tracked. Progress tracking for that |
|
782 | 803 | *topic* is finished when a frame is received reporting the current |
|
783 | 804 | position of that topic as ``-1``. |
|
784 | 805 | |
|
785 | 806 | Multiple *topics* may be active at any given time. |
|
786 | 807 | |
|
787 | 808 | Rendering of progress information is not mandated or governed by this |
|
788 | 809 | specification: implementations MAY render progress information however |
|
789 | 810 | they see fit, including not at all. |
|
790 | 811 | |
|
791 | 812 | The string data describing the topic SHOULD be static strings to |
|
792 | 813 | facilitate receivers localizing that string data. The emitter |
|
793 | 814 | MUST normalize all string data to valid UTF-8 and receivers SHOULD |
|
794 | 815 | validate that received data conforms to UTF-8. The topic name |
|
795 | 816 | SHOULD be ASCII. |
|
796 | 817 | |
|
797 | 818 | Stream Encoding Settings (``0x08``) |
|
798 | 819 | ----------------------------------- |
|
799 | 820 | |
|
800 | 821 | This frame type holds information defining the content encoding |
|
801 | 822 | settings for a *stream*. |
|
802 | 823 | |
|
803 | 824 | This frame type is likely consumed by the protocol layer and is not |
|
804 | 825 | passed on to applications. |
|
805 | 826 | |
|
806 | 827 | This frame type MUST ONLY occur on frames having the *Beginning of Stream* |
|
807 | 828 | ``Stream Flag`` set. |
|
808 | 829 | |
|
809 | 830 | The payload of this frame defines what content encoding has (possibly) |
|
810 | 831 | been applied to the payloads of subsequent frames in this stream. |
|
811 | 832 | |
|
812 | 833 | The payload begins with an 8-bit integer defining the length of the |
|
813 | 834 | encoding *profile*, followed by the string name of that profile, which |
|
814 | 835 | must be an ASCII string. All bytes that follow can be used by that |
|
815 | 836 | profile for supplemental settings definitions. See the section below |
|
816 | 837 | on defined encoding profiles. |
|
817 | 838 | |
|
818 | 839 | Stream States and Flags |
|
819 | 840 | ----------------------- |
|
820 | 841 | |
|
821 | 842 | Streams can be in two states: *open* and *closed*. An *open* stream |
|
822 | 843 | is active and frames attached to that stream could arrive at any time. |
|
823 | 844 | A *closed* stream is not active. If a frame attached to a *closed* |
|
824 | 845 | stream arrives, that frame MUST have an appropriate stream flag |
|
825 | 846 | set indicating beginning of stream. All streams are in the *closed* |
|
826 | 847 | state by default. |
|
827 | 848 | |
|
828 | 849 | The ``Stream Flags`` field denotes a set of bit flags for defining |
|
829 | 850 | the relationship of this frame within a stream. The following flags |
|
830 | 851 | are defined: |
|
831 | 852 | |
|
832 | 853 | 0x01 |
|
833 | 854 | Beginning of stream. The first frame in the stream MUST set this |
|
834 | 855 | flag. When received, the ``Stream ID`` this frame is attached to |
|
835 | 856 | becomes ``open``. |
|
836 | 857 | |
|
837 | 858 | 0x02 |
|
838 | 859 | End of stream. The last frame in a stream MUST set this flag. When |
|
839 | 860 | received, the ``Stream ID`` this frame is attached to becomes |
|
840 | 861 | ``closed``. Any content encoding context associated with this stream |
|
841 | 862 | can be destroyed after processing the payload of this frame. |
|
842 | 863 | |
|
843 | 864 | 0x04 |
|
844 | 865 | Apply content encoding. When set, any content encoding settings |
|
845 | 866 | defined by the stream should be applied when attempting to read |
|
846 | 867 | the frame. When not set, the frame payload isn't encoded. |
|
847 | 868 | |
|
848 | 869 | Streams |
|
849 | 870 | ------- |
|
850 | 871 | |
|
851 | 872 | Streams - along with ``Request IDs`` - facilitate grouping of frames. |
|
852 | 873 | But the purpose of each is quite different and the groupings they |
|
853 | 874 | constitute are independent. |
|
854 | 875 | |
|
855 | 876 | A ``Request ID`` is essentially a tag. It tells you which logical |
|
856 | 877 | request a frame is associated with. |
|
857 | 878 | |
|
858 | 879 | A *stream* is a sequence of frames grouped for the express purpose |
|
859 | 880 | of applying a stateful encoding or for denoting sub-groups of frames. |
|
860 | 881 | |
|
861 | 882 | Unlike ``Request ID``s which span the request and response, a stream |
|
862 | 883 | is unidirectional and stream IDs are independent from client to |
|
863 | 884 | server. |
|
864 | 885 | |
|
865 | 886 | There is no strict hierarchical relationship between ``Request IDs`` |
|
866 | 887 | and *streams*. A stream can contain frames having multiple |
|
867 | 888 | ``Request IDs``. Frames belonging to the same ``Request ID`` can |
|
868 | 889 | span multiple streams. |
|
869 | 890 | |
|
870 | 891 | One goal of streams is to facilitate content encoding. A stream can |
|
871 | 892 | define an encoding to be applied to frame payloads. For example, the |
|
872 | 893 | payload transmitted over the wire may contain output from a |
|
873 | 894 | zstandard compression operation and the receiving end may decompress |
|
874 | 895 | that payload to obtain the original data. |
|
875 | 896 | |
|
876 | 897 | The other goal of streams is to facilitate concurrent execution. For |
|
877 | 898 | example, a server could spawn 4 threads to service a request that can |
|
878 | 899 | be easily parallelized. Each of those 4 threads could write into its |
|
879 | 900 | own stream. Those streams could then in turn be delivered to 4 threads |
|
880 | 901 | on the receiving end, with each thread consuming its stream in near |
|
881 | 902 | isolation. The *main* thread on both ends merely does I/O and |
|
882 | 903 | encodes/decodes frame headers: the bulk of the work is done by worker |
|
883 | 904 | threads. |
|
884 | 905 | |
|
885 | 906 | In addition, since content encoding is defined per stream, each |
|
886 | 907 | *worker thread* could perform potentially CPU bound work concurrently |
|
887 | 908 | with other threads. This approach of applying encoding at the |
|
888 | 909 | sub-protocol / stream level eliminates a potential resource constraint |
|
889 | 910 | on the protocol stream as a whole (it is common for the throughput of |
|
890 | 911 | a compression engine to be smaller than the throughput of a network). |
|
891 | 912 | |
|
892 | 913 | Having multiple streams - each with their own encoding settings - also |
|
893 | 914 | facilitates the use of advanced data compression techniques. For |
|
894 | 915 | example, a transmitter could see that it is generating data faster |
|
895 | 916 | and slower than the receiving end is consuming it and adjust its |
|
896 | 917 | compression settings to trade CPU for compression ratio accordingly. |
|
897 | 918 | |
|
898 | 919 | While streams can define a content encoding, not all frames within |
|
899 | 920 | that stream must use that content encoding. This can be useful when |
|
900 | 921 | data is being served from caches and being derived dynamically. A |
|
901 | 922 | cache could pre-compressed data so the server doesn't have to |
|
902 | 923 | recompress it. The ability to pick and choose which frames are |
|
903 | 924 | compressed allows servers to easily send data to the wire without |
|
904 | 925 | involving potentially expensive encoding overhead. |
|
905 | 926 | |
|
906 | 927 | Content Encoding Profiles |
|
907 | 928 | ------------------------- |
|
908 | 929 | |
|
909 | 930 | Streams can have named content encoding *profiles* associated with |
|
910 | 931 | them. A profile defines a shared understanding of content encoding |
|
911 | 932 | settings and behavior. |
|
912 | 933 | |
|
913 | 934 | The following profiles are defined: |
|
914 | 935 | |
|
915 | 936 | TBD |
|
916 | 937 | |
|
917 | 938 | Command Protocol |
|
918 | 939 | ---------------- |
|
919 | 940 | |
|
920 | 941 | A client can request that a remote run a command by sending it |
|
921 | 942 | frames defining that command. This logical stream is composed of |
|
922 | 943 | 1 or more ``Command Request`` frames and and 0 or more ``Command Data`` |
|
923 | 944 | frames. |
|
924 | 945 | |
|
925 | 946 | All frames composing a single command request MUST be associated with |
|
926 | 947 | the same ``Request ID``. |
|
927 | 948 | |
|
928 | 949 | Clients MAY send additional command requests without waiting on the |
|
929 | 950 | response to a previous command request. If they do so, they MUST ensure |
|
930 | 951 | that the ``Request ID`` field of outbound frames does not conflict |
|
931 | 952 | with that of an active ``Request ID`` whose response has not yet been |
|
932 | 953 | fully received. |
|
933 | 954 | |
|
934 | 955 | Servers MAY respond to commands in a different order than they were |
|
935 | 956 | sent over the wire. Clients MUST be prepared to deal with this. Servers |
|
936 | 957 | also MAY start executing commands in a different order than they were |
|
937 | 958 | received, or MAY execute multiple commands concurrently. |
|
938 | 959 | |
|
939 | 960 | If there is a dependency between commands or a race condition between |
|
940 | 961 | commands executing (e.g. a read-only command that depends on the results |
|
941 | 962 | of a command that mutates the repository), then clients MUST NOT send |
|
942 | 963 | frames issuing a command until a response to all dependent commands has |
|
943 | 964 | been received. |
|
944 | 965 | TODO think about whether we should express dependencies between commands |
|
945 | 966 | to avoid roundtrip latency. |
|
946 | 967 | |
|
947 | 968 | A command is defined by a command name, 0 or more command arguments, |
|
948 | 969 | and optional command data. |
|
949 | 970 | |
|
950 | 971 | Arguments are the recommended mechanism for transferring fixed sets of |
|
951 | 972 | parameters to a command. Data is appropriate for transferring variable |
|
952 | 973 | data. Thinking in terms of HTTP, arguments would be headers and data |
|
953 | 974 | would be the message body. |
|
954 | 975 | |
|
955 | 976 | It is recommended for servers to delay the dispatch of a command |
|
956 | 977 | until all argument have been received. Servers MAY impose limits on the |
|
957 | 978 | maximum argument size. |
|
958 | 979 | TODO define failure mechanism. |
|
959 | 980 | |
|
960 | 981 | Servers MAY dispatch to commands immediately once argument data |
|
961 | 982 | is available or delay until command data is received in full. |
|
962 | 983 | |
|
963 | 984 | Once a ``Command Request`` frame is sent, a client must be prepared to |
|
964 | 985 | receive any of the following frames associated with that request: |
|
965 | 986 | ``Command Response``, ``Error Response``, ``Human Output Side-Channel``, |
|
966 | 987 | ``Progress Update``. |
|
967 | 988 | |
|
968 | 989 | The *main* response for a command will be in ``Command Response`` frames. |
|
969 | 990 | The payloads of these frames consist of 1 or more CBOR encoded values. |
|
970 | 991 | The first CBOR value on the first ``Command Response`` frame is special |
|
971 | 992 | and denotes the overall status of the command. This CBOR map contains |
|
972 | 993 | the following bytestring keys: |
|
973 | 994 | |
|
974 | 995 | status |
|
975 | 996 | (bytestring) A well-defined message containing the overall status of |
|
976 | 997 | this command request. The following values are defined: |
|
977 | 998 | |
|
978 | 999 | ok |
|
979 | 1000 | The command was received successfully and its response follows. |
|
980 | 1001 | error |
|
981 | 1002 | There was an error processing the command. More details about the |
|
982 | 1003 | error are encoded in the ``error`` key. |
|
983 | 1004 | |
|
984 | 1005 | error (optional) |
|
985 | 1006 | A map containing information about an encountered error. The map has the |
|
986 | 1007 | following keys: |
|
987 | 1008 | |
|
988 | 1009 | message |
|
989 | 1010 | (array of maps) A message describing the error. The message uses the |
|
990 | 1011 | same format as those in the ``Human Output Side-Channel`` frame. |
|
991 | 1012 | |
|
992 | 1013 | Capabilities |
|
993 | 1014 | ============ |
|
994 | 1015 | |
|
995 | 1016 | Servers advertise supported wire protocol features. This allows clients to |
|
996 | 1017 | probe for server features before blindly calling a command or passing a |
|
997 | 1018 | specific argument. |
|
998 | 1019 | |
|
999 | 1020 | The server's features are exposed via a *capabilities* string. This is a |
|
1000 | 1021 | space-delimited string of tokens/features. Some features are single words |
|
1001 | 1022 | like ``lookup`` or ``batch``. Others are complicated key-value pairs |
|
1002 | 1023 | advertising sub-features. e.g. ``httpheader=2048``. When complex, non-word |
|
1003 | 1024 | values are used, each feature name can define its own encoding of sub-values. |
|
1004 | 1025 | Comma-delimited and ``x-www-form-urlencoded`` values are common. |
|
1005 | 1026 | |
|
1006 | 1027 | The following document capabilities defined by the canonical Mercurial server |
|
1007 | 1028 | implementation. |
|
1008 | 1029 | |
|
1009 | 1030 | batch |
|
1010 | 1031 | ----- |
|
1011 | 1032 | |
|
1012 | 1033 | Whether the server supports the ``batch`` command. |
|
1013 | 1034 | |
|
1014 | 1035 | This capability/command was introduced in Mercurial 1.9 (released July 2011). |
|
1015 | 1036 | |
|
1016 | 1037 | branchmap |
|
1017 | 1038 | --------- |
|
1018 | 1039 | |
|
1019 | 1040 | Whether the server supports the ``branchmap`` command. |
|
1020 | 1041 | |
|
1021 | 1042 | This capability/command was introduced in Mercurial 1.3 (released July 2009). |
|
1022 | 1043 | |
|
1023 | 1044 | bundle2-exp |
|
1024 | 1045 | ----------- |
|
1025 | 1046 | |
|
1026 | 1047 | Precursor to ``bundle2`` capability that was used before bundle2 was a |
|
1027 | 1048 | stable feature. |
|
1028 | 1049 | |
|
1029 | 1050 | This capability was introduced in Mercurial 3.0 behind an experimental |
|
1030 | 1051 | flag. This capability should not be observed in the wild. |
|
1031 | 1052 | |
|
1032 | 1053 | bundle2 |
|
1033 | 1054 | ------- |
|
1034 | 1055 | |
|
1035 | 1056 | Indicates whether the server supports the ``bundle2`` data exchange format. |
|
1036 | 1057 | |
|
1037 | 1058 | The value of the capability is a URL quoted, newline (``\n``) delimited |
|
1038 | 1059 | list of keys or key-value pairs. |
|
1039 | 1060 | |
|
1040 | 1061 | A key is simply a URL encoded string. |
|
1041 | 1062 | |
|
1042 | 1063 | A key-value pair is a URL encoded key separated from a URL encoded value by |
|
1043 | 1064 | an ``=``. If the value is a list, elements are delimited by a ``,`` after |
|
1044 | 1065 | URL encoding. |
|
1045 | 1066 | |
|
1046 | 1067 | For example, say we have the values:: |
|
1047 | 1068 | |
|
1048 | 1069 | {'HG20': [], 'changegroup': ['01', '02'], 'digests': ['sha1', 'sha512']} |
|
1049 | 1070 | |
|
1050 | 1071 | We would first construct a string:: |
|
1051 | 1072 | |
|
1052 | 1073 | HG20\nchangegroup=01,02\ndigests=sha1,sha512 |
|
1053 | 1074 | |
|
1054 | 1075 | We would then URL quote this string:: |
|
1055 | 1076 | |
|
1056 | 1077 | HG20%0Achangegroup%3D01%2C02%0Adigests%3Dsha1%2Csha512 |
|
1057 | 1078 | |
|
1058 | 1079 | This capability was introduced in Mercurial 3.4 (released May 2015). |
|
1059 | 1080 | |
|
1060 | 1081 | changegroupsubset |
|
1061 | 1082 | ----------------- |
|
1062 | 1083 | |
|
1063 | 1084 | Whether the server supports the ``changegroupsubset`` command. |
|
1064 | 1085 | |
|
1065 | 1086 | This capability was introduced in Mercurial 0.9.2 (released December |
|
1066 | 1087 | 2006). |
|
1067 | 1088 | |
|
1068 | 1089 | This capability was introduced at the same time as the ``lookup`` |
|
1069 | 1090 | capability/command. |
|
1070 | 1091 | |
|
1071 | 1092 | compression |
|
1072 | 1093 | ----------- |
|
1073 | 1094 | |
|
1074 | 1095 | Declares support for negotiating compression formats. |
|
1075 | 1096 | |
|
1076 | 1097 | Presence of this capability indicates the server supports dynamic selection |
|
1077 | 1098 | of compression formats based on the client request. |
|
1078 | 1099 | |
|
1079 | 1100 | Servers advertising this capability are required to support the |
|
1080 | 1101 | ``application/mercurial-0.2`` media type in response to commands returning |
|
1081 | 1102 | streams. Servers may support this media type on any command. |
|
1082 | 1103 | |
|
1083 | 1104 | The value of the capability is a comma-delimited list of strings declaring |
|
1084 | 1105 | supported compression formats. The order of the compression formats is in |
|
1085 | 1106 | server-preferred order, most preferred first. |
|
1086 | 1107 | |
|
1087 | 1108 | The identifiers used by the official Mercurial distribution are: |
|
1088 | 1109 | |
|
1089 | 1110 | bzip2 |
|
1090 | 1111 | bzip2 |
|
1091 | 1112 | none |
|
1092 | 1113 | uncompressed / raw data |
|
1093 | 1114 | zlib |
|
1094 | 1115 | zlib (no gzip header) |
|
1095 | 1116 | zstd |
|
1096 | 1117 | zstd |
|
1097 | 1118 | |
|
1098 | 1119 | This capability was introduced in Mercurial 4.1 (released February 2017). |
|
1099 | 1120 | |
|
1100 | 1121 | getbundle |
|
1101 | 1122 | --------- |
|
1102 | 1123 | |
|
1103 | 1124 | Whether the server supports the ``getbundle`` command. |
|
1104 | 1125 | |
|
1105 | 1126 | This capability was introduced in Mercurial 1.9 (released July 2011). |
|
1106 | 1127 | |
|
1107 | 1128 | httpheader |
|
1108 | 1129 | ---------- |
|
1109 | 1130 | |
|
1110 | 1131 | Whether the server supports receiving command arguments via HTTP request |
|
1111 | 1132 | headers. |
|
1112 | 1133 | |
|
1113 | 1134 | The value of the capability is an integer describing the max header |
|
1114 | 1135 | length that clients should send. Clients should ignore any content after a |
|
1115 | 1136 | comma in the value, as this is reserved for future use. |
|
1116 | 1137 | |
|
1117 | 1138 | This capability was introduced in Mercurial 1.9 (released July 2011). |
|
1118 | 1139 | |
|
1119 | 1140 | httpmediatype |
|
1120 | 1141 | ------------- |
|
1121 | 1142 | |
|
1122 | 1143 | Indicates which HTTP media types (``Content-Type`` header) the server is |
|
1123 | 1144 | capable of receiving and sending. |
|
1124 | 1145 | |
|
1125 | 1146 | The value of the capability is a comma-delimited list of strings identifying |
|
1126 | 1147 | support for media type and transmission direction. The following strings may |
|
1127 | 1148 | be present: |
|
1128 | 1149 | |
|
1129 | 1150 | 0.1rx |
|
1130 | 1151 | Indicates server support for receiving ``application/mercurial-0.1`` media |
|
1131 | 1152 | types. |
|
1132 | 1153 | |
|
1133 | 1154 | 0.1tx |
|
1134 | 1155 | Indicates server support for sending ``application/mercurial-0.1`` media |
|
1135 | 1156 | types. |
|
1136 | 1157 | |
|
1137 | 1158 | 0.2rx |
|
1138 | 1159 | Indicates server support for receiving ``application/mercurial-0.2`` media |
|
1139 | 1160 | types. |
|
1140 | 1161 | |
|
1141 | 1162 | 0.2tx |
|
1142 | 1163 | Indicates server support for sending ``application/mercurial-0.2`` media |
|
1143 | 1164 | types. |
|
1144 | 1165 | |
|
1145 | 1166 | minrx=X |
|
1146 | 1167 | Minimum media type version the server is capable of receiving. Value is a |
|
1147 | 1168 | string like ``0.2``. |
|
1148 | 1169 | |
|
1149 | 1170 | This capability can be used by servers to limit connections from legacy |
|
1150 | 1171 | clients not using the latest supported media type. However, only clients |
|
1151 | 1172 | with knowledge of this capability will know to consult this value. This |
|
1152 | 1173 | capability is present so the client may issue a more user-friendly error |
|
1153 | 1174 | when the server has locked out a legacy client. |
|
1154 | 1175 | |
|
1155 | 1176 | mintx=X |
|
1156 | 1177 | Minimum media type version the server is capable of sending. Value is a |
|
1157 | 1178 | string like ``0.1``. |
|
1158 | 1179 | |
|
1159 | 1180 | Servers advertising support for the ``application/mercurial-0.2`` media type |
|
1160 | 1181 | should also advertise the ``compression`` capability. |
|
1161 | 1182 | |
|
1162 | 1183 | This capability was introduced in Mercurial 4.1 (released February 2017). |
|
1163 | 1184 | |
|
1164 | 1185 | httppostargs |
|
1165 | 1186 | ------------ |
|
1166 | 1187 | |
|
1167 | 1188 | **Experimental** |
|
1168 | 1189 | |
|
1169 | 1190 | Indicates that the server supports and prefers clients send command arguments |
|
1170 | 1191 | via a HTTP POST request as part of the request body. |
|
1171 | 1192 | |
|
1172 | 1193 | This capability was introduced in Mercurial 3.8 (released May 2016). |
|
1173 | 1194 | |
|
1174 | 1195 | known |
|
1175 | 1196 | ----- |
|
1176 | 1197 | |
|
1177 | 1198 | Whether the server supports the ``known`` command. |
|
1178 | 1199 | |
|
1179 | 1200 | This capability/command was introduced in Mercurial 1.9 (released July 2011). |
|
1180 | 1201 | |
|
1181 | 1202 | lookup |
|
1182 | 1203 | ------ |
|
1183 | 1204 | |
|
1184 | 1205 | Whether the server supports the ``lookup`` command. |
|
1185 | 1206 | |
|
1186 | 1207 | This capability was introduced in Mercurial 0.9.2 (released December |
|
1187 | 1208 | 2006). |
|
1188 | 1209 | |
|
1189 | 1210 | This capability was introduced at the same time as the ``changegroupsubset`` |
|
1190 | 1211 | capability/command. |
|
1191 | 1212 | |
|
1192 | 1213 | partial-pull |
|
1193 | 1214 | ------------ |
|
1194 | 1215 | |
|
1195 | 1216 | Indicates that the client can deal with partial answers to pull requests |
|
1196 | 1217 | by repeating the request. |
|
1197 | 1218 | |
|
1198 | 1219 | If this parameter is not advertised, the server will not send pull bundles. |
|
1199 | 1220 | |
|
1200 | 1221 | This client capability was introduced in Mercurial 4.6. |
|
1201 | 1222 | |
|
1202 | 1223 | protocaps |
|
1203 | 1224 | --------- |
|
1204 | 1225 | |
|
1205 | 1226 | Whether the server supports the ``protocaps`` command for SSH V1 transport. |
|
1206 | 1227 | |
|
1207 | 1228 | This capability was introduced in Mercurial 4.6. |
|
1208 | 1229 | |
|
1209 | 1230 | pushkey |
|
1210 | 1231 | ------- |
|
1211 | 1232 | |
|
1212 | 1233 | Whether the server supports the ``pushkey`` and ``listkeys`` commands. |
|
1213 | 1234 | |
|
1214 | 1235 | This capability was introduced in Mercurial 1.6 (released July 2010). |
|
1215 | 1236 | |
|
1216 | 1237 | standardbundle |
|
1217 | 1238 | -------------- |
|
1218 | 1239 | |
|
1219 | 1240 | **Unsupported** |
|
1220 | 1241 | |
|
1221 | 1242 | This capability was introduced during the Mercurial 0.9.2 development cycle in |
|
1222 | 1243 | 2006. It was never present in a release, as it was replaced by the ``unbundle`` |
|
1223 | 1244 | capability. This capability should not be encountered in the wild. |
|
1224 | 1245 | |
|
1225 | 1246 | stream-preferred |
|
1226 | 1247 | ---------------- |
|
1227 | 1248 | |
|
1228 | 1249 | If present the server prefers that clients clone using the streaming clone |
|
1229 | 1250 | protocol (``hg clone --stream``) rather than the standard |
|
1230 | 1251 | changegroup/bundle based protocol. |
|
1231 | 1252 | |
|
1232 | 1253 | This capability was introduced in Mercurial 2.2 (released May 2012). |
|
1233 | 1254 | |
|
1234 | 1255 | streamreqs |
|
1235 | 1256 | ---------- |
|
1236 | 1257 | |
|
1237 | 1258 | Indicates whether the server supports *streaming clones* and the *requirements* |
|
1238 | 1259 | that clients must support to receive it. |
|
1239 | 1260 | |
|
1240 | 1261 | If present, the server supports the ``stream_out`` command, which transmits |
|
1241 | 1262 | raw revlogs from the repository instead of changegroups. This provides a faster |
|
1242 | 1263 | cloning mechanism at the expense of more bandwidth used. |
|
1243 | 1264 | |
|
1244 | 1265 | The value of this capability is a comma-delimited list of repo format |
|
1245 | 1266 | *requirements*. These are requirements that impact the reading of data in |
|
1246 | 1267 | the ``.hg/store`` directory. An example value is |
|
1247 | 1268 | ``streamreqs=generaldelta,revlogv1`` indicating the server repo requires |
|
1248 | 1269 | the ``revlogv1`` and ``generaldelta`` requirements. |
|
1249 | 1270 | |
|
1250 | 1271 | If the only format requirement is ``revlogv1``, the server may expose the |
|
1251 | 1272 | ``stream`` capability instead of the ``streamreqs`` capability. |
|
1252 | 1273 | |
|
1253 | 1274 | This capability was introduced in Mercurial 1.7 (released November 2010). |
|
1254 | 1275 | |
|
1255 | 1276 | stream |
|
1256 | 1277 | ------ |
|
1257 | 1278 | |
|
1258 | 1279 | Whether the server supports *streaming clones* from ``revlogv1`` repos. |
|
1259 | 1280 | |
|
1260 | 1281 | If present, the server supports the ``stream_out`` command, which transmits |
|
1261 | 1282 | raw revlogs from the repository instead of changegroups. This provides a faster |
|
1262 | 1283 | cloning mechanism at the expense of more bandwidth used. |
|
1263 | 1284 | |
|
1264 | 1285 | This capability was introduced in Mercurial 0.9.1 (released July 2006). |
|
1265 | 1286 | |
|
1266 | 1287 | When initially introduced, the value of the capability was the numeric |
|
1267 | 1288 | revlog revision. e.g. ``stream=1``. This indicates the changegroup is using |
|
1268 | 1289 | ``revlogv1``. This simple integer value wasn't powerful enough, so the |
|
1269 | 1290 | ``streamreqs`` capability was invented to handle cases where the repo |
|
1270 | 1291 | requirements have more than just ``revlogv1``. Newer servers omit the |
|
1271 | 1292 | ``=1`` since it was the only value supported and the value of ``1`` can |
|
1272 | 1293 | be implied by clients. |
|
1273 | 1294 | |
|
1274 | 1295 | unbundlehash |
|
1275 | 1296 | ------------ |
|
1276 | 1297 | |
|
1277 | 1298 | Whether the ``unbundle`` commands supports receiving a hash of all the |
|
1278 | 1299 | heads instead of a list. |
|
1279 | 1300 | |
|
1280 | 1301 | For more, see the documentation for the ``unbundle`` command. |
|
1281 | 1302 | |
|
1282 | 1303 | This capability was introduced in Mercurial 1.9 (released July 2011). |
|
1283 | 1304 | |
|
1284 | 1305 | unbundle |
|
1285 | 1306 | -------- |
|
1286 | 1307 | |
|
1287 | 1308 | Whether the server supports pushing via the ``unbundle`` command. |
|
1288 | 1309 | |
|
1289 | 1310 | This capability/command has been present since Mercurial 0.9.1 (released |
|
1290 | 1311 | July 2006). |
|
1291 | 1312 | |
|
1292 | 1313 | Mercurial 0.9.2 (released December 2006) added values to the capability |
|
1293 | 1314 | indicating which bundle types the server supports receiving. This value is a |
|
1294 | 1315 | comma-delimited list. e.g. ``HG10GZ,HG10BZ,HG10UN``. The order of values |
|
1295 | 1316 | reflects the priority/preference of that type, where the first value is the |
|
1296 | 1317 | most preferred type. |
|
1297 | 1318 | |
|
1298 | 1319 | Content Negotiation |
|
1299 | 1320 | =================== |
|
1300 | 1321 | |
|
1301 | 1322 | The wire protocol has some mechanisms to help peers determine what content |
|
1302 | 1323 | types and encoding the other side will accept. Historically, these mechanisms |
|
1303 | 1324 | have been built into commands themselves because most commands only send a |
|
1304 | 1325 | well-defined response type and only certain commands needed to support |
|
1305 | 1326 | functionality like compression. |
|
1306 | 1327 | |
|
1307 | 1328 | Currently, only the HTTP version 1 transport supports content negotiation |
|
1308 | 1329 | at the protocol layer. |
|
1309 | 1330 | |
|
1310 | 1331 | HTTP requests advertise supported response formats via the ``X-HgProto-<N>`` |
|
1311 | 1332 | request header, where ``<N>`` is an integer starting at 1 allowing the logical |
|
1312 | 1333 | value to span multiple headers. This value consists of a list of |
|
1313 | 1334 | space-delimited parameters. Each parameter denotes a feature or capability. |
|
1314 | 1335 | |
|
1315 | 1336 | The following parameters are defined: |
|
1316 | 1337 | |
|
1317 | 1338 | 0.1 |
|
1318 | 1339 | Indicates the client supports receiving ``application/mercurial-0.1`` |
|
1319 | 1340 | responses. |
|
1320 | 1341 | |
|
1321 | 1342 | 0.2 |
|
1322 | 1343 | Indicates the client supports receiving ``application/mercurial-0.2`` |
|
1323 | 1344 | responses. |
|
1324 | 1345 | |
|
1325 | 1346 | cbor |
|
1326 | 1347 | Indicates the client supports receiving ``application/mercurial-cbor`` |
|
1327 | 1348 | responses. |
|
1328 | 1349 | |
|
1329 | 1350 | (Only intended to be used with version 2 transports.) |
|
1330 | 1351 | |
|
1331 | 1352 | comp |
|
1332 | 1353 | Indicates compression formats the client can decode. Value is a list of |
|
1333 | 1354 | comma delimited strings identifying compression formats ordered from |
|
1334 | 1355 | most preferential to least preferential. e.g. ``comp=zstd,zlib,none``. |
|
1335 | 1356 | |
|
1336 | 1357 | This parameter does not have an effect if only the ``0.1`` parameter |
|
1337 | 1358 | is defined, as support for ``application/mercurial-0.2`` or greater is |
|
1338 | 1359 | required to use arbitrary compression formats. |
|
1339 | 1360 | |
|
1340 | 1361 | If this parameter is not advertised, the server interprets this as |
|
1341 | 1362 | equivalent to ``zlib,none``. |
|
1342 | 1363 | |
|
1343 | 1364 | Clients may choose to only send this header if the ``httpmediatype`` |
|
1344 | 1365 | server capability is present, as currently all server-side features |
|
1345 | 1366 | consulting this header require the client to opt in to new protocol features |
|
1346 | 1367 | advertised via the ``httpmediatype`` capability. |
|
1347 | 1368 | |
|
1348 | 1369 | A server that doesn't receive an ``X-HgProto-<N>`` header should infer a |
|
1349 | 1370 | value of ``0.1``. This is compatible with legacy clients. |
|
1350 | 1371 | |
|
1351 | 1372 | A server receiving a request indicating support for multiple media type |
|
1352 | 1373 | versions may respond with any of the supported media types. Not all servers |
|
1353 | 1374 | may support all media types on all commands. |
|
1354 | 1375 | |
|
1355 | 1376 | Commands |
|
1356 | 1377 | ======== |
|
1357 | 1378 | |
|
1358 | 1379 | This section contains a list of all wire protocol commands implemented by |
|
1359 | 1380 | the canonical Mercurial server. |
|
1360 | 1381 | |
|
1361 | 1382 | batch |
|
1362 | 1383 | ----- |
|
1363 | 1384 | |
|
1364 | 1385 | Issue multiple commands while sending a single command request. The purpose |
|
1365 | 1386 | of this command is to allow a client to issue multiple commands while avoiding |
|
1366 | 1387 | multiple round trips to the server therefore enabling commands to complete |
|
1367 | 1388 | quicker. |
|
1368 | 1389 | |
|
1369 | 1390 | The command accepts a ``cmds`` argument that contains a list of commands to |
|
1370 | 1391 | execute. |
|
1371 | 1392 | |
|
1372 | 1393 | The value of ``cmds`` is a ``;`` delimited list of strings. Each string has the |
|
1373 | 1394 | form ``<command> <arguments>``. That is, the command name followed by a space |
|
1374 | 1395 | followed by an argument string. |
|
1375 | 1396 | |
|
1376 | 1397 | The argument string is a ``,`` delimited list of ``<key>=<value>`` values |
|
1377 | 1398 | corresponding to command arguments. Both the argument name and value are |
|
1378 | 1399 | escaped using a special substitution map:: |
|
1379 | 1400 | |
|
1380 | 1401 | : -> :c |
|
1381 | 1402 | , -> :o |
|
1382 | 1403 | ; -> :s |
|
1383 | 1404 | = -> :e |
|
1384 | 1405 | |
|
1385 | 1406 | The response type for this command is ``string``. The value contains a |
|
1386 | 1407 | ``;`` delimited list of responses for each requested command. Each value |
|
1387 | 1408 | in this list is escaped using the same substitution map used for arguments. |
|
1388 | 1409 | |
|
1389 | 1410 | If an error occurs, the generic error response may be sent. |
|
1390 | 1411 | |
|
1391 | 1412 | between |
|
1392 | 1413 | ------- |
|
1393 | 1414 | |
|
1394 | 1415 | (Legacy command used for discovery in old clients) |
|
1395 | 1416 | |
|
1396 | 1417 | Obtain nodes between pairs of nodes. |
|
1397 | 1418 | |
|
1398 | 1419 | The ``pairs`` arguments contains a space-delimited list of ``-`` delimited |
|
1399 | 1420 | hex node pairs. e.g.:: |
|
1400 | 1421 | |
|
1401 | 1422 | a072279d3f7fd3a4aa7ffa1a5af8efc573e1c896-6dc58916e7c070f678682bfe404d2e2d68291a18 |
|
1402 | 1423 | |
|
1403 | 1424 | Return type is a ``string``. Value consists of lines corresponding to each |
|
1404 | 1425 | requested range. Each line contains a space-delimited list of hex nodes. |
|
1405 | 1426 | A newline ``\n`` terminates each line, including the last one. |
|
1406 | 1427 | |
|
1407 | 1428 | branchmap |
|
1408 | 1429 | --------- |
|
1409 | 1430 | |
|
1410 | 1431 | Obtain heads in named branches. |
|
1411 | 1432 | |
|
1412 | 1433 | Accepts no arguments. Return type is a ``string``. |
|
1413 | 1434 | |
|
1414 | 1435 | Return value contains lines with URL encoded branch names followed by a space |
|
1415 | 1436 | followed by a space-delimited list of hex nodes of heads on that branch. |
|
1416 | 1437 | e.g.:: |
|
1417 | 1438 | |
|
1418 | 1439 | default a072279d3f7fd3a4aa7ffa1a5af8efc573e1c896 6dc58916e7c070f678682bfe404d2e2d68291a18 |
|
1419 | 1440 | stable baae3bf31522f41dd5e6d7377d0edd8d1cf3fccc |
|
1420 | 1441 | |
|
1421 | 1442 | There is no trailing newline. |
|
1422 | 1443 | |
|
1423 | 1444 | branches |
|
1424 | 1445 | -------- |
|
1425 | 1446 | |
|
1426 | 1447 | (Legacy command used for discovery in old clients. Clients with ``getbundle`` |
|
1427 | 1448 | use the ``known`` and ``heads`` commands instead.) |
|
1428 | 1449 | |
|
1429 | 1450 | Obtain ancestor changesets of specific nodes back to a branch point. |
|
1430 | 1451 | |
|
1431 | 1452 | Despite the name, this command has nothing to do with Mercurial named branches. |
|
1432 | 1453 | Instead, it is related to DAG branches. |
|
1433 | 1454 | |
|
1434 | 1455 | The command accepts a ``nodes`` argument, which is a string of space-delimited |
|
1435 | 1456 | hex nodes. |
|
1436 | 1457 | |
|
1437 | 1458 | For each node requested, the server will find the first ancestor node that is |
|
1438 | 1459 | a DAG root or is a merge. |
|
1439 | 1460 | |
|
1440 | 1461 | Return type is a ``string``. Return value contains lines with result data for |
|
1441 | 1462 | each requested node. Each line contains space-delimited nodes followed by a |
|
1442 | 1463 | newline (``\n``). The 4 nodes reported on each line correspond to the requested |
|
1443 | 1464 | node, the ancestor node found, and its 2 parent nodes (which may be the null |
|
1444 | 1465 | node). |
|
1445 | 1466 | |
|
1446 | 1467 | capabilities |
|
1447 | 1468 | ------------ |
|
1448 | 1469 | |
|
1449 | 1470 | Obtain the capabilities string for the repo. |
|
1450 | 1471 | |
|
1451 | 1472 | Unlike the ``hello`` command, the capabilities string is not prefixed. |
|
1452 | 1473 | There is no trailing newline. |
|
1453 | 1474 | |
|
1454 | 1475 | This command does not accept any arguments. Return type is a ``string``. |
|
1455 | 1476 | |
|
1456 | 1477 | This command was introduced in Mercurial 0.9.1 (released July 2006). |
|
1457 | 1478 | |
|
1458 | 1479 | changegroup |
|
1459 | 1480 | ----------- |
|
1460 | 1481 | |
|
1461 | 1482 | (Legacy command: use ``getbundle`` instead) |
|
1462 | 1483 | |
|
1463 | 1484 | Obtain a changegroup version 1 with data for changesets that are |
|
1464 | 1485 | descendants of client-specified changesets. |
|
1465 | 1486 | |
|
1466 | 1487 | The ``roots`` arguments contains a list of space-delimited hex nodes. |
|
1467 | 1488 | |
|
1468 | 1489 | The server responds with a changegroup version 1 containing all |
|
1469 | 1490 | changesets between the requested root/base nodes and the repo's head nodes |
|
1470 | 1491 | at the time of the request. |
|
1471 | 1492 | |
|
1472 | 1493 | The return type is a ``stream``. |
|
1473 | 1494 | |
|
1474 | 1495 | changegroupsubset |
|
1475 | 1496 | ----------------- |
|
1476 | 1497 | |
|
1477 | 1498 | (Legacy command: use ``getbundle`` instead) |
|
1478 | 1499 | |
|
1479 | 1500 | Obtain a changegroup version 1 with data for changesetsets between |
|
1480 | 1501 | client specified base and head nodes. |
|
1481 | 1502 | |
|
1482 | 1503 | The ``bases`` argument contains a list of space-delimited hex nodes. |
|
1483 | 1504 | The ``heads`` argument contains a list of space-delimited hex nodes. |
|
1484 | 1505 | |
|
1485 | 1506 | The server responds with a changegroup version 1 containing all |
|
1486 | 1507 | changesets between the requested base and head nodes at the time of the |
|
1487 | 1508 | request. |
|
1488 | 1509 | |
|
1489 | 1510 | The return type is a ``stream``. |
|
1490 | 1511 | |
|
1491 | 1512 | clonebundles |
|
1492 | 1513 | ------------ |
|
1493 | 1514 | |
|
1494 | 1515 | Obtains a manifest of bundle URLs available to seed clones. |
|
1495 | 1516 | |
|
1496 | 1517 | Each returned line contains a URL followed by metadata. See the |
|
1497 | 1518 | documentation in the ``clonebundles`` extension for more. |
|
1498 | 1519 | |
|
1499 | 1520 | The return type is a ``string``. |
|
1500 | 1521 | |
|
1501 | 1522 | getbundle |
|
1502 | 1523 | --------- |
|
1503 | 1524 | |
|
1504 | 1525 | Obtain a bundle containing repository data. |
|
1505 | 1526 | |
|
1506 | 1527 | This command accepts the following arguments: |
|
1507 | 1528 | |
|
1508 | 1529 | heads |
|
1509 | 1530 | List of space-delimited hex nodes of heads to retrieve. |
|
1510 | 1531 | common |
|
1511 | 1532 | List of space-delimited hex nodes that the client has in common with the |
|
1512 | 1533 | server. |
|
1513 | 1534 | obsmarkers |
|
1514 | 1535 | Boolean indicating whether to include obsolescence markers as part |
|
1515 | 1536 | of the response. Only works with bundle2. |
|
1516 | 1537 | bundlecaps |
|
1517 | 1538 | Comma-delimited set of strings defining client bundle capabilities. |
|
1518 | 1539 | listkeys |
|
1519 | 1540 | Comma-delimited list of strings of ``pushkey`` namespaces. For each |
|
1520 | 1541 | namespace listed, a bundle2 part will be included with the content of |
|
1521 | 1542 | that namespace. |
|
1522 | 1543 | cg |
|
1523 | 1544 | Boolean indicating whether changegroup data is requested. |
|
1524 | 1545 | cbattempted |
|
1525 | 1546 | Boolean indicating whether the client attempted to use the *clone bundles* |
|
1526 | 1547 | feature before performing this request. |
|
1527 | 1548 | bookmarks |
|
1528 | 1549 | Boolean indicating whether bookmark data is requested. |
|
1529 | 1550 | phases |
|
1530 | 1551 | Boolean indicating whether phases data is requested. |
|
1531 | 1552 | |
|
1532 | 1553 | The return type on success is a ``stream`` where the value is bundle. |
|
1533 | 1554 | On the HTTP version 1 transport, the response is zlib compressed. |
|
1534 | 1555 | |
|
1535 | 1556 | If an error occurs, a generic error response can be sent. |
|
1536 | 1557 | |
|
1537 | 1558 | Unless the client sends a false value for the ``cg`` argument, the returned |
|
1538 | 1559 | bundle contains a changegroup with the nodes between the specified ``common`` |
|
1539 | 1560 | and ``heads`` nodes. Depending on the command arguments, the type and content |
|
1540 | 1561 | of the returned bundle can vary significantly. |
|
1541 | 1562 | |
|
1542 | 1563 | The default behavior is for the server to send a raw changegroup version |
|
1543 | 1564 | ``01`` response. |
|
1544 | 1565 | |
|
1545 | 1566 | If the ``bundlecaps`` provided by the client contain a value beginning |
|
1546 | 1567 | with ``HG2``, a bundle2 will be returned. The bundle2 data may contain |
|
1547 | 1568 | additional repository data, such as ``pushkey`` namespace values. |
|
1548 | 1569 | |
|
1549 | 1570 | heads |
|
1550 | 1571 | ----- |
|
1551 | 1572 | |
|
1552 | 1573 | Returns a list of space-delimited hex nodes of repository heads followed |
|
1553 | 1574 | by a newline. e.g. |
|
1554 | 1575 | ``a9eeb3adc7ddb5006c088e9eda61791c777cbf7c 31f91a3da534dc849f0d6bfc00a395a97cf218a1\n`` |
|
1555 | 1576 | |
|
1556 | 1577 | This command does not accept any arguments. The return type is a ``string``. |
|
1557 | 1578 | |
|
1558 | 1579 | hello |
|
1559 | 1580 | ----- |
|
1560 | 1581 | |
|
1561 | 1582 | Returns lines describing interesting things about the server in an RFC-822 |
|
1562 | 1583 | like format. |
|
1563 | 1584 | |
|
1564 | 1585 | Currently, the only line defines the server capabilities. It has the form:: |
|
1565 | 1586 | |
|
1566 | 1587 | capabilities: <value> |
|
1567 | 1588 | |
|
1568 | 1589 | See above for more about the capabilities string. |
|
1569 | 1590 | |
|
1570 | 1591 | SSH clients typically issue this command as soon as a connection is |
|
1571 | 1592 | established. |
|
1572 | 1593 | |
|
1573 | 1594 | This command does not accept any arguments. The return type is a ``string``. |
|
1574 | 1595 | |
|
1575 | 1596 | This command was introduced in Mercurial 0.9.1 (released July 2006). |
|
1576 | 1597 | |
|
1577 | 1598 | listkeys |
|
1578 | 1599 | -------- |
|
1579 | 1600 | |
|
1580 | 1601 | List values in a specified ``pushkey`` namespace. |
|
1581 | 1602 | |
|
1582 | 1603 | The ``namespace`` argument defines the pushkey namespace to operate on. |
|
1583 | 1604 | |
|
1584 | 1605 | The return type is a ``string``. The value is an encoded dictionary of keys. |
|
1585 | 1606 | |
|
1586 | 1607 | Key-value pairs are delimited by newlines (``\n``). Within each line, keys and |
|
1587 | 1608 | values are separated by a tab (``\t``). Keys and values are both strings. |
|
1588 | 1609 | |
|
1589 | 1610 | lookup |
|
1590 | 1611 | ------ |
|
1591 | 1612 | |
|
1592 | 1613 | Try to resolve a value to a known repository revision. |
|
1593 | 1614 | |
|
1594 | 1615 | The ``key`` argument is converted from bytes to an |
|
1595 | 1616 | ``encoding.localstr`` instance then passed into |
|
1596 | 1617 | ``localrepository.__getitem__`` in an attempt to resolve it. |
|
1597 | 1618 | |
|
1598 | 1619 | The return type is a ``string``. |
|
1599 | 1620 | |
|
1600 | 1621 | Upon successful resolution, returns ``1 <hex node>\n``. On failure, |
|
1601 | 1622 | returns ``0 <error string>\n``. e.g.:: |
|
1602 | 1623 | |
|
1603 | 1624 | 1 273ce12ad8f155317b2c078ec75a4eba507f1fba\n |
|
1604 | 1625 | |
|
1605 | 1626 | 0 unknown revision 'foo'\n |
|
1606 | 1627 | |
|
1607 | 1628 | known |
|
1608 | 1629 | ----- |
|
1609 | 1630 | |
|
1610 | 1631 | Determine whether multiple nodes are known. |
|
1611 | 1632 | |
|
1612 | 1633 | The ``nodes`` argument is a list of space-delimited hex nodes to check |
|
1613 | 1634 | for existence. |
|
1614 | 1635 | |
|
1615 | 1636 | The return type is ``string``. |
|
1616 | 1637 | |
|
1617 | 1638 | Returns a string consisting of ``0``s and ``1``s indicating whether nodes |
|
1618 | 1639 | are known. If the Nth node specified in the ``nodes`` argument is known, |
|
1619 | 1640 | a ``1`` will be returned at byte offset N. If the node isn't known, ``0`` |
|
1620 | 1641 | will be present at byte offset N. |
|
1621 | 1642 | |
|
1622 | 1643 | There is no trailing newline. |
|
1623 | 1644 | |
|
1624 | 1645 | protocaps |
|
1625 | 1646 | --------- |
|
1626 | 1647 | |
|
1627 | 1648 | Notify the server about the client capabilities in the SSH V1 transport |
|
1628 | 1649 | protocol. |
|
1629 | 1650 | |
|
1630 | 1651 | The ``caps`` argument is a space-delimited list of capabilities. |
|
1631 | 1652 | |
|
1632 | 1653 | The server will reply with the string ``OK``. |
|
1633 | 1654 | |
|
1634 | 1655 | pushkey |
|
1635 | 1656 | ------- |
|
1636 | 1657 | |
|
1637 | 1658 | Set a value using the ``pushkey`` protocol. |
|
1638 | 1659 | |
|
1639 | 1660 | Accepts arguments ``namespace``, ``key``, ``old``, and ``new``, which |
|
1640 | 1661 | correspond to the pushkey namespace to operate on, the key within that |
|
1641 | 1662 | namespace to change, the old value (which may be empty), and the new value. |
|
1642 | 1663 | All arguments are string types. |
|
1643 | 1664 | |
|
1644 | 1665 | The return type is a ``string``. The value depends on the transport protocol. |
|
1645 | 1666 | |
|
1646 | 1667 | The SSH version 1 transport sends a string encoded integer followed by a |
|
1647 | 1668 | newline (``\n``) which indicates operation result. The server may send |
|
1648 | 1669 | additional output on the ``stderr`` stream that should be displayed to the |
|
1649 | 1670 | user. |
|
1650 | 1671 | |
|
1651 | 1672 | The HTTP version 1 transport sends a string encoded integer followed by a |
|
1652 | 1673 | newline followed by additional server output that should be displayed to |
|
1653 | 1674 | the user. This may include output from hooks, etc. |
|
1654 | 1675 | |
|
1655 | 1676 | The integer result varies by namespace. ``0`` means an error has occurred |
|
1656 | 1677 | and there should be additional output to display to the user. |
|
1657 | 1678 | |
|
1658 | 1679 | stream_out |
|
1659 | 1680 | ---------- |
|
1660 | 1681 | |
|
1661 | 1682 | Obtain *streaming clone* data. |
|
1662 | 1683 | |
|
1663 | 1684 | The return type is either a ``string`` or a ``stream``, depending on |
|
1664 | 1685 | whether the request was fulfilled properly. |
|
1665 | 1686 | |
|
1666 | 1687 | A return value of ``1\n`` indicates the server is not configured to serve |
|
1667 | 1688 | this data. If this is seen by the client, they may not have verified the |
|
1668 | 1689 | ``stream`` capability is set before making the request. |
|
1669 | 1690 | |
|
1670 | 1691 | A return value of ``2\n`` indicates the server was unable to lock the |
|
1671 | 1692 | repository to generate data. |
|
1672 | 1693 | |
|
1673 | 1694 | All other responses are a ``stream`` of bytes. The first line of this data |
|
1674 | 1695 | contains 2 space-delimited integers corresponding to the path count and |
|
1675 | 1696 | payload size, respectively:: |
|
1676 | 1697 | |
|
1677 | 1698 | <path count> <payload size>\n |
|
1678 | 1699 | |
|
1679 | 1700 | The ``<payload size>`` is the total size of path data: it does not include |
|
1680 | 1701 | the size of the per-path header lines. |
|
1681 | 1702 | |
|
1682 | 1703 | Following that header are ``<path count>`` entries. Each entry consists of a |
|
1683 | 1704 | line with metadata followed by raw revlog data. The line consists of:: |
|
1684 | 1705 | |
|
1685 | 1706 | <store path>\0<size>\n |
|
1686 | 1707 | |
|
1687 | 1708 | The ``<store path>`` is the encoded store path of the data that follows. |
|
1688 | 1709 | ``<size>`` is the amount of data for this store path/revlog that follows the |
|
1689 | 1710 | newline. |
|
1690 | 1711 | |
|
1691 | 1712 | There is no trailer to indicate end of data. Instead, the client should stop |
|
1692 | 1713 | reading after ``<path count>`` entries are consumed. |
|
1693 | 1714 | |
|
1694 | 1715 | unbundle |
|
1695 | 1716 | -------- |
|
1696 | 1717 | |
|
1697 | 1718 | Send a bundle containing data (usually changegroup data) to the server. |
|
1698 | 1719 | |
|
1699 | 1720 | Accepts the argument ``heads``, which is a space-delimited list of hex nodes |
|
1700 | 1721 | corresponding to server repository heads observed by the client. This is used |
|
1701 | 1722 | to detect race conditions and abort push operations before a server performs |
|
1702 | 1723 | too much work or a client transfers too much data. |
|
1703 | 1724 | |
|
1704 | 1725 | The request payload consists of a bundle to be applied to the repository, |
|
1705 | 1726 | similarly to as if :hg:`unbundle` were called. |
|
1706 | 1727 | |
|
1707 | 1728 | In most scenarios, a special ``push response`` type is returned. This type |
|
1708 | 1729 | contains an integer describing the change in heads as a result of the |
|
1709 | 1730 | operation. A value of ``0`` indicates nothing changed. ``1`` means the number |
|
1710 | 1731 | of heads remained the same. Values ``2`` and larger indicate the number of |
|
1711 | 1732 | added heads minus 1. e.g. ``3`` means 2 heads were added. Negative values |
|
1712 | 1733 | indicate the number of fewer heads, also off by 1. e.g. ``-2`` means there |
|
1713 | 1734 | is 1 fewer head. |
|
1714 | 1735 | |
|
1715 | 1736 | The encoding of the ``push response`` type varies by transport. |
|
1716 | 1737 | |
|
1717 | 1738 | For the SSH version 1 transport, this type is composed of 2 ``string`` |
|
1718 | 1739 | responses: an empty response (``0\n``) followed by the integer result value. |
|
1719 | 1740 | e.g. ``1\n2``. So the full response might be ``0\n1\n2``. |
|
1720 | 1741 | |
|
1721 | 1742 | For the HTTP version 1 transport, the response is a ``string`` type composed |
|
1722 | 1743 | of an integer result value followed by a newline (``\n``) followed by string |
|
1723 | 1744 | content holding server output that should be displayed on the client (output |
|
1724 | 1745 | hooks, etc). |
|
1725 | 1746 | |
|
1726 | 1747 | In some cases, the server may respond with a ``bundle2`` bundle. In this |
|
1727 | 1748 | case, the response type is ``stream``. For the HTTP version 1 transport, the |
|
1728 | 1749 | response is zlib compressed. |
|
1729 | 1750 | |
|
1730 | 1751 | The server may also respond with a generic error type, which contains a string |
|
1731 | 1752 | indicating the failure. |
|
1732 | 1753 | |
|
1733 | 1754 | Frame-Based Protocol Commands |
|
1734 | 1755 | ============================= |
|
1735 | 1756 | |
|
1736 | 1757 | **Experimental and under active development** |
|
1737 | 1758 | |
|
1738 | 1759 | This section documents the wire protocol commands exposed to transports |
|
1739 | 1760 | using the frame-based protocol. The set of commands exposed through |
|
1740 | 1761 | these transports is distinct from the set of commands exposed to legacy |
|
1741 | 1762 | transports. |
|
1742 | 1763 | |
|
1743 | 1764 | The frame-based protocol uses CBOR to encode command execution requests. |
|
1744 | 1765 | All command arguments must be mapped to a specific or set of CBOR data |
|
1745 | 1766 | types. |
|
1746 | 1767 | |
|
1747 | 1768 | The response to many commands is also CBOR. There is no common response |
|
1748 | 1769 | format: each command defines its own response format. |
|
1749 | 1770 | |
|
1750 | 1771 | TODO require node type be specified, as N bytes of binary node value |
|
1751 | 1772 | could be ambiguous once SHA-1 is replaced. |
|
1752 | 1773 | |
|
1753 | 1774 | branchmap |
|
1754 | 1775 | --------- |
|
1755 | 1776 | |
|
1756 | 1777 | Obtain heads in named branches. |
|
1757 | 1778 | |
|
1758 | 1779 | Receives no arguments. |
|
1759 | 1780 | |
|
1760 | 1781 | The response is a map with bytestring keys defining the branch name. |
|
1761 | 1782 | Values are arrays of bytestring defining raw changeset nodes. |
|
1762 | 1783 | |
|
1763 | 1784 | capabilities |
|
1764 | 1785 | ------------ |
|
1765 | 1786 | |
|
1766 | 1787 | Obtain the server's capabilities. |
|
1767 | 1788 | |
|
1768 | 1789 | Receives no arguments. |
|
1769 | 1790 | |
|
1770 | 1791 | This command is typically called only as part of the handshake during |
|
1771 | 1792 | initial connection establishment. |
|
1772 | 1793 | |
|
1773 | 1794 | The response is a map with bytestring keys defining server information. |
|
1774 | 1795 | |
|
1775 | 1796 | The defined keys are: |
|
1776 | 1797 | |
|
1777 | 1798 | commands |
|
1778 | 1799 | A map defining available wire protocol commands on this server. |
|
1779 | 1800 | |
|
1780 | 1801 | Keys in the map are the names of commands that can be invoked. Values |
|
1781 | 1802 | are maps defining information about that command. The bytestring keys |
|
1782 | 1803 | are: |
|
1783 | 1804 | |
|
1784 | 1805 | args |
|
1785 | 1806 | A map of argument names and their expected types. |
|
1786 | 1807 | |
|
1787 | 1808 | Types are defined as a representative value for the expected type. |
|
1788 | 1809 | e.g. an argument expecting a boolean type will have its value |
|
1789 | 1810 | set to true. An integer type will have its value set to 42. The |
|
1790 | 1811 | actual values are arbitrary and may not have meaning. |
|
1791 | 1812 | permissions |
|
1792 | 1813 | An array of permissions required to execute this command. |
|
1793 | 1814 | |
|
1794 | 1815 | compression |
|
1795 | 1816 | An array of maps defining available compression format support. |
|
1796 | 1817 | |
|
1797 | 1818 | The array is sorted from most preferred to least preferred. |
|
1798 | 1819 | |
|
1799 | 1820 | Each entry has the following bytestring keys: |
|
1800 | 1821 | |
|
1801 | 1822 | name |
|
1802 | 1823 | Name of the compression engine. e.g. ``zstd`` or ``zlib``. |
|
1803 | 1824 | |
|
1804 | 1825 | framingmediatypes |
|
1805 | 1826 | An array of bytestrings defining the supported framing protocol |
|
1806 | 1827 | media types. Servers will not accept media types not in this list. |
|
1807 | 1828 | |
|
1808 | 1829 | rawrepoformats |
|
1809 | 1830 | An array of storage formats the repository is using. This set of |
|
1810 | 1831 | requirements can be used to determine whether a client can read a |
|
1811 | 1832 | *raw* copy of file data available. |
|
1812 | 1833 | |
|
1813 | 1834 | heads |
|
1814 | 1835 | ----- |
|
1815 | 1836 | |
|
1816 | 1837 | Obtain DAG heads in the repository. |
|
1817 | 1838 | |
|
1818 | 1839 | The command accepts the following arguments: |
|
1819 | 1840 | |
|
1820 | 1841 | publiconly (optional) |
|
1821 | 1842 | (boolean) If set, operate on the DAG for public phase changesets only. |
|
1822 | 1843 | Non-public (i.e. draft) phase DAG heads will not be returned. |
|
1823 | 1844 | |
|
1824 | 1845 | The response is a CBOR array of bytestrings defining changeset nodes |
|
1825 | 1846 | of DAG heads. The array can be empty if the repository is empty or no |
|
1826 | 1847 | changesets satisfied the request. |
|
1827 | 1848 | |
|
1828 | 1849 | TODO consider exposing phase of heads in response |
|
1829 | 1850 | |
|
1830 | 1851 | known |
|
1831 | 1852 | ----- |
|
1832 | 1853 | |
|
1833 | 1854 | Determine whether a series of changeset nodes is known to the server. |
|
1834 | 1855 | |
|
1835 | 1856 | The command accepts the following arguments: |
|
1836 | 1857 | |
|
1837 | 1858 | nodes |
|
1838 | 1859 | (array of bytestrings) List of changeset nodes whose presence to |
|
1839 | 1860 | query. |
|
1840 | 1861 | |
|
1841 | 1862 | The response is a bytestring where each byte contains a 0 or 1 for the |
|
1842 | 1863 | corresponding requested node at the same index. |
|
1843 | 1864 | |
|
1844 | 1865 | TODO use a bit array for even more compact response |
|
1845 | 1866 | |
|
1846 | 1867 | listkeys |
|
1847 | 1868 | -------- |
|
1848 | 1869 | |
|
1849 | 1870 | List values in a specified ``pushkey`` namespace. |
|
1850 | 1871 | |
|
1851 | 1872 | The command receives the following arguments: |
|
1852 | 1873 | |
|
1853 | 1874 | namespace |
|
1854 | 1875 | (bytestring) Pushkey namespace to query. |
|
1855 | 1876 | |
|
1856 | 1877 | The response is a map with bytestring keys and values. |
|
1857 | 1878 | |
|
1858 | 1879 | TODO consider using binary to represent nodes in certain pushkey namespaces. |
|
1859 | 1880 | |
|
1860 | 1881 | lookup |
|
1861 | 1882 | ------ |
|
1862 | 1883 | |
|
1863 | 1884 | Try to resolve a value to a changeset revision. |
|
1864 | 1885 | |
|
1865 | 1886 | Unlike ``known`` which operates on changeset nodes, lookup operates on |
|
1866 | 1887 | node fragments and other names that a user may use. |
|
1867 | 1888 | |
|
1868 | 1889 | The command receives the following arguments: |
|
1869 | 1890 | |
|
1870 | 1891 | key |
|
1871 | 1892 | (bytestring) Value to try to resolve. |
|
1872 | 1893 | |
|
1873 | 1894 | On success, returns a bytestring containing the resolved node. |
|
1874 | 1895 | |
|
1875 | 1896 | pushkey |
|
1876 | 1897 | ------- |
|
1877 | 1898 | |
|
1878 | 1899 | Set a value using the ``pushkey`` protocol. |
|
1879 | 1900 | |
|
1880 | 1901 | The command receives the following arguments: |
|
1881 | 1902 | |
|
1882 | 1903 | namespace |
|
1883 | 1904 | (bytestring) Pushkey namespace to operate on. |
|
1884 | 1905 | key |
|
1885 | 1906 | (bytestring) The pushkey key to set. |
|
1886 | 1907 | old |
|
1887 | 1908 | (bytestring) Old value for this key. |
|
1888 | 1909 | new |
|
1889 | 1910 | (bytestring) New value for this key. |
|
1890 | 1911 | |
|
1891 | 1912 | TODO consider using binary to represent nodes is certain pushkey namespaces. |
|
1892 | 1913 | TODO better define response type and meaning. |
@@ -1,1073 +1,1078 | |||
|
1 | 1 | # wireprotoframing.py - unified framing protocol for wire protocol |
|
2 | 2 | # |
|
3 | 3 | # Copyright 2018 Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> |
|
4 | 4 | # |
|
5 | 5 | # This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the |
|
6 | 6 | # GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version. |
|
7 | 7 | |
|
8 | 8 | # This file contains functionality to support the unified frame-based wire |
|
9 | 9 | # protocol. For details about the protocol, see |
|
10 | 10 | # `hg help internals.wireprotocol`. |
|
11 | 11 | |
|
12 | 12 | from __future__ import absolute_import |
|
13 | 13 | |
|
14 | 14 | import collections |
|
15 | 15 | import struct |
|
16 | 16 | |
|
17 | 17 | from .i18n import _ |
|
18 | 18 | from .thirdparty import ( |
|
19 | 19 | attr, |
|
20 | 20 | cbor, |
|
21 | 21 | ) |
|
22 | 22 | from . import ( |
|
23 | 23 | encoding, |
|
24 | 24 | error, |
|
25 | 25 | util, |
|
26 | 26 | ) |
|
27 | 27 | from .utils import ( |
|
28 | 28 | stringutil, |
|
29 | 29 | ) |
|
30 | 30 | |
|
31 | 31 | FRAME_HEADER_SIZE = 8 |
|
32 | 32 | DEFAULT_MAX_FRAME_SIZE = 32768 |
|
33 | 33 | |
|
34 | 34 | STREAM_FLAG_BEGIN_STREAM = 0x01 |
|
35 | 35 | STREAM_FLAG_END_STREAM = 0x02 |
|
36 | 36 | STREAM_FLAG_ENCODING_APPLIED = 0x04 |
|
37 | 37 | |
|
38 | 38 | STREAM_FLAGS = { |
|
39 | 39 | b'stream-begin': STREAM_FLAG_BEGIN_STREAM, |
|
40 | 40 | b'stream-end': STREAM_FLAG_END_STREAM, |
|
41 | 41 | b'encoded': STREAM_FLAG_ENCODING_APPLIED, |
|
42 | 42 | } |
|
43 | 43 | |
|
44 | 44 | FRAME_TYPE_COMMAND_REQUEST = 0x01 |
|
45 | 45 | FRAME_TYPE_COMMAND_DATA = 0x02 |
|
46 | 46 | FRAME_TYPE_COMMAND_RESPONSE = 0x03 |
|
47 | 47 | FRAME_TYPE_ERROR_RESPONSE = 0x05 |
|
48 | 48 | FRAME_TYPE_TEXT_OUTPUT = 0x06 |
|
49 | 49 | FRAME_TYPE_PROGRESS = 0x07 |
|
50 | 50 | FRAME_TYPE_STREAM_SETTINGS = 0x08 |
|
51 | 51 | |
|
52 | 52 | FRAME_TYPES = { |
|
53 | 53 | b'command-request': FRAME_TYPE_COMMAND_REQUEST, |
|
54 | 54 | b'command-data': FRAME_TYPE_COMMAND_DATA, |
|
55 | 55 | b'command-response': FRAME_TYPE_COMMAND_RESPONSE, |
|
56 | 56 | b'error-response': FRAME_TYPE_ERROR_RESPONSE, |
|
57 | 57 | b'text-output': FRAME_TYPE_TEXT_OUTPUT, |
|
58 | 58 | b'progress': FRAME_TYPE_PROGRESS, |
|
59 | 59 | b'stream-settings': FRAME_TYPE_STREAM_SETTINGS, |
|
60 | 60 | } |
|
61 | 61 | |
|
62 | 62 | FLAG_COMMAND_REQUEST_NEW = 0x01 |
|
63 | 63 | FLAG_COMMAND_REQUEST_CONTINUATION = 0x02 |
|
64 | 64 | FLAG_COMMAND_REQUEST_MORE_FRAMES = 0x04 |
|
65 | 65 | FLAG_COMMAND_REQUEST_EXPECT_DATA = 0x08 |
|
66 | 66 | |
|
67 | 67 | FLAGS_COMMAND_REQUEST = { |
|
68 | 68 | b'new': FLAG_COMMAND_REQUEST_NEW, |
|
69 | 69 | b'continuation': FLAG_COMMAND_REQUEST_CONTINUATION, |
|
70 | 70 | b'more': FLAG_COMMAND_REQUEST_MORE_FRAMES, |
|
71 | 71 | b'have-data': FLAG_COMMAND_REQUEST_EXPECT_DATA, |
|
72 | 72 | } |
|
73 | 73 | |
|
74 | 74 | FLAG_COMMAND_DATA_CONTINUATION = 0x01 |
|
75 | 75 | FLAG_COMMAND_DATA_EOS = 0x02 |
|
76 | 76 | |
|
77 | 77 | FLAGS_COMMAND_DATA = { |
|
78 | 78 | b'continuation': FLAG_COMMAND_DATA_CONTINUATION, |
|
79 | 79 | b'eos': FLAG_COMMAND_DATA_EOS, |
|
80 | 80 | } |
|
81 | 81 | |
|
82 | 82 | FLAG_COMMAND_RESPONSE_CONTINUATION = 0x01 |
|
83 | 83 | FLAG_COMMAND_RESPONSE_EOS = 0x02 |
|
84 | 84 | |
|
85 | 85 | FLAGS_COMMAND_RESPONSE = { |
|
86 | 86 | b'continuation': FLAG_COMMAND_RESPONSE_CONTINUATION, |
|
87 | 87 | b'eos': FLAG_COMMAND_RESPONSE_EOS, |
|
88 | 88 | } |
|
89 | 89 | |
|
90 | FLAG_ERROR_RESPONSE_PROTOCOL = 0x01 | |
|
91 | FLAG_ERROR_RESPONSE_APPLICATION = 0x02 | |
|
92 | ||
|
93 | FLAGS_ERROR_RESPONSE = { | |
|
94 | b'protocol': FLAG_ERROR_RESPONSE_PROTOCOL, | |
|
95 | b'application': FLAG_ERROR_RESPONSE_APPLICATION, | |
|
96 | } | |
|
97 | ||
|
98 | 90 | # Maps frame types to their available flags. |
|
99 | 91 | FRAME_TYPE_FLAGS = { |
|
100 | 92 | FRAME_TYPE_COMMAND_REQUEST: FLAGS_COMMAND_REQUEST, |
|
101 | 93 | FRAME_TYPE_COMMAND_DATA: FLAGS_COMMAND_DATA, |
|
102 | 94 | FRAME_TYPE_COMMAND_RESPONSE: FLAGS_COMMAND_RESPONSE, |
|
103 |
FRAME_TYPE_ERROR_RESPONSE: |
|
|
95 | FRAME_TYPE_ERROR_RESPONSE: {}, | |
|
104 | 96 | FRAME_TYPE_TEXT_OUTPUT: {}, |
|
105 | 97 | FRAME_TYPE_PROGRESS: {}, |
|
106 | 98 | FRAME_TYPE_STREAM_SETTINGS: {}, |
|
107 | 99 | } |
|
108 | 100 | |
|
109 | 101 | ARGUMENT_RECORD_HEADER = struct.Struct(r'<HH') |
|
110 | 102 | |
|
111 | 103 | def humanflags(mapping, value): |
|
112 | 104 | """Convert a numeric flags value to a human value, using a mapping table.""" |
|
113 | 105 | namemap = {v: k for k, v in mapping.iteritems()} |
|
114 | 106 | flags = [] |
|
115 | 107 | val = 1 |
|
116 | 108 | while value >= val: |
|
117 | 109 | if value & val: |
|
118 | 110 | flags.append(namemap.get(val, '<unknown 0x%02x>' % val)) |
|
119 | 111 | val <<= 1 |
|
120 | 112 | |
|
121 | 113 | return b'|'.join(flags) |
|
122 | 114 | |
|
123 | 115 | @attr.s(slots=True) |
|
124 | 116 | class frameheader(object): |
|
125 | 117 | """Represents the data in a frame header.""" |
|
126 | 118 | |
|
127 | 119 | length = attr.ib() |
|
128 | 120 | requestid = attr.ib() |
|
129 | 121 | streamid = attr.ib() |
|
130 | 122 | streamflags = attr.ib() |
|
131 | 123 | typeid = attr.ib() |
|
132 | 124 | flags = attr.ib() |
|
133 | 125 | |
|
134 | 126 | @attr.s(slots=True, repr=False) |
|
135 | 127 | class frame(object): |
|
136 | 128 | """Represents a parsed frame.""" |
|
137 | 129 | |
|
138 | 130 | requestid = attr.ib() |
|
139 | 131 | streamid = attr.ib() |
|
140 | 132 | streamflags = attr.ib() |
|
141 | 133 | typeid = attr.ib() |
|
142 | 134 | flags = attr.ib() |
|
143 | 135 | payload = attr.ib() |
|
144 | 136 | |
|
145 | 137 | @encoding.strmethod |
|
146 | 138 | def __repr__(self): |
|
147 | 139 | typename = '<unknown 0x%02x>' % self.typeid |
|
148 | 140 | for name, value in FRAME_TYPES.iteritems(): |
|
149 | 141 | if value == self.typeid: |
|
150 | 142 | typename = name |
|
151 | 143 | break |
|
152 | 144 | |
|
153 | 145 | return ('frame(size=%d; request=%d; stream=%d; streamflags=%s; ' |
|
154 | 146 | 'type=%s; flags=%s)' % ( |
|
155 | 147 | len(self.payload), self.requestid, self.streamid, |
|
156 | 148 | humanflags(STREAM_FLAGS, self.streamflags), typename, |
|
157 | 149 | humanflags(FRAME_TYPE_FLAGS.get(self.typeid, {}), self.flags))) |
|
158 | 150 | |
|
159 | 151 | def makeframe(requestid, streamid, streamflags, typeid, flags, payload): |
|
160 | 152 | """Assemble a frame into a byte array.""" |
|
161 | 153 | # TODO assert size of payload. |
|
162 | 154 | frame = bytearray(FRAME_HEADER_SIZE + len(payload)) |
|
163 | 155 | |
|
164 | 156 | # 24 bits length |
|
165 | 157 | # 16 bits request id |
|
166 | 158 | # 8 bits stream id |
|
167 | 159 | # 8 bits stream flags |
|
168 | 160 | # 4 bits type |
|
169 | 161 | # 4 bits flags |
|
170 | 162 | |
|
171 | 163 | l = struct.pack(r'<I', len(payload)) |
|
172 | 164 | frame[0:3] = l[0:3] |
|
173 | 165 | struct.pack_into(r'<HBB', frame, 3, requestid, streamid, streamflags) |
|
174 | 166 | frame[7] = (typeid << 4) | flags |
|
175 | 167 | frame[8:] = payload |
|
176 | 168 | |
|
177 | 169 | return frame |
|
178 | 170 | |
|
179 | 171 | def makeframefromhumanstring(s): |
|
180 | 172 | """Create a frame from a human readable string |
|
181 | 173 | |
|
182 | 174 | Strings have the form: |
|
183 | 175 | |
|
184 | 176 | <request-id> <stream-id> <stream-flags> <type> <flags> <payload> |
|
185 | 177 | |
|
186 | 178 | This can be used by user-facing applications and tests for creating |
|
187 | 179 | frames easily without having to type out a bunch of constants. |
|
188 | 180 | |
|
189 | 181 | Request ID and stream IDs are integers. |
|
190 | 182 | |
|
191 | 183 | Stream flags, frame type, and flags can be specified by integer or |
|
192 | 184 | named constant. |
|
193 | 185 | |
|
194 | 186 | Flags can be delimited by `|` to bitwise OR them together. |
|
195 | 187 | |
|
196 | 188 | If the payload begins with ``cbor:``, the following string will be |
|
197 | 189 | evaluated as Python literal and the resulting object will be fed into |
|
198 | 190 | a CBOR encoder. Otherwise, the payload is interpreted as a Python |
|
199 | 191 | byte string literal. |
|
200 | 192 | """ |
|
201 | 193 | fields = s.split(b' ', 5) |
|
202 | 194 | requestid, streamid, streamflags, frametype, frameflags, payload = fields |
|
203 | 195 | |
|
204 | 196 | requestid = int(requestid) |
|
205 | 197 | streamid = int(streamid) |
|
206 | 198 | |
|
207 | 199 | finalstreamflags = 0 |
|
208 | 200 | for flag in streamflags.split(b'|'): |
|
209 | 201 | if flag in STREAM_FLAGS: |
|
210 | 202 | finalstreamflags |= STREAM_FLAGS[flag] |
|
211 | 203 | else: |
|
212 | 204 | finalstreamflags |= int(flag) |
|
213 | 205 | |
|
214 | 206 | if frametype in FRAME_TYPES: |
|
215 | 207 | frametype = FRAME_TYPES[frametype] |
|
216 | 208 | else: |
|
217 | 209 | frametype = int(frametype) |
|
218 | 210 | |
|
219 | 211 | finalflags = 0 |
|
220 | 212 | validflags = FRAME_TYPE_FLAGS[frametype] |
|
221 | 213 | for flag in frameflags.split(b'|'): |
|
222 | 214 | if flag in validflags: |
|
223 | 215 | finalflags |= validflags[flag] |
|
224 | 216 | else: |
|
225 | 217 | finalflags |= int(flag) |
|
226 | 218 | |
|
227 | 219 | if payload.startswith(b'cbor:'): |
|
228 | 220 | payload = cbor.dumps(stringutil.evalpythonliteral(payload[5:]), |
|
229 | 221 | canonical=True) |
|
230 | 222 | |
|
231 | 223 | else: |
|
232 | 224 | payload = stringutil.unescapestr(payload) |
|
233 | 225 | |
|
234 | 226 | return makeframe(requestid=requestid, streamid=streamid, |
|
235 | 227 | streamflags=finalstreamflags, typeid=frametype, |
|
236 | 228 | flags=finalflags, payload=payload) |
|
237 | 229 | |
|
238 | 230 | def parseheader(data): |
|
239 | 231 | """Parse a unified framing protocol frame header from a buffer. |
|
240 | 232 | |
|
241 | 233 | The header is expected to be in the buffer at offset 0 and the |
|
242 | 234 | buffer is expected to be large enough to hold a full header. |
|
243 | 235 | """ |
|
244 | 236 | # 24 bits payload length (little endian) |
|
245 | 237 | # 16 bits request ID |
|
246 | 238 | # 8 bits stream ID |
|
247 | 239 | # 8 bits stream flags |
|
248 | 240 | # 4 bits frame type |
|
249 | 241 | # 4 bits frame flags |
|
250 | 242 | # ... payload |
|
251 | 243 | framelength = data[0] + 256 * data[1] + 16384 * data[2] |
|
252 | 244 | requestid, streamid, streamflags = struct.unpack_from(r'<HBB', data, 3) |
|
253 | 245 | typeflags = data[7] |
|
254 | 246 | |
|
255 | 247 | frametype = (typeflags & 0xf0) >> 4 |
|
256 | 248 | frameflags = typeflags & 0x0f |
|
257 | 249 | |
|
258 | 250 | return frameheader(framelength, requestid, streamid, streamflags, |
|
259 | 251 | frametype, frameflags) |
|
260 | 252 | |
|
261 | 253 | def readframe(fh): |
|
262 | 254 | """Read a unified framing protocol frame from a file object. |
|
263 | 255 | |
|
264 | 256 | Returns a 3-tuple of (type, flags, payload) for the decoded frame or |
|
265 | 257 | None if no frame is available. May raise if a malformed frame is |
|
266 | 258 | seen. |
|
267 | 259 | """ |
|
268 | 260 | header = bytearray(FRAME_HEADER_SIZE) |
|
269 | 261 | |
|
270 | 262 | readcount = fh.readinto(header) |
|
271 | 263 | |
|
272 | 264 | if readcount == 0: |
|
273 | 265 | return None |
|
274 | 266 | |
|
275 | 267 | if readcount != FRAME_HEADER_SIZE: |
|
276 | 268 | raise error.Abort(_('received incomplete frame: got %d bytes: %s') % |
|
277 | 269 | (readcount, header)) |
|
278 | 270 | |
|
279 | 271 | h = parseheader(header) |
|
280 | 272 | |
|
281 | 273 | payload = fh.read(h.length) |
|
282 | 274 | if len(payload) != h.length: |
|
283 | 275 | raise error.Abort(_('frame length error: expected %d; got %d') % |
|
284 | 276 | (h.length, len(payload))) |
|
285 | 277 | |
|
286 | 278 | return frame(h.requestid, h.streamid, h.streamflags, h.typeid, h.flags, |
|
287 | 279 | payload) |
|
288 | 280 | |
|
289 | 281 | def createcommandframes(stream, requestid, cmd, args, datafh=None, |
|
290 | 282 | maxframesize=DEFAULT_MAX_FRAME_SIZE): |
|
291 | 283 | """Create frames necessary to transmit a request to run a command. |
|
292 | 284 | |
|
293 | 285 | This is a generator of bytearrays. Each item represents a frame |
|
294 | 286 | ready to be sent over the wire to a peer. |
|
295 | 287 | """ |
|
296 | 288 | data = {b'name': cmd} |
|
297 | 289 | if args: |
|
298 | 290 | data[b'args'] = args |
|
299 | 291 | |
|
300 | 292 | data = cbor.dumps(data, canonical=True) |
|
301 | 293 | |
|
302 | 294 | offset = 0 |
|
303 | 295 | |
|
304 | 296 | while True: |
|
305 | 297 | flags = 0 |
|
306 | 298 | |
|
307 | 299 | # Must set new or continuation flag. |
|
308 | 300 | if not offset: |
|
309 | 301 | flags |= FLAG_COMMAND_REQUEST_NEW |
|
310 | 302 | else: |
|
311 | 303 | flags |= FLAG_COMMAND_REQUEST_CONTINUATION |
|
312 | 304 | |
|
313 | 305 | # Data frames is set on all frames. |
|
314 | 306 | if datafh: |
|
315 | 307 | flags |= FLAG_COMMAND_REQUEST_EXPECT_DATA |
|
316 | 308 | |
|
317 | 309 | payload = data[offset:offset + maxframesize] |
|
318 | 310 | offset += len(payload) |
|
319 | 311 | |
|
320 | 312 | if len(payload) == maxframesize and offset < len(data): |
|
321 | 313 | flags |= FLAG_COMMAND_REQUEST_MORE_FRAMES |
|
322 | 314 | |
|
323 | 315 | yield stream.makeframe(requestid=requestid, |
|
324 | 316 | typeid=FRAME_TYPE_COMMAND_REQUEST, |
|
325 | 317 | flags=flags, |
|
326 | 318 | payload=payload) |
|
327 | 319 | |
|
328 | 320 | if not (flags & FLAG_COMMAND_REQUEST_MORE_FRAMES): |
|
329 | 321 | break |
|
330 | 322 | |
|
331 | 323 | if datafh: |
|
332 | 324 | while True: |
|
333 | 325 | data = datafh.read(DEFAULT_MAX_FRAME_SIZE) |
|
334 | 326 | |
|
335 | 327 | done = False |
|
336 | 328 | if len(data) == DEFAULT_MAX_FRAME_SIZE: |
|
337 | 329 | flags = FLAG_COMMAND_DATA_CONTINUATION |
|
338 | 330 | else: |
|
339 | 331 | flags = FLAG_COMMAND_DATA_EOS |
|
340 | 332 | assert datafh.read(1) == b'' |
|
341 | 333 | done = True |
|
342 | 334 | |
|
343 | 335 | yield stream.makeframe(requestid=requestid, |
|
344 | 336 | typeid=FRAME_TYPE_COMMAND_DATA, |
|
345 | 337 | flags=flags, |
|
346 | 338 | payload=data) |
|
347 | 339 | |
|
348 | 340 | if done: |
|
349 | 341 | break |
|
350 | 342 | |
|
351 | 343 | def createcommandresponseframesfrombytes(stream, requestid, data, |
|
352 | 344 | maxframesize=DEFAULT_MAX_FRAME_SIZE): |
|
353 | 345 | """Create a raw frame to send a bytes response from static bytes input. |
|
354 | 346 | |
|
355 | 347 | Returns a generator of bytearrays. |
|
356 | 348 | """ |
|
357 | 349 | # Automatically send the overall CBOR response map. |
|
358 | 350 | overall = cbor.dumps({b'status': b'ok'}, canonical=True) |
|
359 | 351 | if len(overall) > maxframesize: |
|
360 | 352 | raise error.ProgrammingError('not yet implemented') |
|
361 | 353 | |
|
362 | 354 | # Simple case where we can fit the full response in a single frame. |
|
363 | 355 | if len(overall) + len(data) <= maxframesize: |
|
364 | 356 | flags = FLAG_COMMAND_RESPONSE_EOS |
|
365 | 357 | yield stream.makeframe(requestid=requestid, |
|
366 | 358 | typeid=FRAME_TYPE_COMMAND_RESPONSE, |
|
367 | 359 | flags=flags, |
|
368 | 360 | payload=overall + data) |
|
369 | 361 | return |
|
370 | 362 | |
|
371 | 363 | # It's easier to send the overall CBOR map in its own frame than to track |
|
372 | 364 | # offsets. |
|
373 | 365 | yield stream.makeframe(requestid=requestid, |
|
374 | 366 | typeid=FRAME_TYPE_COMMAND_RESPONSE, |
|
375 | 367 | flags=FLAG_COMMAND_RESPONSE_CONTINUATION, |
|
376 | 368 | payload=overall) |
|
377 | 369 | |
|
378 | 370 | offset = 0 |
|
379 | 371 | while True: |
|
380 | 372 | chunk = data[offset:offset + maxframesize] |
|
381 | 373 | offset += len(chunk) |
|
382 | 374 | done = offset == len(data) |
|
383 | 375 | |
|
384 | 376 | if done: |
|
385 | 377 | flags = FLAG_COMMAND_RESPONSE_EOS |
|
386 | 378 | else: |
|
387 | 379 | flags = FLAG_COMMAND_RESPONSE_CONTINUATION |
|
388 | 380 | |
|
389 | 381 | yield stream.makeframe(requestid=requestid, |
|
390 | 382 | typeid=FRAME_TYPE_COMMAND_RESPONSE, |
|
391 | 383 | flags=flags, |
|
392 | 384 | payload=chunk) |
|
393 | 385 | |
|
394 | 386 | if done: |
|
395 | 387 | break |
|
396 | 388 | |
|
397 |
def createerrorframe(stream, requestid, msg, |
|
|
389 | def createerrorframe(stream, requestid, msg, errtype): | |
|
398 | 390 | # TODO properly handle frame size limits. |
|
399 | 391 | assert len(msg) <= DEFAULT_MAX_FRAME_SIZE |
|
400 | 392 | |
|
401 | flags = 0 | |
|
402 | if protocol: | |
|
403 | flags |= FLAG_ERROR_RESPONSE_PROTOCOL | |
|
404 | if application: | |
|
405 | flags |= FLAG_ERROR_RESPONSE_APPLICATION | |
|
393 | payload = cbor.dumps({ | |
|
394 | b'type': errtype, | |
|
395 | b'message': [{b'msg': msg}], | |
|
396 | }, canonical=True) | |
|
406 | 397 | |
|
407 | 398 | yield stream.makeframe(requestid=requestid, |
|
408 | 399 | typeid=FRAME_TYPE_ERROR_RESPONSE, |
|
409 |
flags= |
|
|
410 |
payload= |
|
|
400 | flags=0, | |
|
401 | payload=payload) | |
|
411 | 402 | |
|
412 | 403 | def createtextoutputframe(stream, requestid, atoms, |
|
413 | 404 | maxframesize=DEFAULT_MAX_FRAME_SIZE): |
|
414 | 405 | """Create a text output frame to render text to people. |
|
415 | 406 | |
|
416 | 407 | ``atoms`` is a 3-tuple of (formatting string, args, labels). |
|
417 | 408 | |
|
418 | 409 | The formatting string contains ``%s`` tokens to be replaced by the |
|
419 | 410 | corresponding indexed entry in ``args``. ``labels`` is an iterable of |
|
420 | 411 | formatters to be applied at rendering time. In terms of the ``ui`` |
|
421 | 412 | class, each atom corresponds to a ``ui.write()``. |
|
422 | 413 | """ |
|
423 | 414 | atomdicts = [] |
|
424 | 415 | |
|
425 | 416 | for (formatting, args, labels) in atoms: |
|
426 | 417 | # TODO look for localstr, other types here? |
|
427 | 418 | |
|
428 | 419 | if not isinstance(formatting, bytes): |
|
429 | 420 | raise ValueError('must use bytes formatting strings') |
|
430 | 421 | for arg in args: |
|
431 | 422 | if not isinstance(arg, bytes): |
|
432 | 423 | raise ValueError('must use bytes for arguments') |
|
433 | 424 | for label in labels: |
|
434 | 425 | if not isinstance(label, bytes): |
|
435 | 426 | raise ValueError('must use bytes for labels') |
|
436 | 427 | |
|
437 | 428 | # Formatting string must be ASCII. |
|
438 | 429 | formatting = formatting.decode(r'ascii', r'replace').encode(r'ascii') |
|
439 | 430 | |
|
440 | 431 | # Arguments must be UTF-8. |
|
441 | 432 | args = [a.decode(r'utf-8', r'replace').encode(r'utf-8') for a in args] |
|
442 | 433 | |
|
443 | 434 | # Labels must be ASCII. |
|
444 | 435 | labels = [l.decode(r'ascii', r'strict').encode(r'ascii') |
|
445 | 436 | for l in labels] |
|
446 | 437 | |
|
447 | 438 | atom = {b'msg': formatting} |
|
448 | 439 | if args: |
|
449 | 440 | atom[b'args'] = args |
|
450 | 441 | if labels: |
|
451 | 442 | atom[b'labels'] = labels |
|
452 | 443 | |
|
453 | 444 | atomdicts.append(atom) |
|
454 | 445 | |
|
455 | 446 | payload = cbor.dumps(atomdicts, canonical=True) |
|
456 | 447 | |
|
457 | 448 | if len(payload) > maxframesize: |
|
458 | 449 | raise ValueError('cannot encode data in a single frame') |
|
459 | 450 | |
|
460 | 451 | yield stream.makeframe(requestid=requestid, |
|
461 | 452 | typeid=FRAME_TYPE_TEXT_OUTPUT, |
|
462 | 453 | flags=0, |
|
463 | 454 | payload=payload) |
|
464 | 455 | |
|
465 | 456 | class stream(object): |
|
466 | 457 | """Represents a logical unidirectional series of frames.""" |
|
467 | 458 | |
|
468 | 459 | def __init__(self, streamid, active=False): |
|
469 | 460 | self.streamid = streamid |
|
470 | 461 | self._active = active |
|
471 | 462 | |
|
472 | 463 | def makeframe(self, requestid, typeid, flags, payload): |
|
473 | 464 | """Create a frame to be sent out over this stream. |
|
474 | 465 | |
|
475 | 466 | Only returns the frame instance. Does not actually send it. |
|
476 | 467 | """ |
|
477 | 468 | streamflags = 0 |
|
478 | 469 | if not self._active: |
|
479 | 470 | streamflags |= STREAM_FLAG_BEGIN_STREAM |
|
480 | 471 | self._active = True |
|
481 | 472 | |
|
482 | 473 | return makeframe(requestid, self.streamid, streamflags, typeid, flags, |
|
483 | 474 | payload) |
|
484 | 475 | |
|
485 | 476 | def ensureserverstream(stream): |
|
486 | 477 | if stream.streamid % 2: |
|
487 | 478 | raise error.ProgrammingError('server should only write to even ' |
|
488 | 479 | 'numbered streams; %d is not even' % |
|
489 | 480 | stream.streamid) |
|
490 | 481 | |
|
491 | 482 | class serverreactor(object): |
|
492 | 483 | """Holds state of a server handling frame-based protocol requests. |
|
493 | 484 | |
|
494 | 485 | This class is the "brain" of the unified frame-based protocol server |
|
495 | 486 | component. While the protocol is stateless from the perspective of |
|
496 | 487 | requests/commands, something needs to track which frames have been |
|
497 | 488 | received, what frames to expect, etc. This class is that thing. |
|
498 | 489 | |
|
499 | 490 | Instances are modeled as a state machine of sorts. Instances are also |
|
500 | 491 | reactionary to external events. The point of this class is to encapsulate |
|
501 | 492 | the state of the connection and the exchange of frames, not to perform |
|
502 | 493 | work. Instead, callers tell this class when something occurs, like a |
|
503 | 494 | frame arriving. If that activity is worthy of a follow-up action (say |
|
504 | 495 | *run a command*), the return value of that handler will say so. |
|
505 | 496 | |
|
506 | 497 | I/O and CPU intensive operations are purposefully delegated outside of |
|
507 | 498 | this class. |
|
508 | 499 | |
|
509 | 500 | Consumers are expected to tell instances when events occur. They do so by |
|
510 | 501 | calling the various ``on*`` methods. These methods return a 2-tuple |
|
511 | 502 | describing any follow-up action(s) to take. The first element is the |
|
512 | 503 | name of an action to perform. The second is a data structure (usually |
|
513 | 504 | a dict) specific to that action that contains more information. e.g. |
|
514 | 505 | if the server wants to send frames back to the client, the data structure |
|
515 | 506 | will contain a reference to those frames. |
|
516 | 507 | |
|
517 | 508 | Valid actions that consumers can be instructed to take are: |
|
518 | 509 | |
|
519 | 510 | sendframes |
|
520 | 511 | Indicates that frames should be sent to the client. The ``framegen`` |
|
521 | 512 | key contains a generator of frames that should be sent. The server |
|
522 | 513 | assumes that all frames are sent to the client. |
|
523 | 514 | |
|
524 | 515 | error |
|
525 | 516 | Indicates that an error occurred. Consumer should probably abort. |
|
526 | 517 | |
|
527 | 518 | runcommand |
|
528 | 519 | Indicates that the consumer should run a wire protocol command. Details |
|
529 | 520 | of the command to run are given in the data structure. |
|
530 | 521 | |
|
531 | 522 | wantframe |
|
532 | 523 | Indicates that nothing of interest happened and the server is waiting on |
|
533 | 524 | more frames from the client before anything interesting can be done. |
|
534 | 525 | |
|
535 | 526 | noop |
|
536 | 527 | Indicates no additional action is required. |
|
537 | 528 | |
|
538 | 529 | Known Issues |
|
539 | 530 | ------------ |
|
540 | 531 | |
|
541 | 532 | There are no limits to the number of partially received commands or their |
|
542 | 533 | size. A malicious client could stream command request data and exhaust the |
|
543 | 534 | server's memory. |
|
544 | 535 | |
|
545 | 536 | Partially received commands are not acted upon when end of input is |
|
546 | 537 | reached. Should the server error if it receives a partial request? |
|
547 | 538 | Should the client send a message to abort a partially transmitted request |
|
548 | 539 | to facilitate graceful shutdown? |
|
549 | 540 | |
|
550 | 541 | Active requests that haven't been responded to aren't tracked. This means |
|
551 | 542 | that if we receive a command and instruct its dispatch, another command |
|
552 | 543 | with its request ID can come in over the wire and there will be a race |
|
553 | 544 | between who responds to what. |
|
554 | 545 | """ |
|
555 | 546 | |
|
556 | 547 | def __init__(self, deferoutput=False): |
|
557 | 548 | """Construct a new server reactor. |
|
558 | 549 | |
|
559 | 550 | ``deferoutput`` can be used to indicate that no output frames should be |
|
560 | 551 | instructed to be sent until input has been exhausted. In this mode, |
|
561 | 552 | events that would normally generate output frames (such as a command |
|
562 | 553 | response being ready) will instead defer instructing the consumer to |
|
563 | 554 | send those frames. This is useful for half-duplex transports where the |
|
564 | 555 | sender cannot receive until all data has been transmitted. |
|
565 | 556 | """ |
|
566 | 557 | self._deferoutput = deferoutput |
|
567 | 558 | self._state = 'idle' |
|
568 | 559 | self._nextoutgoingstreamid = 2 |
|
569 | 560 | self._bufferedframegens = [] |
|
570 | 561 | # stream id -> stream instance for all active streams from the client. |
|
571 | 562 | self._incomingstreams = {} |
|
572 | 563 | self._outgoingstreams = {} |
|
573 | 564 | # request id -> dict of commands that are actively being received. |
|
574 | 565 | self._receivingcommands = {} |
|
575 | 566 | # Request IDs that have been received and are actively being processed. |
|
576 | 567 | # Once all output for a request has been sent, it is removed from this |
|
577 | 568 | # set. |
|
578 | 569 | self._activecommands = set() |
|
579 | 570 | |
|
580 | 571 | def onframerecv(self, frame): |
|
581 | 572 | """Process a frame that has been received off the wire. |
|
582 | 573 | |
|
583 | 574 | Returns a dict with an ``action`` key that details what action, |
|
584 | 575 | if any, the consumer should take next. |
|
585 | 576 | """ |
|
586 | 577 | if not frame.streamid % 2: |
|
587 | 578 | self._state = 'errored' |
|
588 | 579 | return self._makeerrorresult( |
|
589 | 580 | _('received frame with even numbered stream ID: %d') % |
|
590 | 581 | frame.streamid) |
|
591 | 582 | |
|
592 | 583 | if frame.streamid not in self._incomingstreams: |
|
593 | 584 | if not frame.streamflags & STREAM_FLAG_BEGIN_STREAM: |
|
594 | 585 | self._state = 'errored' |
|
595 | 586 | return self._makeerrorresult( |
|
596 | 587 | _('received frame on unknown inactive stream without ' |
|
597 | 588 | 'beginning of stream flag set')) |
|
598 | 589 | |
|
599 | 590 | self._incomingstreams[frame.streamid] = stream(frame.streamid) |
|
600 | 591 | |
|
601 | 592 | if frame.streamflags & STREAM_FLAG_ENCODING_APPLIED: |
|
602 | 593 | # TODO handle decoding frames |
|
603 | 594 | self._state = 'errored' |
|
604 | 595 | raise error.ProgrammingError('support for decoding stream payloads ' |
|
605 | 596 | 'not yet implemented') |
|
606 | 597 | |
|
607 | 598 | if frame.streamflags & STREAM_FLAG_END_STREAM: |
|
608 | 599 | del self._incomingstreams[frame.streamid] |
|
609 | 600 | |
|
610 | 601 | handlers = { |
|
611 | 602 | 'idle': self._onframeidle, |
|
612 | 603 | 'command-receiving': self._onframecommandreceiving, |
|
613 | 604 | 'errored': self._onframeerrored, |
|
614 | 605 | } |
|
615 | 606 | |
|
616 | 607 | meth = handlers.get(self._state) |
|
617 | 608 | if not meth: |
|
618 | 609 | raise error.ProgrammingError('unhandled state: %s' % self._state) |
|
619 | 610 | |
|
620 | 611 | return meth(frame) |
|
621 | 612 | |
|
622 | 613 | def oncommandresponseready(self, stream, requestid, data): |
|
623 | 614 | """Signal that a bytes response is ready to be sent to the client. |
|
624 | 615 | |
|
625 | 616 | The raw bytes response is passed as an argument. |
|
626 | 617 | """ |
|
627 | 618 | ensureserverstream(stream) |
|
628 | 619 | |
|
629 | 620 | def sendframes(): |
|
630 | 621 | for frame in createcommandresponseframesfrombytes(stream, requestid, |
|
631 | 622 | data): |
|
632 | 623 | yield frame |
|
633 | 624 | |
|
634 | 625 | self._activecommands.remove(requestid) |
|
635 | 626 | |
|
636 | 627 | result = sendframes() |
|
637 | 628 | |
|
638 | 629 | if self._deferoutput: |
|
639 | 630 | self._bufferedframegens.append(result) |
|
640 | 631 | return 'noop', {} |
|
641 | 632 | else: |
|
642 | 633 | return 'sendframes', { |
|
643 | 634 | 'framegen': result, |
|
644 | 635 | } |
|
645 | 636 | |
|
646 | 637 | def oninputeof(self): |
|
647 | 638 | """Signals that end of input has been received. |
|
648 | 639 | |
|
649 | 640 | No more frames will be received. All pending activity should be |
|
650 | 641 | completed. |
|
651 | 642 | """ |
|
652 | 643 | # TODO should we do anything about in-flight commands? |
|
653 | 644 | |
|
654 | 645 | if not self._deferoutput or not self._bufferedframegens: |
|
655 | 646 | return 'noop', {} |
|
656 | 647 | |
|
657 | 648 | # If we buffered all our responses, emit those. |
|
658 | 649 | def makegen(): |
|
659 | 650 | for gen in self._bufferedframegens: |
|
660 | 651 | for frame in gen: |
|
661 | 652 | yield frame |
|
662 | 653 | |
|
663 | 654 | return 'sendframes', { |
|
664 | 655 | 'framegen': makegen(), |
|
665 | 656 | } |
|
666 | 657 | |
|
667 |
def on |
|
|
658 | def onservererror(self, stream, requestid, msg): | |
|
668 | 659 | ensureserverstream(stream) |
|
669 | 660 | |
|
670 | 661 | return 'sendframes', { |
|
671 | 662 | 'framegen': createerrorframe(stream, requestid, msg, |
|
672 |
|
|
|
663 | errtype='server'), | |
|
673 | 664 | } |
|
674 | 665 | |
|
675 | 666 | def makeoutputstream(self): |
|
676 | 667 | """Create a stream to be used for sending data to the client.""" |
|
677 | 668 | streamid = self._nextoutgoingstreamid |
|
678 | 669 | self._nextoutgoingstreamid += 2 |
|
679 | 670 | |
|
680 | 671 | s = stream(streamid) |
|
681 | 672 | self._outgoingstreams[streamid] = s |
|
682 | 673 | |
|
683 | 674 | return s |
|
684 | 675 | |
|
685 | 676 | def _makeerrorresult(self, msg): |
|
686 | 677 | return 'error', { |
|
687 | 678 | 'message': msg, |
|
688 | 679 | } |
|
689 | 680 | |
|
690 | 681 | def _makeruncommandresult(self, requestid): |
|
691 | 682 | entry = self._receivingcommands[requestid] |
|
692 | 683 | |
|
693 | 684 | if not entry['requestdone']: |
|
694 | 685 | self._state = 'errored' |
|
695 | 686 | raise error.ProgrammingError('should not be called without ' |
|
696 | 687 | 'requestdone set') |
|
697 | 688 | |
|
698 | 689 | del self._receivingcommands[requestid] |
|
699 | 690 | |
|
700 | 691 | if self._receivingcommands: |
|
701 | 692 | self._state = 'command-receiving' |
|
702 | 693 | else: |
|
703 | 694 | self._state = 'idle' |
|
704 | 695 | |
|
705 | 696 | # Decode the payloads as CBOR. |
|
706 | 697 | entry['payload'].seek(0) |
|
707 | 698 | request = cbor.load(entry['payload']) |
|
708 | 699 | |
|
709 | 700 | if b'name' not in request: |
|
710 | 701 | self._state = 'errored' |
|
711 | 702 | return self._makeerrorresult( |
|
712 | 703 | _('command request missing "name" field')) |
|
713 | 704 | |
|
714 | 705 | if b'args' not in request: |
|
715 | 706 | request[b'args'] = {} |
|
716 | 707 | |
|
717 | 708 | assert requestid not in self._activecommands |
|
718 | 709 | self._activecommands.add(requestid) |
|
719 | 710 | |
|
720 | 711 | return 'runcommand', { |
|
721 | 712 | 'requestid': requestid, |
|
722 | 713 | 'command': request[b'name'], |
|
723 | 714 | 'args': request[b'args'], |
|
724 | 715 | 'data': entry['data'].getvalue() if entry['data'] else None, |
|
725 | 716 | } |
|
726 | 717 | |
|
727 | 718 | def _makewantframeresult(self): |
|
728 | 719 | return 'wantframe', { |
|
729 | 720 | 'state': self._state, |
|
730 | 721 | } |
|
731 | 722 | |
|
732 | 723 | def _validatecommandrequestframe(self, frame): |
|
733 | 724 | new = frame.flags & FLAG_COMMAND_REQUEST_NEW |
|
734 | 725 | continuation = frame.flags & FLAG_COMMAND_REQUEST_CONTINUATION |
|
735 | 726 | |
|
736 | 727 | if new and continuation: |
|
737 | 728 | self._state = 'errored' |
|
738 | 729 | return self._makeerrorresult( |
|
739 | 730 | _('received command request frame with both new and ' |
|
740 | 731 | 'continuation flags set')) |
|
741 | 732 | |
|
742 | 733 | if not new and not continuation: |
|
743 | 734 | self._state = 'errored' |
|
744 | 735 | return self._makeerrorresult( |
|
745 | 736 | _('received command request frame with neither new nor ' |
|
746 | 737 | 'continuation flags set')) |
|
747 | 738 | |
|
748 | 739 | def _onframeidle(self, frame): |
|
749 | 740 | # The only frame type that should be received in this state is a |
|
750 | 741 | # command request. |
|
751 | 742 | if frame.typeid != FRAME_TYPE_COMMAND_REQUEST: |
|
752 | 743 | self._state = 'errored' |
|
753 | 744 | return self._makeerrorresult( |
|
754 | 745 | _('expected command request frame; got %d') % frame.typeid) |
|
755 | 746 | |
|
756 | 747 | res = self._validatecommandrequestframe(frame) |
|
757 | 748 | if res: |
|
758 | 749 | return res |
|
759 | 750 | |
|
760 | 751 | if frame.requestid in self._receivingcommands: |
|
761 | 752 | self._state = 'errored' |
|
762 | 753 | return self._makeerrorresult( |
|
763 | 754 | _('request with ID %d already received') % frame.requestid) |
|
764 | 755 | |
|
765 | 756 | if frame.requestid in self._activecommands: |
|
766 | 757 | self._state = 'errored' |
|
767 | 758 | return self._makeerrorresult( |
|
768 | 759 | _('request with ID %d is already active') % frame.requestid) |
|
769 | 760 | |
|
770 | 761 | new = frame.flags & FLAG_COMMAND_REQUEST_NEW |
|
771 | 762 | moreframes = frame.flags & FLAG_COMMAND_REQUEST_MORE_FRAMES |
|
772 | 763 | expectingdata = frame.flags & FLAG_COMMAND_REQUEST_EXPECT_DATA |
|
773 | 764 | |
|
774 | 765 | if not new: |
|
775 | 766 | self._state = 'errored' |
|
776 | 767 | return self._makeerrorresult( |
|
777 | 768 | _('received command request frame without new flag set')) |
|
778 | 769 | |
|
779 | 770 | payload = util.bytesio() |
|
780 | 771 | payload.write(frame.payload) |
|
781 | 772 | |
|
782 | 773 | self._receivingcommands[frame.requestid] = { |
|
783 | 774 | 'payload': payload, |
|
784 | 775 | 'data': None, |
|
785 | 776 | 'requestdone': not moreframes, |
|
786 | 777 | 'expectingdata': bool(expectingdata), |
|
787 | 778 | } |
|
788 | 779 | |
|
789 | 780 | # This is the final frame for this request. Dispatch it. |
|
790 | 781 | if not moreframes and not expectingdata: |
|
791 | 782 | return self._makeruncommandresult(frame.requestid) |
|
792 | 783 | |
|
793 | 784 | assert moreframes or expectingdata |
|
794 | 785 | self._state = 'command-receiving' |
|
795 | 786 | return self._makewantframeresult() |
|
796 | 787 | |
|
797 | 788 | def _onframecommandreceiving(self, frame): |
|
798 | 789 | if frame.typeid == FRAME_TYPE_COMMAND_REQUEST: |
|
799 | 790 | # Process new command requests as such. |
|
800 | 791 | if frame.flags & FLAG_COMMAND_REQUEST_NEW: |
|
801 | 792 | return self._onframeidle(frame) |
|
802 | 793 | |
|
803 | 794 | res = self._validatecommandrequestframe(frame) |
|
804 | 795 | if res: |
|
805 | 796 | return res |
|
806 | 797 | |
|
807 | 798 | # All other frames should be related to a command that is currently |
|
808 | 799 | # receiving but is not active. |
|
809 | 800 | if frame.requestid in self._activecommands: |
|
810 | 801 | self._state = 'errored' |
|
811 | 802 | return self._makeerrorresult( |
|
812 | 803 | _('received frame for request that is still active: %d') % |
|
813 | 804 | frame.requestid) |
|
814 | 805 | |
|
815 | 806 | if frame.requestid not in self._receivingcommands: |
|
816 | 807 | self._state = 'errored' |
|
817 | 808 | return self._makeerrorresult( |
|
818 | 809 | _('received frame for request that is not receiving: %d') % |
|
819 | 810 | frame.requestid) |
|
820 | 811 | |
|
821 | 812 | entry = self._receivingcommands[frame.requestid] |
|
822 | 813 | |
|
823 | 814 | if frame.typeid == FRAME_TYPE_COMMAND_REQUEST: |
|
824 | 815 | moreframes = frame.flags & FLAG_COMMAND_REQUEST_MORE_FRAMES |
|
825 | 816 | expectingdata = bool(frame.flags & FLAG_COMMAND_REQUEST_EXPECT_DATA) |
|
826 | 817 | |
|
827 | 818 | if entry['requestdone']: |
|
828 | 819 | self._state = 'errored' |
|
829 | 820 | return self._makeerrorresult( |
|
830 | 821 | _('received command request frame when request frames ' |
|
831 | 822 | 'were supposedly done')) |
|
832 | 823 | |
|
833 | 824 | if expectingdata != entry['expectingdata']: |
|
834 | 825 | self._state = 'errored' |
|
835 | 826 | return self._makeerrorresult( |
|
836 | 827 | _('mismatch between expect data flag and previous frame')) |
|
837 | 828 | |
|
838 | 829 | entry['payload'].write(frame.payload) |
|
839 | 830 | |
|
840 | 831 | if not moreframes: |
|
841 | 832 | entry['requestdone'] = True |
|
842 | 833 | |
|
843 | 834 | if not moreframes and not expectingdata: |
|
844 | 835 | return self._makeruncommandresult(frame.requestid) |
|
845 | 836 | |
|
846 | 837 | return self._makewantframeresult() |
|
847 | 838 | |
|
848 | 839 | elif frame.typeid == FRAME_TYPE_COMMAND_DATA: |
|
849 | 840 | if not entry['expectingdata']: |
|
850 | 841 | self._state = 'errored' |
|
851 | 842 | return self._makeerrorresult(_( |
|
852 | 843 | 'received command data frame for request that is not ' |
|
853 | 844 | 'expecting data: %d') % frame.requestid) |
|
854 | 845 | |
|
855 | 846 | if entry['data'] is None: |
|
856 | 847 | entry['data'] = util.bytesio() |
|
857 | 848 | |
|
858 | 849 | return self._handlecommanddataframe(frame, entry) |
|
859 | 850 | else: |
|
860 | 851 | self._state = 'errored' |
|
861 | 852 | return self._makeerrorresult(_( |
|
862 | 853 | 'received unexpected frame type: %d') % frame.typeid) |
|
863 | 854 | |
|
864 | 855 | def _handlecommanddataframe(self, frame, entry): |
|
865 | 856 | assert frame.typeid == FRAME_TYPE_COMMAND_DATA |
|
866 | 857 | |
|
867 | 858 | # TODO support streaming data instead of buffering it. |
|
868 | 859 | entry['data'].write(frame.payload) |
|
869 | 860 | |
|
870 | 861 | if frame.flags & FLAG_COMMAND_DATA_CONTINUATION: |
|
871 | 862 | return self._makewantframeresult() |
|
872 | 863 | elif frame.flags & FLAG_COMMAND_DATA_EOS: |
|
873 | 864 | entry['data'].seek(0) |
|
874 | 865 | return self._makeruncommandresult(frame.requestid) |
|
875 | 866 | else: |
|
876 | 867 | self._state = 'errored' |
|
877 | 868 | return self._makeerrorresult(_('command data frame without ' |
|
878 | 869 | 'flags')) |
|
879 | 870 | |
|
880 | 871 | def _onframeerrored(self, frame): |
|
881 | 872 | return self._makeerrorresult(_('server already errored')) |
|
882 | 873 | |
|
883 | 874 | class commandrequest(object): |
|
884 | 875 | """Represents a request to run a command.""" |
|
885 | 876 | |
|
886 | 877 | def __init__(self, requestid, name, args, datafh=None): |
|
887 | 878 | self.requestid = requestid |
|
888 | 879 | self.name = name |
|
889 | 880 | self.args = args |
|
890 | 881 | self.datafh = datafh |
|
891 | 882 | self.state = 'pending' |
|
892 | 883 | |
|
893 | 884 | class clientreactor(object): |
|
894 | 885 | """Holds state of a client issuing frame-based protocol requests. |
|
895 | 886 | |
|
896 | 887 | This is like ``serverreactor`` but for client-side state. |
|
897 | 888 | |
|
898 | 889 | Each instance is bound to the lifetime of a connection. For persistent |
|
899 | 890 | connection transports using e.g. TCP sockets and speaking the raw |
|
900 | 891 | framing protocol, there will be a single instance for the lifetime of |
|
901 | 892 | the TCP socket. For transports where there are multiple discrete |
|
902 | 893 | interactions (say tunneled within in HTTP request), there will be a |
|
903 | 894 | separate instance for each distinct interaction. |
|
904 | 895 | """ |
|
905 | 896 | def __init__(self, hasmultiplesend=False, buffersends=True): |
|
906 | 897 | """Create a new instance. |
|
907 | 898 | |
|
908 | 899 | ``hasmultiplesend`` indicates whether multiple sends are supported |
|
909 | 900 | by the transport. When True, it is possible to send commands immediately |
|
910 | 901 | instead of buffering until the caller signals an intent to finish a |
|
911 | 902 | send operation. |
|
912 | 903 | |
|
913 | 904 | ``buffercommands`` indicates whether sends should be buffered until the |
|
914 | 905 | last request has been issued. |
|
915 | 906 | """ |
|
916 | 907 | self._hasmultiplesend = hasmultiplesend |
|
917 | 908 | self._buffersends = buffersends |
|
918 | 909 | |
|
919 | 910 | self._canissuecommands = True |
|
920 | 911 | self._cansend = True |
|
921 | 912 | |
|
922 | 913 | self._nextrequestid = 1 |
|
923 | 914 | # We only support a single outgoing stream for now. |
|
924 | 915 | self._outgoingstream = stream(1) |
|
925 | 916 | self._pendingrequests = collections.deque() |
|
926 | 917 | self._activerequests = {} |
|
927 | 918 | self._incomingstreams = {} |
|
928 | 919 | |
|
929 | 920 | def callcommand(self, name, args, datafh=None): |
|
930 | 921 | """Request that a command be executed. |
|
931 | 922 | |
|
932 | 923 | Receives the command name, a dict of arguments to pass to the command, |
|
933 | 924 | and an optional file object containing the raw data for the command. |
|
934 | 925 | |
|
935 | 926 | Returns a 3-tuple of (request, action, action data). |
|
936 | 927 | """ |
|
937 | 928 | if not self._canissuecommands: |
|
938 | 929 | raise error.ProgrammingError('cannot issue new commands') |
|
939 | 930 | |
|
940 | 931 | requestid = self._nextrequestid |
|
941 | 932 | self._nextrequestid += 2 |
|
942 | 933 | |
|
943 | 934 | request = commandrequest(requestid, name, args, datafh=datafh) |
|
944 | 935 | |
|
945 | 936 | if self._buffersends: |
|
946 | 937 | self._pendingrequests.append(request) |
|
947 | 938 | return request, 'noop', {} |
|
948 | 939 | else: |
|
949 | 940 | if not self._cansend: |
|
950 | 941 | raise error.ProgrammingError('sends cannot be performed on ' |
|
951 | 942 | 'this instance') |
|
952 | 943 | |
|
953 | 944 | if not self._hasmultiplesend: |
|
954 | 945 | self._cansend = False |
|
955 | 946 | self._canissuecommands = False |
|
956 | 947 | |
|
957 | 948 | return request, 'sendframes', { |
|
958 | 949 | 'framegen': self._makecommandframes(request), |
|
959 | 950 | } |
|
960 | 951 | |
|
961 | 952 | def flushcommands(self): |
|
962 | 953 | """Request that all queued commands be sent. |
|
963 | 954 | |
|
964 | 955 | If any commands are buffered, this will instruct the caller to send |
|
965 | 956 | them over the wire. If no commands are buffered it instructs the client |
|
966 | 957 | to no-op. |
|
967 | 958 | |
|
968 | 959 | If instances aren't configured for multiple sends, no new command |
|
969 | 960 | requests are allowed after this is called. |
|
970 | 961 | """ |
|
971 | 962 | if not self._pendingrequests: |
|
972 | 963 | return 'noop', {} |
|
973 | 964 | |
|
974 | 965 | if not self._cansend: |
|
975 | 966 | raise error.ProgrammingError('sends cannot be performed on this ' |
|
976 | 967 | 'instance') |
|
977 | 968 | |
|
978 | 969 | # If the instance only allows sending once, mark that we have fired |
|
979 | 970 | # our one shot. |
|
980 | 971 | if not self._hasmultiplesend: |
|
981 | 972 | self._canissuecommands = False |
|
982 | 973 | self._cansend = False |
|
983 | 974 | |
|
984 | 975 | def makeframes(): |
|
985 | 976 | while self._pendingrequests: |
|
986 | 977 | request = self._pendingrequests.popleft() |
|
987 | 978 | for frame in self._makecommandframes(request): |
|
988 | 979 | yield frame |
|
989 | 980 | |
|
990 | 981 | return 'sendframes', { |
|
991 | 982 | 'framegen': makeframes(), |
|
992 | 983 | } |
|
993 | 984 | |
|
994 | 985 | def _makecommandframes(self, request): |
|
995 | 986 | """Emit frames to issue a command request. |
|
996 | 987 | |
|
997 | 988 | As a side-effect, update request accounting to reflect its changed |
|
998 | 989 | state. |
|
999 | 990 | """ |
|
1000 | 991 | self._activerequests[request.requestid] = request |
|
1001 | 992 | request.state = 'sending' |
|
1002 | 993 | |
|
1003 | 994 | res = createcommandframes(self._outgoingstream, |
|
1004 | 995 | request.requestid, |
|
1005 | 996 | request.name, |
|
1006 | 997 | request.args, |
|
1007 | 998 | request.datafh) |
|
1008 | 999 | |
|
1009 | 1000 | for frame in res: |
|
1010 | 1001 | yield frame |
|
1011 | 1002 | |
|
1012 | 1003 | request.state = 'sent' |
|
1013 | 1004 | |
|
1014 | 1005 | def onframerecv(self, frame): |
|
1015 | 1006 | """Process a frame that has been received off the wire. |
|
1016 | 1007 | |
|
1017 | 1008 | Returns a 2-tuple of (action, meta) describing further action the |
|
1018 | 1009 | caller needs to take as a result of receiving this frame. |
|
1019 | 1010 | """ |
|
1020 | 1011 | if frame.streamid % 2: |
|
1021 | 1012 | return 'error', { |
|
1022 | 1013 | 'message': ( |
|
1023 | 1014 | _('received frame with odd numbered stream ID: %d') % |
|
1024 | 1015 | frame.streamid), |
|
1025 | 1016 | } |
|
1026 | 1017 | |
|
1027 | 1018 | if frame.streamid not in self._incomingstreams: |
|
1028 | 1019 | if not frame.streamflags & STREAM_FLAG_BEGIN_STREAM: |
|
1029 | 1020 | return 'error', { |
|
1030 | 1021 | 'message': _('received frame on unknown stream ' |
|
1031 | 1022 | 'without beginning of stream flag set'), |
|
1032 | 1023 | } |
|
1033 | 1024 | |
|
1034 | 1025 | self._incomingstreams[frame.streamid] = stream(frame.streamid) |
|
1035 | 1026 | |
|
1036 | 1027 | if frame.streamflags & STREAM_FLAG_ENCODING_APPLIED: |
|
1037 | 1028 | raise error.ProgrammingError('support for decoding stream ' |
|
1038 | 1029 | 'payloads not yet implemneted') |
|
1039 | 1030 | |
|
1040 | 1031 | if frame.streamflags & STREAM_FLAG_END_STREAM: |
|
1041 | 1032 | del self._incomingstreams[frame.streamid] |
|
1042 | 1033 | |
|
1043 | 1034 | if frame.requestid not in self._activerequests: |
|
1044 | 1035 | return 'error', { |
|
1045 | 1036 | 'message': (_('received frame for inactive request ID: %d') % |
|
1046 | 1037 | frame.requestid), |
|
1047 | 1038 | } |
|
1048 | 1039 | |
|
1049 | 1040 | request = self._activerequests[frame.requestid] |
|
1050 | 1041 | request.state = 'receiving' |
|
1051 | 1042 | |
|
1052 | 1043 | handlers = { |
|
1053 | 1044 | FRAME_TYPE_COMMAND_RESPONSE: self._oncommandresponseframe, |
|
1045 | FRAME_TYPE_ERROR_RESPONSE: self._onerrorresponseframe, | |
|
1054 | 1046 | } |
|
1055 | 1047 | |
|
1056 | 1048 | meth = handlers.get(frame.typeid) |
|
1057 | 1049 | if not meth: |
|
1058 | 1050 | raise error.ProgrammingError('unhandled frame type: %d' % |
|
1059 | 1051 | frame.typeid) |
|
1060 | 1052 | |
|
1061 | 1053 | return meth(request, frame) |
|
1062 | 1054 | |
|
1063 | 1055 | def _oncommandresponseframe(self, request, frame): |
|
1064 | 1056 | if frame.flags & FLAG_COMMAND_RESPONSE_EOS: |
|
1065 | 1057 | request.state = 'received' |
|
1066 | 1058 | del self._activerequests[request.requestid] |
|
1067 | 1059 | |
|
1068 | 1060 | return 'responsedata', { |
|
1069 | 1061 | 'request': request, |
|
1070 | 1062 | 'expectmore': frame.flags & FLAG_COMMAND_RESPONSE_CONTINUATION, |
|
1071 | 1063 | 'eos': frame.flags & FLAG_COMMAND_RESPONSE_EOS, |
|
1072 | 1064 | 'data': frame.payload, |
|
1073 | 1065 | } |
|
1066 | ||
|
1067 | def _onerrorresponseframe(self, request, frame): | |
|
1068 | request.state = 'errored' | |
|
1069 | del self._activerequests[request.requestid] | |
|
1070 | ||
|
1071 | # The payload should be a CBOR map. | |
|
1072 | m = cbor.loads(frame.payload) | |
|
1073 | ||
|
1074 | return 'error', { | |
|
1075 | 'request': request, | |
|
1076 | 'type': m['type'], | |
|
1077 | 'message': m['message'], | |
|
1078 | } |
@@ -1,484 +1,484 | |||
|
1 | 1 | # Copyright 21 May 2005 - (c) 2005 Jake Edge <jake@edge2.net> |
|
2 | 2 | # Copyright 2005-2007 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> |
|
3 | 3 | # |
|
4 | 4 | # This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the |
|
5 | 5 | # GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version. |
|
6 | 6 | |
|
7 | 7 | from __future__ import absolute_import |
|
8 | 8 | |
|
9 | 9 | import contextlib |
|
10 | 10 | |
|
11 | 11 | from .i18n import _ |
|
12 | 12 | from .thirdparty import ( |
|
13 | 13 | cbor, |
|
14 | 14 | ) |
|
15 | 15 | from .thirdparty.zope import ( |
|
16 | 16 | interface as zi, |
|
17 | 17 | ) |
|
18 | 18 | from . import ( |
|
19 | 19 | encoding, |
|
20 | 20 | error, |
|
21 | 21 | pycompat, |
|
22 | 22 | streamclone, |
|
23 | 23 | util, |
|
24 | 24 | wireproto, |
|
25 | 25 | wireprotoframing, |
|
26 | 26 | wireprototypes, |
|
27 | 27 | ) |
|
28 | 28 | |
|
29 | 29 | FRAMINGTYPE = b'application/mercurial-exp-framing-0005' |
|
30 | 30 | |
|
31 | 31 | HTTP_WIREPROTO_V2 = wireprototypes.HTTP_WIREPROTO_V2 |
|
32 | 32 | |
|
33 | 33 | def handlehttpv2request(rctx, req, res, checkperm, urlparts): |
|
34 | 34 | from .hgweb import common as hgwebcommon |
|
35 | 35 | |
|
36 | 36 | # URL space looks like: <permissions>/<command>, where <permission> can |
|
37 | 37 | # be ``ro`` or ``rw`` to signal read-only or read-write, respectively. |
|
38 | 38 | |
|
39 | 39 | # Root URL does nothing meaningful... yet. |
|
40 | 40 | if not urlparts: |
|
41 | 41 | res.status = b'200 OK' |
|
42 | 42 | res.headers[b'Content-Type'] = b'text/plain' |
|
43 | 43 | res.setbodybytes(_('HTTP version 2 API handler')) |
|
44 | 44 | return |
|
45 | 45 | |
|
46 | 46 | if len(urlparts) == 1: |
|
47 | 47 | res.status = b'404 Not Found' |
|
48 | 48 | res.headers[b'Content-Type'] = b'text/plain' |
|
49 | 49 | res.setbodybytes(_('do not know how to process %s\n') % |
|
50 | 50 | req.dispatchpath) |
|
51 | 51 | return |
|
52 | 52 | |
|
53 | 53 | permission, command = urlparts[0:2] |
|
54 | 54 | |
|
55 | 55 | if permission not in (b'ro', b'rw'): |
|
56 | 56 | res.status = b'404 Not Found' |
|
57 | 57 | res.headers[b'Content-Type'] = b'text/plain' |
|
58 | 58 | res.setbodybytes(_('unknown permission: %s') % permission) |
|
59 | 59 | return |
|
60 | 60 | |
|
61 | 61 | if req.method != 'POST': |
|
62 | 62 | res.status = b'405 Method Not Allowed' |
|
63 | 63 | res.headers[b'Allow'] = b'POST' |
|
64 | 64 | res.setbodybytes(_('commands require POST requests')) |
|
65 | 65 | return |
|
66 | 66 | |
|
67 | 67 | # At some point we'll want to use our own API instead of recycling the |
|
68 | 68 | # behavior of version 1 of the wire protocol... |
|
69 | 69 | # TODO return reasonable responses - not responses that overload the |
|
70 | 70 | # HTTP status line message for error reporting. |
|
71 | 71 | try: |
|
72 | 72 | checkperm(rctx, req, 'pull' if permission == b'ro' else 'push') |
|
73 | 73 | except hgwebcommon.ErrorResponse as e: |
|
74 | 74 | res.status = hgwebcommon.statusmessage(e.code, pycompat.bytestr(e)) |
|
75 | 75 | for k, v in e.headers: |
|
76 | 76 | res.headers[k] = v |
|
77 | 77 | res.setbodybytes('permission denied') |
|
78 | 78 | return |
|
79 | 79 | |
|
80 | 80 | # We have a special endpoint to reflect the request back at the client. |
|
81 | 81 | if command == b'debugreflect': |
|
82 | 82 | _processhttpv2reflectrequest(rctx.repo.ui, rctx.repo, req, res) |
|
83 | 83 | return |
|
84 | 84 | |
|
85 | 85 | # Extra commands that we handle that aren't really wire protocol |
|
86 | 86 | # commands. Think extra hard before making this hackery available to |
|
87 | 87 | # extension. |
|
88 | 88 | extracommands = {'multirequest'} |
|
89 | 89 | |
|
90 | 90 | if command not in wireproto.commandsv2 and command not in extracommands: |
|
91 | 91 | res.status = b'404 Not Found' |
|
92 | 92 | res.headers[b'Content-Type'] = b'text/plain' |
|
93 | 93 | res.setbodybytes(_('unknown wire protocol command: %s\n') % command) |
|
94 | 94 | return |
|
95 | 95 | |
|
96 | 96 | repo = rctx.repo |
|
97 | 97 | ui = repo.ui |
|
98 | 98 | |
|
99 | 99 | proto = httpv2protocolhandler(req, ui) |
|
100 | 100 | |
|
101 | 101 | if (not wireproto.commandsv2.commandavailable(command, proto) |
|
102 | 102 | and command not in extracommands): |
|
103 | 103 | res.status = b'404 Not Found' |
|
104 | 104 | res.headers[b'Content-Type'] = b'text/plain' |
|
105 | 105 | res.setbodybytes(_('invalid wire protocol command: %s') % command) |
|
106 | 106 | return |
|
107 | 107 | |
|
108 | 108 | # TODO consider cases where proxies may add additional Accept headers. |
|
109 | 109 | if req.headers.get(b'Accept') != FRAMINGTYPE: |
|
110 | 110 | res.status = b'406 Not Acceptable' |
|
111 | 111 | res.headers[b'Content-Type'] = b'text/plain' |
|
112 | 112 | res.setbodybytes(_('client MUST specify Accept header with value: %s\n') |
|
113 | 113 | % FRAMINGTYPE) |
|
114 | 114 | return |
|
115 | 115 | |
|
116 | 116 | if req.headers.get(b'Content-Type') != FRAMINGTYPE: |
|
117 | 117 | res.status = b'415 Unsupported Media Type' |
|
118 | 118 | # TODO we should send a response with appropriate media type, |
|
119 | 119 | # since client does Accept it. |
|
120 | 120 | res.headers[b'Content-Type'] = b'text/plain' |
|
121 | 121 | res.setbodybytes(_('client MUST send Content-Type header with ' |
|
122 | 122 | 'value: %s\n') % FRAMINGTYPE) |
|
123 | 123 | return |
|
124 | 124 | |
|
125 | 125 | _processhttpv2request(ui, repo, req, res, permission, command, proto) |
|
126 | 126 | |
|
127 | 127 | def _processhttpv2reflectrequest(ui, repo, req, res): |
|
128 | 128 | """Reads unified frame protocol request and dumps out state to client. |
|
129 | 129 | |
|
130 | 130 | This special endpoint can be used to help debug the wire protocol. |
|
131 | 131 | |
|
132 | 132 | Instead of routing the request through the normal dispatch mechanism, |
|
133 | 133 | we instead read all frames, decode them, and feed them into our state |
|
134 | 134 | tracker. We then dump the log of all that activity back out to the |
|
135 | 135 | client. |
|
136 | 136 | """ |
|
137 | 137 | import json |
|
138 | 138 | |
|
139 | 139 | # Reflection APIs have a history of being abused, accidentally disclosing |
|
140 | 140 | # sensitive data, etc. So we have a config knob. |
|
141 | 141 | if not ui.configbool('experimental', 'web.api.debugreflect'): |
|
142 | 142 | res.status = b'404 Not Found' |
|
143 | 143 | res.headers[b'Content-Type'] = b'text/plain' |
|
144 | 144 | res.setbodybytes(_('debugreflect service not available')) |
|
145 | 145 | return |
|
146 | 146 | |
|
147 | 147 | # We assume we have a unified framing protocol request body. |
|
148 | 148 | |
|
149 | 149 | reactor = wireprotoframing.serverreactor() |
|
150 | 150 | states = [] |
|
151 | 151 | |
|
152 | 152 | while True: |
|
153 | 153 | frame = wireprotoframing.readframe(req.bodyfh) |
|
154 | 154 | |
|
155 | 155 | if not frame: |
|
156 | 156 | states.append(b'received: <no frame>') |
|
157 | 157 | break |
|
158 | 158 | |
|
159 | 159 | states.append(b'received: %d %d %d %s' % (frame.typeid, frame.flags, |
|
160 | 160 | frame.requestid, |
|
161 | 161 | frame.payload)) |
|
162 | 162 | |
|
163 | 163 | action, meta = reactor.onframerecv(frame) |
|
164 | 164 | states.append(json.dumps((action, meta), sort_keys=True, |
|
165 | 165 | separators=(', ', ': '))) |
|
166 | 166 | |
|
167 | 167 | action, meta = reactor.oninputeof() |
|
168 | 168 | meta['action'] = action |
|
169 | 169 | states.append(json.dumps(meta, sort_keys=True, separators=(', ',': '))) |
|
170 | 170 | |
|
171 | 171 | res.status = b'200 OK' |
|
172 | 172 | res.headers[b'Content-Type'] = b'text/plain' |
|
173 | 173 | res.setbodybytes(b'\n'.join(states)) |
|
174 | 174 | |
|
175 | 175 | def _processhttpv2request(ui, repo, req, res, authedperm, reqcommand, proto): |
|
176 | 176 | """Post-validation handler for HTTPv2 requests. |
|
177 | 177 | |
|
178 | 178 | Called when the HTTP request contains unified frame-based protocol |
|
179 | 179 | frames for evaluation. |
|
180 | 180 | """ |
|
181 | 181 | # TODO Some HTTP clients are full duplex and can receive data before |
|
182 | 182 | # the entire request is transmitted. Figure out a way to indicate support |
|
183 | 183 | # for that so we can opt into full duplex mode. |
|
184 | 184 | reactor = wireprotoframing.serverreactor(deferoutput=True) |
|
185 | 185 | seencommand = False |
|
186 | 186 | |
|
187 | 187 | outstream = reactor.makeoutputstream() |
|
188 | 188 | |
|
189 | 189 | while True: |
|
190 | 190 | frame = wireprotoframing.readframe(req.bodyfh) |
|
191 | 191 | if not frame: |
|
192 | 192 | break |
|
193 | 193 | |
|
194 | 194 | action, meta = reactor.onframerecv(frame) |
|
195 | 195 | |
|
196 | 196 | if action == 'wantframe': |
|
197 | 197 | # Need more data before we can do anything. |
|
198 | 198 | continue |
|
199 | 199 | elif action == 'runcommand': |
|
200 | 200 | sentoutput = _httpv2runcommand(ui, repo, req, res, authedperm, |
|
201 | 201 | reqcommand, reactor, outstream, |
|
202 | 202 | meta, issubsequent=seencommand) |
|
203 | 203 | |
|
204 | 204 | if sentoutput: |
|
205 | 205 | return |
|
206 | 206 | |
|
207 | 207 | seencommand = True |
|
208 | 208 | |
|
209 | 209 | elif action == 'error': |
|
210 | 210 | # TODO define proper error mechanism. |
|
211 | 211 | res.status = b'200 OK' |
|
212 | 212 | res.headers[b'Content-Type'] = b'text/plain' |
|
213 | 213 | res.setbodybytes(meta['message'] + b'\n') |
|
214 | 214 | return |
|
215 | 215 | else: |
|
216 | 216 | raise error.ProgrammingError( |
|
217 | 217 | 'unhandled action from frame processor: %s' % action) |
|
218 | 218 | |
|
219 | 219 | action, meta = reactor.oninputeof() |
|
220 | 220 | if action == 'sendframes': |
|
221 | 221 | # We assume we haven't started sending the response yet. If we're |
|
222 | 222 | # wrong, the response type will raise an exception. |
|
223 | 223 | res.status = b'200 OK' |
|
224 | 224 | res.headers[b'Content-Type'] = FRAMINGTYPE |
|
225 | 225 | res.setbodygen(meta['framegen']) |
|
226 | 226 | elif action == 'noop': |
|
227 | 227 | pass |
|
228 | 228 | else: |
|
229 | 229 | raise error.ProgrammingError('unhandled action from frame processor: %s' |
|
230 | 230 | % action) |
|
231 | 231 | |
|
232 | 232 | def _httpv2runcommand(ui, repo, req, res, authedperm, reqcommand, reactor, |
|
233 | 233 | outstream, command, issubsequent): |
|
234 | 234 | """Dispatch a wire protocol command made from HTTPv2 requests. |
|
235 | 235 | |
|
236 | 236 | The authenticated permission (``authedperm``) along with the original |
|
237 | 237 | command from the URL (``reqcommand``) are passed in. |
|
238 | 238 | """ |
|
239 | 239 | # We already validated that the session has permissions to perform the |
|
240 | 240 | # actions in ``authedperm``. In the unified frame protocol, the canonical |
|
241 | 241 | # command to run is expressed in a frame. However, the URL also requested |
|
242 | 242 | # to run a specific command. We need to be careful that the command we |
|
243 | 243 | # run doesn't have permissions requirements greater than what was granted |
|
244 | 244 | # by ``authedperm``. |
|
245 | 245 | # |
|
246 | 246 | # Our rule for this is we only allow one command per HTTP request and |
|
247 | 247 | # that command must match the command in the URL. However, we make |
|
248 | 248 | # an exception for the ``multirequest`` URL. This URL is allowed to |
|
249 | 249 | # execute multiple commands. We double check permissions of each command |
|
250 | 250 | # as it is invoked to ensure there is no privilege escalation. |
|
251 | 251 | # TODO consider allowing multiple commands to regular command URLs |
|
252 | 252 | # iff each command is the same. |
|
253 | 253 | |
|
254 | 254 | proto = httpv2protocolhandler(req, ui, args=command['args']) |
|
255 | 255 | |
|
256 | 256 | if reqcommand == b'multirequest': |
|
257 | 257 | if not wireproto.commandsv2.commandavailable(command['command'], proto): |
|
258 | 258 | # TODO proper error mechanism |
|
259 | 259 | res.status = b'200 OK' |
|
260 | 260 | res.headers[b'Content-Type'] = b'text/plain' |
|
261 | 261 | res.setbodybytes(_('wire protocol command not available: %s') % |
|
262 | 262 | command['command']) |
|
263 | 263 | return True |
|
264 | 264 | |
|
265 | 265 | # TODO don't use assert here, since it may be elided by -O. |
|
266 | 266 | assert authedperm in (b'ro', b'rw') |
|
267 | 267 | wirecommand = wireproto.commandsv2[command['command']] |
|
268 | 268 | assert wirecommand.permission in ('push', 'pull') |
|
269 | 269 | |
|
270 | 270 | if authedperm == b'ro' and wirecommand.permission != 'pull': |
|
271 | 271 | # TODO proper error mechanism |
|
272 | 272 | res.status = b'403 Forbidden' |
|
273 | 273 | res.headers[b'Content-Type'] = b'text/plain' |
|
274 | 274 | res.setbodybytes(_('insufficient permissions to execute ' |
|
275 | 275 | 'command: %s') % command['command']) |
|
276 | 276 | return True |
|
277 | 277 | |
|
278 | 278 | # TODO should we also call checkperm() here? Maybe not if we're going |
|
279 | 279 | # to overhaul that API. The granted scope from the URL check should |
|
280 | 280 | # be good enough. |
|
281 | 281 | |
|
282 | 282 | else: |
|
283 | 283 | # Don't allow multiple commands outside of ``multirequest`` URL. |
|
284 | 284 | if issubsequent: |
|
285 | 285 | # TODO proper error mechanism |
|
286 | 286 | res.status = b'200 OK' |
|
287 | 287 | res.headers[b'Content-Type'] = b'text/plain' |
|
288 | 288 | res.setbodybytes(_('multiple commands cannot be issued to this ' |
|
289 | 289 | 'URL')) |
|
290 | 290 | return True |
|
291 | 291 | |
|
292 | 292 | if reqcommand != command['command']: |
|
293 | 293 | # TODO define proper error mechanism |
|
294 | 294 | res.status = b'200 OK' |
|
295 | 295 | res.headers[b'Content-Type'] = b'text/plain' |
|
296 | 296 | res.setbodybytes(_('command in frame must match command in URL')) |
|
297 | 297 | return True |
|
298 | 298 | |
|
299 | 299 | rsp = wireproto.dispatch(repo, proto, command['command']) |
|
300 | 300 | |
|
301 | 301 | res.status = b'200 OK' |
|
302 | 302 | res.headers[b'Content-Type'] = FRAMINGTYPE |
|
303 | 303 | |
|
304 | 304 | if isinstance(rsp, wireprototypes.bytesresponse): |
|
305 | 305 | action, meta = reactor.oncommandresponseready(outstream, |
|
306 | 306 | command['requestid'], |
|
307 | 307 | rsp.data) |
|
308 | 308 | elif isinstance(rsp, wireprototypes.cborresponse): |
|
309 | 309 | encoded = cbor.dumps(rsp.value, canonical=True) |
|
310 | 310 | action, meta = reactor.oncommandresponseready(outstream, |
|
311 | 311 | command['requestid'], |
|
312 | 312 | encoded) |
|
313 | 313 | else: |
|
314 |
action, meta = reactor.on |
|
|
314 | action, meta = reactor.onservererror( | |
|
315 | 315 | _('unhandled response type from wire proto command')) |
|
316 | 316 | |
|
317 | 317 | if action == 'sendframes': |
|
318 | 318 | res.setbodygen(meta['framegen']) |
|
319 | 319 | return True |
|
320 | 320 | elif action == 'noop': |
|
321 | 321 | return False |
|
322 | 322 | else: |
|
323 | 323 | raise error.ProgrammingError('unhandled event from reactor: %s' % |
|
324 | 324 | action) |
|
325 | 325 | |
|
326 | 326 | @zi.implementer(wireprototypes.baseprotocolhandler) |
|
327 | 327 | class httpv2protocolhandler(object): |
|
328 | 328 | def __init__(self, req, ui, args=None): |
|
329 | 329 | self._req = req |
|
330 | 330 | self._ui = ui |
|
331 | 331 | self._args = args |
|
332 | 332 | |
|
333 | 333 | @property |
|
334 | 334 | def name(self): |
|
335 | 335 | return HTTP_WIREPROTO_V2 |
|
336 | 336 | |
|
337 | 337 | def getargs(self, args): |
|
338 | 338 | data = {} |
|
339 | 339 | for k, typ in args.items(): |
|
340 | 340 | if k == '*': |
|
341 | 341 | raise NotImplementedError('do not support * args') |
|
342 | 342 | elif k in self._args: |
|
343 | 343 | # TODO consider validating value types. |
|
344 | 344 | data[k] = self._args[k] |
|
345 | 345 | |
|
346 | 346 | return data |
|
347 | 347 | |
|
348 | 348 | def getprotocaps(self): |
|
349 | 349 | # Protocol capabilities are currently not implemented for HTTP V2. |
|
350 | 350 | return set() |
|
351 | 351 | |
|
352 | 352 | def getpayload(self): |
|
353 | 353 | raise NotImplementedError |
|
354 | 354 | |
|
355 | 355 | @contextlib.contextmanager |
|
356 | 356 | def mayberedirectstdio(self): |
|
357 | 357 | raise NotImplementedError |
|
358 | 358 | |
|
359 | 359 | def client(self): |
|
360 | 360 | raise NotImplementedError |
|
361 | 361 | |
|
362 | 362 | def addcapabilities(self, repo, caps): |
|
363 | 363 | return caps |
|
364 | 364 | |
|
365 | 365 | def checkperm(self, perm): |
|
366 | 366 | raise NotImplementedError |
|
367 | 367 | |
|
368 | 368 | def httpv2apidescriptor(req, repo): |
|
369 | 369 | proto = httpv2protocolhandler(req, repo.ui) |
|
370 | 370 | |
|
371 | 371 | return _capabilitiesv2(repo, proto) |
|
372 | 372 | |
|
373 | 373 | def _capabilitiesv2(repo, proto): |
|
374 | 374 | """Obtain the set of capabilities for version 2 transports. |
|
375 | 375 | |
|
376 | 376 | These capabilities are distinct from the capabilities for version 1 |
|
377 | 377 | transports. |
|
378 | 378 | """ |
|
379 | 379 | compression = [] |
|
380 | 380 | for engine in wireproto.supportedcompengines(repo.ui, util.SERVERROLE): |
|
381 | 381 | compression.append({ |
|
382 | 382 | b'name': engine.wireprotosupport().name, |
|
383 | 383 | }) |
|
384 | 384 | |
|
385 | 385 | caps = { |
|
386 | 386 | 'commands': {}, |
|
387 | 387 | 'compression': compression, |
|
388 | 388 | 'framingmediatypes': [FRAMINGTYPE], |
|
389 | 389 | } |
|
390 | 390 | |
|
391 | 391 | for command, entry in wireproto.commandsv2.items(): |
|
392 | 392 | caps['commands'][command] = { |
|
393 | 393 | 'args': entry.args, |
|
394 | 394 | 'permissions': [entry.permission], |
|
395 | 395 | } |
|
396 | 396 | |
|
397 | 397 | if streamclone.allowservergeneration(repo): |
|
398 | 398 | caps['rawrepoformats'] = sorted(repo.requirements & |
|
399 | 399 | repo.supportedformats) |
|
400 | 400 | |
|
401 | 401 | return proto.addcapabilities(repo, caps) |
|
402 | 402 | |
|
403 | 403 | def wireprotocommand(*args, **kwargs): |
|
404 | 404 | def register(func): |
|
405 | 405 | return wireproto.wireprotocommand( |
|
406 | 406 | *args, transportpolicy=wireproto.POLICY_V2_ONLY, **kwargs)(func) |
|
407 | 407 | |
|
408 | 408 | return register |
|
409 | 409 | |
|
410 | 410 | @wireprotocommand('branchmap', permission='pull') |
|
411 | 411 | def branchmapv2(repo, proto): |
|
412 | 412 | branchmap = {encoding.fromlocal(k): v |
|
413 | 413 | for k, v in repo.branchmap().iteritems()} |
|
414 | 414 | |
|
415 | 415 | return wireprototypes.cborresponse(branchmap) |
|
416 | 416 | |
|
417 | 417 | @wireprotocommand('capabilities', permission='pull') |
|
418 | 418 | def capabilitiesv2(repo, proto): |
|
419 | 419 | caps = _capabilitiesv2(repo, proto) |
|
420 | 420 | |
|
421 | 421 | return wireprototypes.cborresponse(caps) |
|
422 | 422 | |
|
423 | 423 | @wireprotocommand('heads', |
|
424 | 424 | args={ |
|
425 | 425 | 'publiconly': False, |
|
426 | 426 | }, |
|
427 | 427 | permission='pull') |
|
428 | 428 | def headsv2(repo, proto, publiconly=False): |
|
429 | 429 | if publiconly: |
|
430 | 430 | repo = repo.filtered('immutable') |
|
431 | 431 | |
|
432 | 432 | return wireprototypes.cborresponse(repo.heads()) |
|
433 | 433 | |
|
434 | 434 | @wireprotocommand('known', |
|
435 | 435 | args={ |
|
436 | 436 | 'nodes': [b'deadbeef'], |
|
437 | 437 | }, |
|
438 | 438 | permission='pull') |
|
439 | 439 | def knownv2(repo, proto, nodes=None): |
|
440 | 440 | nodes = nodes or [] |
|
441 | 441 | result = b''.join(b'1' if n else b'0' for n in repo.known(nodes)) |
|
442 | 442 | return wireprototypes.cborresponse(result) |
|
443 | 443 | |
|
444 | 444 | @wireprotocommand('listkeys', |
|
445 | 445 | args={ |
|
446 | 446 | 'namespace': b'ns', |
|
447 | 447 | }, |
|
448 | 448 | permission='pull') |
|
449 | 449 | def listkeysv2(repo, proto, namespace=None): |
|
450 | 450 | keys = repo.listkeys(encoding.tolocal(namespace)) |
|
451 | 451 | keys = {encoding.fromlocal(k): encoding.fromlocal(v) |
|
452 | 452 | for k, v in keys.iteritems()} |
|
453 | 453 | |
|
454 | 454 | return wireprototypes.cborresponse(keys) |
|
455 | 455 | |
|
456 | 456 | @wireprotocommand('lookup', |
|
457 | 457 | args={ |
|
458 | 458 | 'key': b'foo', |
|
459 | 459 | }, |
|
460 | 460 | permission='pull') |
|
461 | 461 | def lookupv2(repo, proto, key): |
|
462 | 462 | key = encoding.tolocal(key) |
|
463 | 463 | |
|
464 | 464 | # TODO handle exception. |
|
465 | 465 | node = repo.lookup(key) |
|
466 | 466 | |
|
467 | 467 | return wireprototypes.cborresponse(node) |
|
468 | 468 | |
|
469 | 469 | @wireprotocommand('pushkey', |
|
470 | 470 | args={ |
|
471 | 471 | 'namespace': b'ns', |
|
472 | 472 | 'key': b'key', |
|
473 | 473 | 'old': b'old', |
|
474 | 474 | 'new': b'new', |
|
475 | 475 | }, |
|
476 | 476 | permission='push') |
|
477 | 477 | def pushkeyv2(repo, proto, namespace, key, old, new): |
|
478 | 478 | # TODO handle ui output redirection |
|
479 | 479 | r = repo.pushkey(encoding.tolocal(namespace), |
|
480 | 480 | encoding.tolocal(key), |
|
481 | 481 | encoding.tolocal(old), |
|
482 | 482 | encoding.tolocal(new)) |
|
483 | 483 | |
|
484 | 484 | return wireprototypes.cborresponse(r) |
@@ -1,488 +1,490 | |||
|
1 | 1 | from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function |
|
2 | 2 | |
|
3 | 3 | import unittest |
|
4 | 4 | |
|
5 | 5 | from mercurial.thirdparty import ( |
|
6 | 6 | cbor, |
|
7 | 7 | ) |
|
8 | 8 | from mercurial import ( |
|
9 | 9 | util, |
|
10 | 10 | wireprotoframing as framing, |
|
11 | 11 | ) |
|
12 | 12 | |
|
13 | 13 | ffs = framing.makeframefromhumanstring |
|
14 | 14 | |
|
15 | 15 | OK = cbor.dumps({b'status': b'ok'}) |
|
16 | 16 | |
|
17 | 17 | def makereactor(deferoutput=False): |
|
18 | 18 | return framing.serverreactor(deferoutput=deferoutput) |
|
19 | 19 | |
|
20 | 20 | def sendframes(reactor, gen): |
|
21 | 21 | """Send a generator of frame bytearray to a reactor. |
|
22 | 22 | |
|
23 | 23 | Emits a generator of results from ``onframerecv()`` calls. |
|
24 | 24 | """ |
|
25 | 25 | for frame in gen: |
|
26 | 26 | header = framing.parseheader(frame) |
|
27 | 27 | payload = frame[framing.FRAME_HEADER_SIZE:] |
|
28 | 28 | assert len(payload) == header.length |
|
29 | 29 | |
|
30 | 30 | yield reactor.onframerecv(framing.frame(header.requestid, |
|
31 | 31 | header.streamid, |
|
32 | 32 | header.streamflags, |
|
33 | 33 | header.typeid, |
|
34 | 34 | header.flags, |
|
35 | 35 | payload)) |
|
36 | 36 | |
|
37 | 37 | def sendcommandframes(reactor, stream, rid, cmd, args, datafh=None): |
|
38 | 38 | """Generate frames to run a command and send them to a reactor.""" |
|
39 | 39 | return sendframes(reactor, |
|
40 | 40 | framing.createcommandframes(stream, rid, cmd, args, |
|
41 | 41 | datafh)) |
|
42 | 42 | |
|
43 | 43 | |
|
44 | 44 | class ServerReactorTests(unittest.TestCase): |
|
45 | 45 | def _sendsingleframe(self, reactor, f): |
|
46 | 46 | results = list(sendframes(reactor, [f])) |
|
47 | 47 | self.assertEqual(len(results), 1) |
|
48 | 48 | |
|
49 | 49 | return results[0] |
|
50 | 50 | |
|
51 | 51 | def assertaction(self, res, expected): |
|
52 | 52 | self.assertIsInstance(res, tuple) |
|
53 | 53 | self.assertEqual(len(res), 2) |
|
54 | 54 | self.assertIsInstance(res[1], dict) |
|
55 | 55 | self.assertEqual(res[0], expected) |
|
56 | 56 | |
|
57 | 57 | def assertframesequal(self, frames, framestrings): |
|
58 | 58 | expected = [ffs(s) for s in framestrings] |
|
59 | 59 | self.assertEqual(list(frames), expected) |
|
60 | 60 | |
|
61 | 61 | def test1framecommand(self): |
|
62 | 62 | """Receiving a command in a single frame yields request to run it.""" |
|
63 | 63 | reactor = makereactor() |
|
64 | 64 | stream = framing.stream(1) |
|
65 | 65 | results = list(sendcommandframes(reactor, stream, 1, b'mycommand', {})) |
|
66 | 66 | self.assertEqual(len(results), 1) |
|
67 | 67 | self.assertaction(results[0], b'runcommand') |
|
68 | 68 | self.assertEqual(results[0][1], { |
|
69 | 69 | b'requestid': 1, |
|
70 | 70 | b'command': b'mycommand', |
|
71 | 71 | b'args': {}, |
|
72 | 72 | b'data': None, |
|
73 | 73 | }) |
|
74 | 74 | |
|
75 | 75 | result = reactor.oninputeof() |
|
76 | 76 | self.assertaction(result, b'noop') |
|
77 | 77 | |
|
78 | 78 | def test1argument(self): |
|
79 | 79 | reactor = makereactor() |
|
80 | 80 | stream = framing.stream(1) |
|
81 | 81 | results = list(sendcommandframes(reactor, stream, 41, b'mycommand', |
|
82 | 82 | {b'foo': b'bar'})) |
|
83 | 83 | self.assertEqual(len(results), 1) |
|
84 | 84 | self.assertaction(results[0], b'runcommand') |
|
85 | 85 | self.assertEqual(results[0][1], { |
|
86 | 86 | b'requestid': 41, |
|
87 | 87 | b'command': b'mycommand', |
|
88 | 88 | b'args': {b'foo': b'bar'}, |
|
89 | 89 | b'data': None, |
|
90 | 90 | }) |
|
91 | 91 | |
|
92 | 92 | def testmultiarguments(self): |
|
93 | 93 | reactor = makereactor() |
|
94 | 94 | stream = framing.stream(1) |
|
95 | 95 | results = list(sendcommandframes(reactor, stream, 1, b'mycommand', |
|
96 | 96 | {b'foo': b'bar', b'biz': b'baz'})) |
|
97 | 97 | self.assertEqual(len(results), 1) |
|
98 | 98 | self.assertaction(results[0], b'runcommand') |
|
99 | 99 | self.assertEqual(results[0][1], { |
|
100 | 100 | b'requestid': 1, |
|
101 | 101 | b'command': b'mycommand', |
|
102 | 102 | b'args': {b'foo': b'bar', b'biz': b'baz'}, |
|
103 | 103 | b'data': None, |
|
104 | 104 | }) |
|
105 | 105 | |
|
106 | 106 | def testsimplecommanddata(self): |
|
107 | 107 | reactor = makereactor() |
|
108 | 108 | stream = framing.stream(1) |
|
109 | 109 | results = list(sendcommandframes(reactor, stream, 1, b'mycommand', {}, |
|
110 | 110 | util.bytesio(b'data!'))) |
|
111 | 111 | self.assertEqual(len(results), 2) |
|
112 | 112 | self.assertaction(results[0], b'wantframe') |
|
113 | 113 | self.assertaction(results[1], b'runcommand') |
|
114 | 114 | self.assertEqual(results[1][1], { |
|
115 | 115 | b'requestid': 1, |
|
116 | 116 | b'command': b'mycommand', |
|
117 | 117 | b'args': {}, |
|
118 | 118 | b'data': b'data!', |
|
119 | 119 | }) |
|
120 | 120 | |
|
121 | 121 | def testmultipledataframes(self): |
|
122 | 122 | frames = [ |
|
123 | 123 | ffs(b'1 1 stream-begin command-request new|have-data ' |
|
124 | 124 | b"cbor:{b'name': b'mycommand'}"), |
|
125 | 125 | ffs(b'1 1 0 command-data continuation data1'), |
|
126 | 126 | ffs(b'1 1 0 command-data continuation data2'), |
|
127 | 127 | ffs(b'1 1 0 command-data eos data3'), |
|
128 | 128 | ] |
|
129 | 129 | |
|
130 | 130 | reactor = makereactor() |
|
131 | 131 | results = list(sendframes(reactor, frames)) |
|
132 | 132 | self.assertEqual(len(results), 4) |
|
133 | 133 | for i in range(3): |
|
134 | 134 | self.assertaction(results[i], b'wantframe') |
|
135 | 135 | self.assertaction(results[3], b'runcommand') |
|
136 | 136 | self.assertEqual(results[3][1], { |
|
137 | 137 | b'requestid': 1, |
|
138 | 138 | b'command': b'mycommand', |
|
139 | 139 | b'args': {}, |
|
140 | 140 | b'data': b'data1data2data3', |
|
141 | 141 | }) |
|
142 | 142 | |
|
143 | 143 | def testargumentanddata(self): |
|
144 | 144 | frames = [ |
|
145 | 145 | ffs(b'1 1 stream-begin command-request new|have-data ' |
|
146 | 146 | b"cbor:{b'name': b'command', b'args': {b'key': b'val'," |
|
147 | 147 | b"b'foo': b'bar'}}"), |
|
148 | 148 | ffs(b'1 1 0 command-data continuation value1'), |
|
149 | 149 | ffs(b'1 1 0 command-data eos value2'), |
|
150 | 150 | ] |
|
151 | 151 | |
|
152 | 152 | reactor = makereactor() |
|
153 | 153 | results = list(sendframes(reactor, frames)) |
|
154 | 154 | |
|
155 | 155 | self.assertaction(results[-1], b'runcommand') |
|
156 | 156 | self.assertEqual(results[-1][1], { |
|
157 | 157 | b'requestid': 1, |
|
158 | 158 | b'command': b'command', |
|
159 | 159 | b'args': { |
|
160 | 160 | b'key': b'val', |
|
161 | 161 | b'foo': b'bar', |
|
162 | 162 | }, |
|
163 | 163 | b'data': b'value1value2', |
|
164 | 164 | }) |
|
165 | 165 | |
|
166 | 166 | def testnewandcontinuation(self): |
|
167 | 167 | result = self._sendsingleframe(makereactor(), |
|
168 | 168 | ffs(b'1 1 stream-begin command-request new|continuation ')) |
|
169 | 169 | self.assertaction(result, b'error') |
|
170 | 170 | self.assertEqual(result[1], { |
|
171 | 171 | b'message': b'received command request frame with both new and ' |
|
172 | 172 | b'continuation flags set', |
|
173 | 173 | }) |
|
174 | 174 | |
|
175 | 175 | def testneithernewnorcontinuation(self): |
|
176 | 176 | result = self._sendsingleframe(makereactor(), |
|
177 | 177 | ffs(b'1 1 stream-begin command-request 0 ')) |
|
178 | 178 | self.assertaction(result, b'error') |
|
179 | 179 | self.assertEqual(result[1], { |
|
180 | 180 | b'message': b'received command request frame with neither new nor ' |
|
181 | 181 | b'continuation flags set', |
|
182 | 182 | }) |
|
183 | 183 | |
|
184 | 184 | def testunexpectedcommanddata(self): |
|
185 | 185 | """Command data frame when not running a command is an error.""" |
|
186 | 186 | result = self._sendsingleframe(makereactor(), |
|
187 | 187 | ffs(b'1 1 stream-begin command-data 0 ignored')) |
|
188 | 188 | self.assertaction(result, b'error') |
|
189 | 189 | self.assertEqual(result[1], { |
|
190 | 190 | b'message': b'expected command request frame; got 2', |
|
191 | 191 | }) |
|
192 | 192 | |
|
193 | 193 | def testunexpectedcommanddatareceiving(self): |
|
194 | 194 | """Same as above except the command is receiving.""" |
|
195 | 195 | results = list(sendframes(makereactor(), [ |
|
196 | 196 | ffs(b'1 1 stream-begin command-request new|more ' |
|
197 | 197 | b"cbor:{b'name': b'ignored'}"), |
|
198 | 198 | ffs(b'1 1 0 command-data eos ignored'), |
|
199 | 199 | ])) |
|
200 | 200 | |
|
201 | 201 | self.assertaction(results[0], b'wantframe') |
|
202 | 202 | self.assertaction(results[1], b'error') |
|
203 | 203 | self.assertEqual(results[1][1], { |
|
204 | 204 | b'message': b'received command data frame for request that is not ' |
|
205 | 205 | b'expecting data: 1', |
|
206 | 206 | }) |
|
207 | 207 | |
|
208 | 208 | def testconflictingrequestidallowed(self): |
|
209 | 209 | """Multiple fully serviced commands with same request ID is allowed.""" |
|
210 | 210 | reactor = makereactor() |
|
211 | 211 | results = [] |
|
212 | 212 | outstream = reactor.makeoutputstream() |
|
213 | 213 | results.append(self._sendsingleframe( |
|
214 | 214 | reactor, ffs(b'1 1 stream-begin command-request new ' |
|
215 | 215 | b"cbor:{b'name': b'command'}"))) |
|
216 | 216 | result = reactor.oncommandresponseready(outstream, 1, b'response1') |
|
217 | 217 | self.assertaction(result, b'sendframes') |
|
218 | 218 | list(result[1][b'framegen']) |
|
219 | 219 | results.append(self._sendsingleframe( |
|
220 | 220 | reactor, ffs(b'1 1 stream-begin command-request new ' |
|
221 | 221 | b"cbor:{b'name': b'command'}"))) |
|
222 | 222 | result = reactor.oncommandresponseready(outstream, 1, b'response2') |
|
223 | 223 | self.assertaction(result, b'sendframes') |
|
224 | 224 | list(result[1][b'framegen']) |
|
225 | 225 | results.append(self._sendsingleframe( |
|
226 | 226 | reactor, ffs(b'1 1 stream-begin command-request new ' |
|
227 | 227 | b"cbor:{b'name': b'command'}"))) |
|
228 | 228 | result = reactor.oncommandresponseready(outstream, 1, b'response3') |
|
229 | 229 | self.assertaction(result, b'sendframes') |
|
230 | 230 | list(result[1][b'framegen']) |
|
231 | 231 | |
|
232 | 232 | for i in range(3): |
|
233 | 233 | self.assertaction(results[i], b'runcommand') |
|
234 | 234 | self.assertEqual(results[i][1], { |
|
235 | 235 | b'requestid': 1, |
|
236 | 236 | b'command': b'command', |
|
237 | 237 | b'args': {}, |
|
238 | 238 | b'data': None, |
|
239 | 239 | }) |
|
240 | 240 | |
|
241 | 241 | def testconflictingrequestid(self): |
|
242 | 242 | """Request ID for new command matching in-flight command is illegal.""" |
|
243 | 243 | results = list(sendframes(makereactor(), [ |
|
244 | 244 | ffs(b'1 1 stream-begin command-request new|more ' |
|
245 | 245 | b"cbor:{b'name': b'command'}"), |
|
246 | 246 | ffs(b'1 1 0 command-request new ' |
|
247 | 247 | b"cbor:{b'name': b'command1'}"), |
|
248 | 248 | ])) |
|
249 | 249 | |
|
250 | 250 | self.assertaction(results[0], b'wantframe') |
|
251 | 251 | self.assertaction(results[1], b'error') |
|
252 | 252 | self.assertEqual(results[1][1], { |
|
253 | 253 | b'message': b'request with ID 1 already received', |
|
254 | 254 | }) |
|
255 | 255 | |
|
256 | 256 | def testinterleavedcommands(self): |
|
257 | 257 | cbor1 = cbor.dumps({ |
|
258 | 258 | b'name': b'command1', |
|
259 | 259 | b'args': { |
|
260 | 260 | b'foo': b'bar', |
|
261 | 261 | b'key1': b'val', |
|
262 | 262 | } |
|
263 | 263 | }, canonical=True) |
|
264 | 264 | cbor3 = cbor.dumps({ |
|
265 | 265 | b'name': b'command3', |
|
266 | 266 | b'args': { |
|
267 | 267 | b'biz': b'baz', |
|
268 | 268 | b'key': b'val', |
|
269 | 269 | }, |
|
270 | 270 | }, canonical=True) |
|
271 | 271 | |
|
272 | 272 | results = list(sendframes(makereactor(), [ |
|
273 | 273 | ffs(b'1 1 stream-begin command-request new|more %s' % cbor1[0:6]), |
|
274 | 274 | ffs(b'3 1 0 command-request new|more %s' % cbor3[0:10]), |
|
275 | 275 | ffs(b'1 1 0 command-request continuation|more %s' % cbor1[6:9]), |
|
276 | 276 | ffs(b'3 1 0 command-request continuation|more %s' % cbor3[10:13]), |
|
277 | 277 | ffs(b'3 1 0 command-request continuation %s' % cbor3[13:]), |
|
278 | 278 | ffs(b'1 1 0 command-request continuation %s' % cbor1[9:]), |
|
279 | 279 | ])) |
|
280 | 280 | |
|
281 | 281 | self.assertEqual([t[0] for t in results], [ |
|
282 | 282 | b'wantframe', |
|
283 | 283 | b'wantframe', |
|
284 | 284 | b'wantframe', |
|
285 | 285 | b'wantframe', |
|
286 | 286 | b'runcommand', |
|
287 | 287 | b'runcommand', |
|
288 | 288 | ]) |
|
289 | 289 | |
|
290 | 290 | self.assertEqual(results[4][1], { |
|
291 | 291 | b'requestid': 3, |
|
292 | 292 | b'command': b'command3', |
|
293 | 293 | b'args': {b'biz': b'baz', b'key': b'val'}, |
|
294 | 294 | b'data': None, |
|
295 | 295 | }) |
|
296 | 296 | self.assertEqual(results[5][1], { |
|
297 | 297 | b'requestid': 1, |
|
298 | 298 | b'command': b'command1', |
|
299 | 299 | b'args': {b'foo': b'bar', b'key1': b'val'}, |
|
300 | 300 | b'data': None, |
|
301 | 301 | }) |
|
302 | 302 | |
|
303 | 303 | def testmissingcommanddataframe(self): |
|
304 | 304 | # The reactor doesn't currently handle partially received commands. |
|
305 | 305 | # So this test is failing to do anything with request 1. |
|
306 | 306 | frames = [ |
|
307 | 307 | ffs(b'1 1 stream-begin command-request new|have-data ' |
|
308 | 308 | b"cbor:{b'name': b'command1'}"), |
|
309 | 309 | ffs(b'3 1 0 command-request new ' |
|
310 | 310 | b"cbor:{b'name': b'command2'}"), |
|
311 | 311 | ] |
|
312 | 312 | results = list(sendframes(makereactor(), frames)) |
|
313 | 313 | self.assertEqual(len(results), 2) |
|
314 | 314 | self.assertaction(results[0], b'wantframe') |
|
315 | 315 | self.assertaction(results[1], b'runcommand') |
|
316 | 316 | |
|
317 | 317 | def testmissingcommanddataframeflags(self): |
|
318 | 318 | frames = [ |
|
319 | 319 | ffs(b'1 1 stream-begin command-request new|have-data ' |
|
320 | 320 | b"cbor:{b'name': b'command1'}"), |
|
321 | 321 | ffs(b'1 1 0 command-data 0 data'), |
|
322 | 322 | ] |
|
323 | 323 | results = list(sendframes(makereactor(), frames)) |
|
324 | 324 | self.assertEqual(len(results), 2) |
|
325 | 325 | self.assertaction(results[0], b'wantframe') |
|
326 | 326 | self.assertaction(results[1], b'error') |
|
327 | 327 | self.assertEqual(results[1][1], { |
|
328 | 328 | b'message': b'command data frame without flags', |
|
329 | 329 | }) |
|
330 | 330 | |
|
331 | 331 | def testframefornonreceivingrequest(self): |
|
332 | 332 | """Receiving a frame for a command that is not receiving is illegal.""" |
|
333 | 333 | results = list(sendframes(makereactor(), [ |
|
334 | 334 | ffs(b'1 1 stream-begin command-request new ' |
|
335 | 335 | b"cbor:{b'name': b'command1'}"), |
|
336 | 336 | ffs(b'3 1 0 command-request new|have-data ' |
|
337 | 337 | b"cbor:{b'name': b'command3'}"), |
|
338 | 338 | ffs(b'5 1 0 command-data eos ignored'), |
|
339 | 339 | ])) |
|
340 | 340 | self.assertaction(results[2], b'error') |
|
341 | 341 | self.assertEqual(results[2][1], { |
|
342 | 342 | b'message': b'received frame for request that is not receiving: 5', |
|
343 | 343 | }) |
|
344 | 344 | |
|
345 | 345 | def testsimpleresponse(self): |
|
346 | 346 | """Bytes response to command sends result frames.""" |
|
347 | 347 | reactor = makereactor() |
|
348 | 348 | instream = framing.stream(1) |
|
349 | 349 | list(sendcommandframes(reactor, instream, 1, b'mycommand', {})) |
|
350 | 350 | |
|
351 | 351 | outstream = reactor.makeoutputstream() |
|
352 | 352 | result = reactor.oncommandresponseready(outstream, 1, b'response') |
|
353 | 353 | self.assertaction(result, b'sendframes') |
|
354 | 354 | self.assertframesequal(result[1][b'framegen'], [ |
|
355 | 355 | b'1 2 stream-begin command-response eos %sresponse' % OK, |
|
356 | 356 | ]) |
|
357 | 357 | |
|
358 | 358 | def testmultiframeresponse(self): |
|
359 | 359 | """Bytes response spanning multiple frames is handled.""" |
|
360 | 360 | first = b'x' * framing.DEFAULT_MAX_FRAME_SIZE |
|
361 | 361 | second = b'y' * 100 |
|
362 | 362 | |
|
363 | 363 | reactor = makereactor() |
|
364 | 364 | instream = framing.stream(1) |
|
365 | 365 | list(sendcommandframes(reactor, instream, 1, b'mycommand', {})) |
|
366 | 366 | |
|
367 | 367 | outstream = reactor.makeoutputstream() |
|
368 | 368 | result = reactor.oncommandresponseready(outstream, 1, first + second) |
|
369 | 369 | self.assertaction(result, b'sendframes') |
|
370 | 370 | self.assertframesequal(result[1][b'framegen'], [ |
|
371 | 371 | b'1 2 stream-begin command-response continuation %s' % OK, |
|
372 | 372 | b'1 2 0 command-response continuation %s' % first, |
|
373 | 373 | b'1 2 0 command-response eos %s' % second, |
|
374 | 374 | ]) |
|
375 | 375 | |
|
376 |
def test |
|
|
376 | def testservererror(self): | |
|
377 | 377 | reactor = makereactor() |
|
378 | 378 | instream = framing.stream(1) |
|
379 | 379 | list(sendcommandframes(reactor, instream, 1, b'mycommand', {})) |
|
380 | 380 | |
|
381 | 381 | outstream = reactor.makeoutputstream() |
|
382 |
result = reactor.on |
|
|
382 | result = reactor.onservererror(outstream, 1, b'some message') | |
|
383 | 383 | self.assertaction(result, b'sendframes') |
|
384 | 384 | self.assertframesequal(result[1][b'framegen'], [ |
|
385 |
b |
|
|
385 | b"1 2 stream-begin error-response 0 " | |
|
386 | b"cbor:{b'type': b'server', " | |
|
387 | b"b'message': [{b'msg': b'some message'}]}", | |
|
386 | 388 | ]) |
|
387 | 389 | |
|
388 | 390 | def test1commanddeferresponse(self): |
|
389 | 391 | """Responses when in deferred output mode are delayed until EOF.""" |
|
390 | 392 | reactor = makereactor(deferoutput=True) |
|
391 | 393 | instream = framing.stream(1) |
|
392 | 394 | results = list(sendcommandframes(reactor, instream, 1, b'mycommand', |
|
393 | 395 | {})) |
|
394 | 396 | self.assertEqual(len(results), 1) |
|
395 | 397 | self.assertaction(results[0], b'runcommand') |
|
396 | 398 | |
|
397 | 399 | outstream = reactor.makeoutputstream() |
|
398 | 400 | result = reactor.oncommandresponseready(outstream, 1, b'response') |
|
399 | 401 | self.assertaction(result, b'noop') |
|
400 | 402 | result = reactor.oninputeof() |
|
401 | 403 | self.assertaction(result, b'sendframes') |
|
402 | 404 | self.assertframesequal(result[1][b'framegen'], [ |
|
403 | 405 | b'1 2 stream-begin command-response eos %sresponse' % OK, |
|
404 | 406 | ]) |
|
405 | 407 | |
|
406 | 408 | def testmultiplecommanddeferresponse(self): |
|
407 | 409 | reactor = makereactor(deferoutput=True) |
|
408 | 410 | instream = framing.stream(1) |
|
409 | 411 | list(sendcommandframes(reactor, instream, 1, b'command1', {})) |
|
410 | 412 | list(sendcommandframes(reactor, instream, 3, b'command2', {})) |
|
411 | 413 | |
|
412 | 414 | outstream = reactor.makeoutputstream() |
|
413 | 415 | result = reactor.oncommandresponseready(outstream, 1, b'response1') |
|
414 | 416 | self.assertaction(result, b'noop') |
|
415 | 417 | result = reactor.oncommandresponseready(outstream, 3, b'response2') |
|
416 | 418 | self.assertaction(result, b'noop') |
|
417 | 419 | result = reactor.oninputeof() |
|
418 | 420 | self.assertaction(result, b'sendframes') |
|
419 | 421 | self.assertframesequal(result[1][b'framegen'], [ |
|
420 | 422 | b'1 2 stream-begin command-response eos %sresponse1' % OK, |
|
421 | 423 | b'3 2 0 command-response eos %sresponse2' % OK, |
|
422 | 424 | ]) |
|
423 | 425 | |
|
424 | 426 | def testrequestidtracking(self): |
|
425 | 427 | reactor = makereactor(deferoutput=True) |
|
426 | 428 | instream = framing.stream(1) |
|
427 | 429 | list(sendcommandframes(reactor, instream, 1, b'command1', {})) |
|
428 | 430 | list(sendcommandframes(reactor, instream, 3, b'command2', {})) |
|
429 | 431 | list(sendcommandframes(reactor, instream, 5, b'command3', {})) |
|
430 | 432 | |
|
431 | 433 | # Register results for commands out of order. |
|
432 | 434 | outstream = reactor.makeoutputstream() |
|
433 | 435 | reactor.oncommandresponseready(outstream, 3, b'response3') |
|
434 | 436 | reactor.oncommandresponseready(outstream, 1, b'response1') |
|
435 | 437 | reactor.oncommandresponseready(outstream, 5, b'response5') |
|
436 | 438 | |
|
437 | 439 | result = reactor.oninputeof() |
|
438 | 440 | self.assertaction(result, b'sendframes') |
|
439 | 441 | self.assertframesequal(result[1][b'framegen'], [ |
|
440 | 442 | b'3 2 stream-begin command-response eos %sresponse3' % OK, |
|
441 | 443 | b'1 2 0 command-response eos %sresponse1' % OK, |
|
442 | 444 | b'5 2 0 command-response eos %sresponse5' % OK, |
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443 | 445 | ]) |
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444 | 446 | |
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445 | 447 | def testduplicaterequestonactivecommand(self): |
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446 | 448 | """Receiving a request ID that matches a request that isn't finished.""" |
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447 | 449 | reactor = makereactor() |
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448 | 450 | stream = framing.stream(1) |
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449 | 451 | list(sendcommandframes(reactor, stream, 1, b'command1', {})) |
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450 | 452 | results = list(sendcommandframes(reactor, stream, 1, b'command1', {})) |
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451 | 453 | |
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452 | 454 | self.assertaction(results[0], b'error') |
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453 | 455 | self.assertEqual(results[0][1], { |
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454 | 456 | b'message': b'request with ID 1 is already active', |
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455 | 457 | }) |
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456 | 458 | |
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457 | 459 | def testduplicaterequestonactivecommandnosend(self): |
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458 | 460 | """Same as above but we've registered a response but haven't sent it.""" |
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459 | 461 | reactor = makereactor() |
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460 | 462 | instream = framing.stream(1) |
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461 | 463 | list(sendcommandframes(reactor, instream, 1, b'command1', {})) |
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462 | 464 | outstream = reactor.makeoutputstream() |
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463 | 465 | reactor.oncommandresponseready(outstream, 1, b'response') |
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464 | 466 | |
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465 | 467 | # We've registered the response but haven't sent it. From the |
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466 | 468 | # perspective of the reactor, the command is still active. |
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467 | 469 | |
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468 | 470 | results = list(sendcommandframes(reactor, instream, 1, b'command1', {})) |
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469 | 471 | self.assertaction(results[0], b'error') |
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470 | 472 | self.assertEqual(results[0][1], { |
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471 | 473 | b'message': b'request with ID 1 is already active', |
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472 | 474 | }) |
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473 | 475 | |
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474 | 476 | def testduplicaterequestaftersend(self): |
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475 | 477 | """We can use a duplicate request ID after we've sent the response.""" |
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476 | 478 | reactor = makereactor() |
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477 | 479 | instream = framing.stream(1) |
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478 | 480 | list(sendcommandframes(reactor, instream, 1, b'command1', {})) |
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479 | 481 | outstream = reactor.makeoutputstream() |
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480 | 482 | res = reactor.oncommandresponseready(outstream, 1, b'response') |
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481 | 483 | list(res[1][b'framegen']) |
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482 | 484 | |
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483 | 485 | results = list(sendcommandframes(reactor, instream, 1, b'command1', {})) |
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484 | 486 | self.assertaction(results[0], b'runcommand') |
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485 | 487 | |
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486 | 488 | if __name__ == '__main__': |
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487 | 489 | import silenttestrunner |
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488 | 490 | silenttestrunner.main(__name__) |
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