protocol.txt revision 4f6e8d7a00cbeda1e70cc15be9c4af1018bdad53
1
2--- a replacement for aproto -------------------------------------------
3
4When it comes down to it, aproto's primary purpose is to forward
5various streams between the host computer and client device (in either
6direction).
7
8This replacement further simplifies the concept, reducing the protocol
9to an extremely straightforward model optimized to accomplish the
10forwarding of these streams and removing additional state or
11complexity.
12
13The host side becomes a simple comms bridge with no "UI", which will 
14be used by either commandline or interactive tools to communicate with 
15a device or emulator that is connected to the bridge.
16
17The protocol is designed to be straightforward and well-defined enough 
18that if it needs to be reimplemented in another environment (Java 
19perhaps), there should not problems ensuring perfect interoperability.
20
21The protocol discards the layering aproto has and should allow the 
22implementation to be much more robust.
23
24
25--- protocol overview and basics ---------------------------------------
26 
27The transport layer deals in "messages", which consist of a 24 byte
28header followed (optionally) by a payload.  The header consists of 6
2932 bit words which are sent across the wire in little endian format.
30
31struct message {
32    unsigned command;       /* command identifier constant      */
33    unsigned arg0;          /* first argument                   */
34    unsigned arg1;          /* second argument                  */
35    unsigned data_length;   /* length of payload (0 is allowed) */
36    unsigned data_crc32;    /* crc32 of data payload            */
37    unsigned magic;         /* command ^ 0xffffffff             */
38};
39
40Receipt of an invalid message header, corrupt message payload, or an
41unrecognized command MUST result in the closing of the remote
42connection.  The protocol depends on shared state and any break in the
43message stream will result in state getting out of sync.
44
45The following sections describe the six defined message types in
46detail.  Their format is COMMAND(arg0, arg1, payload) where the payload
47is represented by a quoted string or an empty string if none should be
48sent.
49
50The identifiers "local-id" and "remote-id" are always relative to the
51*sender* of the message, so for a receiver, the meanings are effectively
52reversed.
53
54
55
56--- CONNECT(version, maxdata, "system-identity-string") ----------------
57
58The CONNECT message establishes the presence of a remote system.
59The version is used to ensure protocol compatibility and maxdata
60declares the maximum message body size that the remote system
61is willing to accept.
62
63Currently, version=0x01000000 and maxdata=4096
64
65Both sides send a CONNECT message when the connection between them is
66established.  Until a CONNECT message is received no other messages may
67be sent.  Any messages received before a CONNECT message MUST be ignored.
68
69If a CONNECT message is received with an unknown version or insufficiently
70large maxdata value, the connection with the other side must be closed.
71
72The system identity string should be "<systemtype>:<serialno>:<banner>"
73where systemtype is "bootloader", "device", or "host", serialno is some
74kind of unique ID (or empty), and banner is a human-readable version
75or identifier string (informational only).
76
77
78--- OPEN(local-id, 0, "destination") -----------------------------------
79
80The OPEN message informs the recipient that the sender has a stream
81identified by local-id that it wishes to connect to the named
82destination in the message payload.  The local-id may not be zero.
83
84The OPEN message MUST result in either a READY message indicating that
85the connection has been established (and identifying the other end) or
86a CLOSE message, indicating failure.  An OPEN message also implies
87a READY message sent at the same time.
88
89Common destination naming conventions include:
90
91* "tcp:<host>:<port>" - host may be omitted to indicate localhost
92* "udp:<host>:<port>" - host may be omitted to indicate localhost
93* "local-dgram:<identifier>"
94* "local-stream:<identifier>"
95* "shell" - local shell service
96* "upload" - service for pushing files across (like aproto's /sync)
97* "fs-bridge" - FUSE protocol filesystem bridge
98
99
100--- READY(local-id, remote-id, "") -------------------------------------
101
102The READY message informs the recipient that the sender's stream
103identified by local-id is ready for write messages and that it is
104connected to the recipient's stream identified by remote-id.
105
106Neither the local-id nor the remote-id may be zero. 
107
108A READY message containing a remote-id which does not map to an open
109stream on the recipient's side is ignored.  The stream may have been
110closed while this message was in-flight.
111
112The local-id is ignored on all but the first READY message (where it
113is used to establish the connection).  Nonetheless, the local-id MUST
114not change on later READY messages sent to the same stream.
115
116
117
118--- WRITE(0, remote-id, "data") ----------------------------------------
119
120The WRITE message sends data to the recipient's stream identified by
121remote-id.  The payload MUST be <= maxdata in length.
122
123A WRITE message containing a remote-id which does not map to an open
124stream on the recipient's side is ignored.  The stream may have been
125closed while this message was in-flight.
126
127A WRITE message may not be sent until a READY message is received.
128Once a WRITE message is sent, an additional WRITE message may not be
129sent until another READY message has been received.  Recipients of
130a WRITE message that is in violation of this requirement will CLOSE
131the connection.
132
133
134--- CLOSE(local-id, remote-id, "") -------------------------------------
135
136The CLOSE message informs recipient that the connection between the
137sender's stream (local-id) and the recipient's stream (remote-id) is
138broken.  The remote-id MUST not be zero, but the local-id MAY be zero
139if this CLOSE indicates a failed OPEN.
140
141A CLOSE message containing a remote-id which does not map to an open
142stream on the recipient's side is ignored.  The stream may have
143already been closed by the recipient while this message was in-flight.
144
145The recipient should not respond to a CLOSE message in any way.  The
146recipient should cancel pending WRITEs or CLOSEs, but this is not a
147requirement, since they will be ignored.
148
149
150--- SYNC(online, sequence, "") -----------------------------------------
151
152The SYNC message is used by the io pump to make sure that stale
153outbound messages are discarded when the connection to the remote side
154is broken.  It is only used internally to the bridge and never valid
155to send across the wire.  
156
157* when the connection to the remote side goes offline, the io pump 
158  sends a SYNC(0, 0) and starts discarding all messages
159* when the connection to the remote side is established, the io pump
160  sends a SYNC(1, token) and continues to discard messages
161* when the io pump receives a matching SYNC(1, token), it once again
162  starts accepting messages to forward to the remote side
163
164
165--- message command constants ------------------------------------------
166
167#define A_SYNC 0x434e5953
168#define A_CNXN 0x4e584e43
169#define A_OPEN 0x4e45504f
170#define A_OKAY 0x59414b4f
171#define A_CLSE 0x45534c43
172#define A_WRTE 0x45545257
173
174
175
176--- implementation details ---------------------------------------------
177
178The core of the bridge program will use three threads.  One thread
179will be a select/epoll loop to handle io between various inbound and
180outbound connections and the connection to the remote side.
181
182The remote side connection will be implemented as two threads (one for
183reading, one for writing) and a datagram socketpair to provide the
184channel between the main select/epoll thread and the remote connection
185threadpair.  The reason for this is that for usb connections, the
186kernel interface on linux and osx does not allow you to do meaningful
187nonblocking IO.
188
189The endian swapping for the message headers will happen (as needed) in
190the remote connection threadpair and that the rest of the program will
191always treat message header values as native-endian.
192
193The bridge program will be able to have a number of mini-servers
194compiled in.  They will be published under known names (examples
195"shell", "fs-bridge", etc) and upon receiving an OPEN() to such a
196service, the bridge program will create a stream socketpair and spawn
197a thread or subprocess to handle the io.
198
199
200--- simplified / embedded implementation -------------------------------
201
202For limited environments, like the bootloader, it is allowable to
203support a smaller, fixed number of channels using pre-assigned channel
204ID numbers such that only one stream may be connected to a bootloader
205endpoint at any given time.  The protocol remains unchanged, but the
206"embedded" version of it is less dynamic.
207
208The bootloader will support two streams.  A "bootloader:debug" stream,
209which may be opened to get debug messages from the bootloader and a 
210"bootloader:control", stream which will support the set of basic 
211bootloader commands.
212
213Example command stream dialogues:  
214  "flash_kernel,2515049,........\n" "okay\n" 
215  "flash_ramdisk,5038,........\n" "fail,flash write error\n" 
216  "bogus_command......" <CLOSE>
217
218
219--- future expansion ---------------------------------------------------
220
221I plan on providing either a message or a special control stream so that
222the client device could ask the host computer to setup inbound socket
223translations on the fly on behalf of the client device.
224
225
226The initial design does handshaking to provide flow control, with a
227message flow that looks like:
228
229  >OPEN <READY >WRITE <READY >WRITE <READY >WRITE <CLOSE
230
231The far side may choose to issue the READY message as soon as it receives
232a WRITE or it may defer the READY until the write to the local stream
233succeeds.  A future version may want to do some level of windowing where
234multiple WRITEs may be sent without requiring individual READY acks.
235
236------------------------------------------------------------------------
237
238--- smartsockets -------------------------------------------------------
239
240Port 5037 is used for smart sockets which allow a client on the host
241side to request access to a service in the host adb daemon or in the
242remote (device) daemon.  The service is requested by ascii name,
243preceeded by a 4 digit hex length.  Upon successful connection an
244"OKAY" response is sent, otherwise a "FAIL" message is returned.  Once
245connected the client is talking to that (remote or local) service.
246
247client: <hex4> <service-name>
248server: "OKAY"
249
250client: <hex4> <service-name>
251server: "FAIL" <hex4> <reason>
252
253