annotate osx/include/capnp/rpc-twoparty.capnp @ 147:45360b968bf4

Cap'n Proto v0.6 + build for OSX
author Chris Cannam <cannam@all-day-breakfast.com>
date Mon, 22 May 2017 10:01:37 +0100
parents 41e769c91eca
children
rev   line source
cannam@147 1 # Copyright (c) 2013-2014 Sandstorm Development Group, Inc. and contributors
cannam@147 2 # Licensed under the MIT License:
cannam@147 3 #
cannam@147 4 # Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
cannam@147 5 # of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
cannam@147 6 # in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
cannam@147 7 # to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
cannam@147 8 # copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
cannam@147 9 # furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
cannam@147 10 #
cannam@147 11 # The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
cannam@147 12 # all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
cannam@147 13 #
cannam@147 14 # THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
cannam@147 15 # IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
cannam@147 16 # FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
cannam@147 17 # AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
cannam@147 18 # LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
cannam@147 19 # OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN
cannam@147 20 # THE SOFTWARE.
cannam@147 21
cannam@147 22 @0xa184c7885cdaf2a1;
cannam@147 23 # This file defines the "network-specific parameters" in rpc.capnp to support a network consisting
cannam@147 24 # of two vats. Each of these vats may in fact be in communication with other vats, but any
cannam@147 25 # capabilities they forward must be proxied. Thus, to each end of the connection, all capabilities
cannam@147 26 # received from the other end appear to live in a single vat.
cannam@147 27 #
cannam@147 28 # Two notable use cases for this model include:
cannam@147 29 # - Regular client-server communications, where a remote client machine (perhaps living on an end
cannam@147 30 # user's personal device) connects to a server. The server may be part of a cluster, and may
cannam@147 31 # call on other servers in the cluster to help service the user's request. It may even obtain
cannam@147 32 # capabilities from these other servers which it passes on to the user. To simplify network
cannam@147 33 # common traversal problems (e.g. if the user is behind a firewall), it is probably desirable to
cannam@147 34 # multiplex all communications between the server cluster and the client over the original
cannam@147 35 # connection rather than form new ones. This connection should use the two-party protocol, as
cannam@147 36 # the client has no interest in knowing about additional servers.
cannam@147 37 # - Applications running in a sandbox. A supervisor process may execute a confined application
cannam@147 38 # such that all of the confined app's communications with the outside world must pass through
cannam@147 39 # the supervisor. In this case, the connection between the confined app and the supervisor might
cannam@147 40 # as well use the two-party protocol, because the confined app is intentionally prevented from
cannam@147 41 # talking to any other vat anyway. Any external resources will be proxied through the supervisor,
cannam@147 42 # and so to the contained app will appear as if they were hosted by the supervisor itself.
cannam@147 43 #
cannam@147 44 # Since there are only two vats in this network, there is never a need for three-way introductions,
cannam@147 45 # so level 3 is free. Moreover, because it is never necessary to form new connections, the
cannam@147 46 # two-party protocol can be used easily anywhere where a two-way byte stream exists, without regard
cannam@147 47 # to where that byte stream goes or how it was initiated. This makes the two-party runtime library
cannam@147 48 # highly reusable.
cannam@147 49 #
cannam@147 50 # Joins (level 4) _could_ be needed in cases where one or both vats are participating in other
cannam@147 51 # networks that use joins. For instance, if Alice and Bob are speaking through the two-party
cannam@147 52 # protocol, and Bob is also participating on another network, Bob may send Alice two or more
cannam@147 53 # proxied capabilities which, unbeknownst to Bob at the time, are in fact pointing at the same
cannam@147 54 # remote object. Alice may then request to join these capabilities, at which point Bob will have
cannam@147 55 # to forward the join to the other network. Note, however, that if Alice is _not_ participating on
cannam@147 56 # any other network, then Alice will never need to _receive_ a Join, because Alice would always
cannam@147 57 # know when two locally-hosted capabilities are the same and would never export a redundant alias
cannam@147 58 # to Bob. So, Alice can respond to all incoming joins with an error, and only needs to implement
cannam@147 59 # outgoing joins if she herself desires to use this feature. Also, outgoing joins are relatively
cannam@147 60 # easy to implement in this scenario.
cannam@147 61 #
cannam@147 62 # What all this means is that a level 4 implementation of the confined network is barely more
cannam@147 63 # complicated than a level 2 implementation. However, such an implementation allows the "client"
cannam@147 64 # or "confined" app to access the server's/supervisor's network with equal functionality to any
cannam@147 65 # native participant. In other words, an application which implements only the two-party protocol
cannam@147 66 # can be paired with a proxy app in order to participate in any network.
cannam@147 67 #
cannam@147 68 # So, when implementing Cap'n Proto in a new language, it makes sense to implement only the
cannam@147 69 # two-party protocol initially, and then pair applications with an appropriate proxy written in
cannam@147 70 # C++, rather than implement other parameterizations of the RPC protocol directly.
cannam@147 71
cannam@147 72 using Cxx = import "/capnp/c++.capnp";
cannam@147 73 $Cxx.namespace("capnp::rpc::twoparty");
cannam@147 74
cannam@147 75 # Note: SturdyRef is not specified here. It is up to the application to define semantics of
cannam@147 76 # SturdyRefs if desired.
cannam@147 77
cannam@147 78 enum Side {
cannam@147 79 server @0;
cannam@147 80 # The object lives on the "server" or "supervisor" end of the connection. Only the
cannam@147 81 # server/supervisor knows how to interpret the ref; to the client, it is opaque.
cannam@147 82 #
cannam@147 83 # Note that containers intending to implement strong confinement should rewrite SturdyRefs
cannam@147 84 # received from the external network before passing them on to the confined app. The confined
cannam@147 85 # app thus does not ever receive the raw bits of the SturdyRef (which it could perhaps
cannam@147 86 # maliciously leak), but instead receives only a thing that it can pass back to the container
cannam@147 87 # later to restore the ref. See:
cannam@147 88 # http://www.erights.org/elib/capability/dist-confine.html
cannam@147 89
cannam@147 90 client @1;
cannam@147 91 # The object lives on the "client" or "confined app" end of the connection. Only the client
cannam@147 92 # knows how to interpret the ref; to the server/supervisor, it is opaque. Most clients do not
cannam@147 93 # actually know how to persist capabilities at all, so use of this is unusual.
cannam@147 94 }
cannam@147 95
cannam@147 96 struct VatId {
cannam@147 97 side @0 :Side;
cannam@147 98 }
cannam@147 99
cannam@147 100 struct ProvisionId {
cannam@147 101 # Only used for joins, since three-way introductions never happen on a two-party network.
cannam@147 102
cannam@147 103 joinId @0 :UInt32;
cannam@147 104 # The ID from `JoinKeyPart`.
cannam@147 105 }
cannam@147 106
cannam@147 107 struct RecipientId {}
cannam@147 108 # Never used, because there are only two parties.
cannam@147 109
cannam@147 110 struct ThirdPartyCapId {}
cannam@147 111 # Never used, because there is no third party.
cannam@147 112
cannam@147 113 struct JoinKeyPart {
cannam@147 114 # Joins in the two-party case are simplified by a few observations.
cannam@147 115 #
cannam@147 116 # First, on a two-party network, a Join only ever makes sense if the receiving end is also
cannam@147 117 # connected to other networks. A vat which is not connected to any other network can safely
cannam@147 118 # reject all joins.
cannam@147 119 #
cannam@147 120 # Second, since a two-party connection bisects the network -- there can be no other connections
cannam@147 121 # between the networks at either end of the connection -- if one part of a join crosses the
cannam@147 122 # connection, then _all_ parts must cross it. Therefore, a vat which is receiving a Join request
cannam@147 123 # off some other network which needs to be forwarded across the two-party connection can
cannam@147 124 # collect all the parts on its end and only forward them across the two-party connection when all
cannam@147 125 # have been received.
cannam@147 126 #
cannam@147 127 # For example, imagine that Alice and Bob are vats connected over a two-party connection, and
cannam@147 128 # each is also connected to other networks. At some point, Alice receives one part of a Join
cannam@147 129 # request off her network. The request is addressed to a capability that Alice received from
cannam@147 130 # Bob and is proxying to her other network. Alice goes ahead and responds to the Join part as
cannam@147 131 # if she hosted the capability locally (this is important so that if not all the Join parts end
cannam@147 132 # up at Alice, the original sender can detect the failed Join without hanging). As other parts
cannam@147 133 # trickle in, Alice verifies that each part is addressed to a capability from Bob and continues
cannam@147 134 # to respond to each one. Once the complete set of join parts is received, Alice checks if they
cannam@147 135 # were all for the exact same capability. If so, she doesn't need to send anything to Bob at
cannam@147 136 # all. Otherwise, she collects the set of capabilities (from Bob) to which the join parts were
cannam@147 137 # addressed and essentially initiates a _new_ Join request on those capabilities to Bob. Alice
cannam@147 138 # does not forward the Join parts she received herself, but essentially forwards the Join as a
cannam@147 139 # whole.
cannam@147 140 #
cannam@147 141 # On Bob's end, since he knows that Alice will always send all parts of a Join together, he
cannam@147 142 # simply waits until he's received them all, then performs a join on the respective capabilities
cannam@147 143 # as if it had been requested locally.
cannam@147 144
cannam@147 145 joinId @0 :UInt32;
cannam@147 146 # A number identifying this join, chosen by the sender. May be reused once `Finish` messages are
cannam@147 147 # sent corresponding to all of the `Join` messages.
cannam@147 148
cannam@147 149 partCount @1 :UInt16;
cannam@147 150 # The number of capabilities to be joined.
cannam@147 151
cannam@147 152 partNum @2 :UInt16;
cannam@147 153 # Which part this request targets -- a number in the range [0, partCount).
cannam@147 154 }
cannam@147 155
cannam@147 156 struct JoinResult {
cannam@147 157 joinId @0 :UInt32;
cannam@147 158 # Matches `JoinKeyPart`.
cannam@147 159
cannam@147 160 succeeded @1 :Bool;
cannam@147 161 # All JoinResults in the set will have the same value for `succeeded`. The receiver actually
cannam@147 162 # implements the join by waiting for all the `JoinKeyParts` and then performing its own join on
cannam@147 163 # them, then going back and answering all the join requests afterwards.
cannam@147 164
cannam@147 165 cap @2 :AnyPointer;
cannam@147 166 # One of the JoinResults will have a non-null `cap` which is the joined capability.
cannam@147 167 #
cannam@147 168 # TODO(cleanup): Change `AnyPointer` to `Capability` when that is supported.
cannam@147 169 }