comm_wire -
The comm wire protocol
package require comm_wire
The comm command provides an inter-interpreter remote
execution facility much like Tk's send(n), except that it uses
sockets rather than the X server for the communication path. As a
result, comm works with multiple interpreters, works on
Windows and Macintosh systems, and provides control over the remote
execution path.
This document contains a specification of the various versions of the
wire protocol used by comm internally for the communication between
its endpoints. It has no relevance to users of comm, only to
developers who wish to modify the package, write a compatible facility
in a different language, or some other facility based on the same
protocol.
The basic encoding for
all data is UTF-8. Because of this
binary data, including the NULL character, can be sent over the wire
as is, without the need for armoring it.
On top of the
Basic Layer we have a
message oriented exchange of data. Each
message is a
syntactically valid Tcl list terminated with an additional EOL. Note
that EOL characters can occur within the list as well. They can be
distinguished from the terminating EOL by the fact that the data from
the beginning up to their location is not a valid Tcl list.
EOL is signaled through the character
. This is following
the unix convention for line-endings.
As a list each message is composed of words. Their meaning
depends on when the message was sent in the overall exchange. This is
described in the section sections.
The command protocol is defined like this:
-
The first message send by a client to a server, when opening the
connection, contains two words. The first word is a list as well, and
contains the versions of the wire protocol the client is willing to
accept, with the most prefered version first. The second word is the
TCP port the client is listening on for connections to itself.
-
The first message sent by the server to the client, in response to the
message above contains only one word. This word is a list, containing
the string vers as its first element, and the version of the
wire protocol the server has selected from the offered versions as the
second.
All messages coming after the
initial handshake
consist of three words. These are an instruction, a transaction id,
and the payload. The valid instructions are shown below. The
transaction ids are used by the client to match any incoming replies
to the command messages it sent. This means that a server has to copy
the transaction id from a command message to the reply it sends for
that message.
- send
-
- async
-
- command
-
The payload is the Tcl script to execute on the server. It is actually
a list containing the script fragments. These fragement are
concatenated together by the server to form the full script to
execute on the server side.
This emulates the Tcl "eval" semantics.
In most cases it is best to have only one word in the list, a list
containing the exact command.
Examples:
(a) {send 1 {{array get tcl_platform}}}
(b) {send 1 {array get tcl_platform}}
(c) {send 1 {array {get tcl_platform}}}
are all valid representations of the same command. They are
generated via
(a') send {array get tcl_platform}
(b') send array get tcl_platform
(c') send array {get tcl_platform}
respectively
Note that (a), generated by (a'), is the usual form, if only single
commands are sent by the client.
For example constructed using list, if the command contains
variable arguments. Like
send [list array get $the_variable]
These three instructions all invoke the script on the server
side. Their difference is in the treatment of result values, and thus
determines if a reply is expected.
- send
-
A reply is expected. The sender is waiting for the result.
- async
-
No reply is expected, the sender has no interest in the result and is
not waiting for any.
- command
-
A reply is expected, but the sender is not waiting for it. It has
arranged to get a process-internal notification when the result
arrives.
- reply
-
Like the previous three command, however the tcl script in the payload
is highly restricted.
It has to be a syntactically valid Tcl return command. This
contains result code, value, error code, and error info.
Examples:
{reply 1 {return -code 0 {}}}
{reply 1 {return -code 0 {osVersion 2.4.21-99-default byteOrder littleEndian machine i686 platform unix os Linux user andreask wordSize 4}}}
comm
socket, remote communication, communication, ipc, message, rpc