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[Xen-devel] [PATCH] xenstore: document the xenstore protocol

To: xen-devel <xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [Xen-devel] [PATCH] xenstore: document the xenstore protocol
From: Ian Jackson <Ian.Jackson@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Tue, 4 Dec 2007 17:16:49 +0000
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The attached patch adds a new text file docs/misc/xenstore.txt which
describes the actual protocol implemented by xenstored.  This was
reverse-engineered from the actual code in tools/xenstore.

I didn't bother making any automatic arrangements to ensure that the
implemented and documented protocols are kept in step (for example,
automatic code generation, etc.)  The protocol is rather messy
unfortunately and unsuitable for an xdr approach, and in any case is
not likely to change very quickly.

Also in this patch are a couple of comments for xenstored_core.c which
help clarify the behaviour of some payload parsing helper functions.

Ian.

Signed-off-by: Ian Jackson <ian.jackson@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>

Xenstore protocol specification
-------------------------------

Xenstore implements a database which maps filename-like pathnames
(also known as `keys') to values.  Clients may read and write values,
watch for changes, and set permissions to allow or deny access.  There
is a rudimentary transaction system.

While xenstore and most tools and APIs are capable of dealing with
arbitrary binary data as values, this should generally be avoided.
Data should generally be human-readable for ease of management and
debugging; xenstore is not a high-performance facility and should be
used only for small amounts of control plane data.  Therefore xenstore
values should normally be 7-bit ASCII text strings containing bytes
0x20..0x7f only, and should not contain a trailing nul byte.  (The
APIs used for accessing xenstore generally add a nul when reading, for
the caller's convenience.)

A separate specification will detail the keys and values which are
used in the Xen system and what their meanings are.  (Sadly that
specification currently exists only in multiple out-of-date versions.)


Paths are /-separated and start with a /, just as Unix filenames.

We can speak of two paths being <child> and <parent>, which is the
case if they're identical, or if <parent> is /, or if <parent>/ is an
initial substring of <child>.  (This includes <path> being a child of
itself.)

If a particular path exists, all of its parents do too.  Every
existing path maps to a possibly empty value, and may also have zero
or more immediate children.  There is thus no particular distinction
between directories and leaf nodes.  However, it is conventional not
to store nonempty values at nodes which also have children.

The permitted character for paths set is ASCII alphanumerics and plus
the four punctuation characters -/_@ (hyphen slash underscore atsign).
@ should be avoided except to specify special watches (see below).
Doubled slashes and trailing slashes (except to specify the root) are
forbidden.  The empty path is also forbidden.


Communication with xenstore is via either sockets, or event channel
and shared memory, as specified in io/xs_wire.h: each message in
either direction is a header formatted as a struct xsd_sockmsg
followed by xsd_sockmsg.len bytes of payload.

The payload syntax varies according to the type field.  Generally
requests each generate a reply with an identical type, req_id and
tx_id.  However, if an error occurs, a reply will be returned with
type ERROR, and only req_id and tx_id copied from the request.

A caller who sends several requests may receive the replies in any
order and must use req_id (and tx_id, if applicable) to match up
replies to requests.  (The current implementation always replies to
requests in the order received but this should not be relied on.)


---------- Xenstore protocol details - introduction ----------

The payload syntax and semantics of the requests and replies are
described below.  In the payload syntax specifications we use the
following notations:

 |              A nul (zero) byte.
 <foo>          A string guaranteed not to contain any nul bytes.
 <foo|>         Binary data (which may contain zero or more nul bytes)
 <foo>|*        Zero or more strings each followed by a trailing nul
 <foo>|+        One or more strings each followed by a trailing nul
 ?              Reserved value (may not contain nuls)
 ??             Reserved value (may contain nuls)

Except as otherwise noted, reserved values are believed to be sent as
empty strings by all current clients.  Clients should not send
nonempty strings for reserved values; those parts of the protocol may
be used for extension in the future.


Error replies are as follows:

ERROR                                           E<something>|
        Where E<something> is the name of an errno value
        listed in io/xs_wire.h.  Note that the string name
        is transmitted, not a numeric value.


Where no reply payload format is specified below, success responses
have the following payload:
                                                OK|

Values commonly included in payloads include:

    <path>
        Specifies a path in the hierarchical key structure.
        If <path> starts with a / it simply represents that path.

        <path> is allowed not to start with /, in which case the
        caller must be a domain (rather than connected via a socket)
        and the path is taken to be relative to /local/domain/<domid>
        (eg, `x/y' sent by domain 3 would mean `/local/domain/3/x/y').

    <domid>
        Integer domid, represented as decimal number 0..65535.
        Parsing errors and values out of range generally go
        undetected.  The special DOMID_... values (see xen.h) are
        represented as integers; unless otherwise specified it
        is an error not to specify a real domain id.



The following are the actual type values, including the request and
reply payloads as applicable:


---------- Database read, write and permissions operatons ----------

READ                    <path>|                 <value|>
WRITE                   <path>|<value|>
        Store and read the octet string <value> at <path>.
        WRITE creates any missing parent paths, with empty values.

MKDIR                   <path>|
        Ensures that the <path> exists, by necessary by creating
        it and any missing parents with empty values.  If <path>
        or any parent already exists, its value is left unchanged.

RM                      <path>|
        Ensures that the <path> does not exist, by deleting
        it and all of its children.  It is not an error if <path> does
        not exist, but it _is_ an error if <path>'s immediate parent
        does not exist either.

DIRECTORY               <path>|                 <child-leaf-name>|*
        Gives a list of the immediate children of <path>, as only the
        leafnames.  The resulting children are each named
        <path>/<child-leaf-name>.

GET_PERMS               <path>|                 <perm-as-string>|+
SET_PERMS               <path>|<perm-as-string>|+?
        <perm-as-string> is one of the following
                w<domid>        write only
                r<domid>        read only
                b<domid>        both read and write
                n<domid>        no access
        See http://wiki.xensource.com/xenwiki/XenBus section
        `Permissions' for details of the permissions system.

---------- Watches ----------

WATCH                   <wpath>|<token>|?
        Adds a watch.

        When a <path> is modified (including path creation, removal,
        contents change or permissions change) this generates an event
        on the changed <path>.  Changes made in transactions cause an
        event only if and when committed.  Each occurring event is
        matched against all the watches currently set up, and each
        matching watch results in a WATCH_EVENT message (see below).

        The event's path matches the watch's <wpath> if it is an child
        of <wpath>.

        <wpath> can be a <path> to watch or @<wspecial>.  In the
        latter case <wspecial> may have any syntax but it matches
        (according to the rules above) only the following special
        events which are invented by xenstored:
            @introduceDomain    occurs on INTRODUCE
            @releaseDomain      occurs on any domain crash or
                                shutdown, and also on RELEASE
                                and domain destruction

        When a watch is first set up it is triggered once straight
        away, with <path> equal to <wpath>.  Watches may be triggered
        spuriously.  The tx_id in a WATCH request is ignored.

WATCH_EVENT                                     <epath>|<token>|
        Unsolicited `reply' generated for matching modfication events
        as described above.  req_id and tx_id are both 0.

        <epath> is the event's path, ie the actual path that was
        modifed; however if the event was the recursive removal of an
        parent of <wpath>, <epath> is just
        <wpath> (rather than the actual path which was removed).  So
        <epath> is a child of <epath>, regardless.

        Iff <wpath> for the watch was specified as a relative pathname,
        the <epath> path will also be relative (with the same base,
        obviously).

UNWATCH                 <wpath>|<token>|?

---------- Transactions ----------

TRANSACTION_START       ??                      <transid>|
        <transid> is an opaque uint32_t allocated by xenstored
        represented as unsigned decimal.  After this, transaction may
        be referenced by using <transid> (as 32-bit binary) in the
        tx_id request header field.  When transaction is started whole
        db is copied; reads and writes happen on the copy.
        It is not legal to send non-0 tx_id in TRANSACTION_START.
        Currently xenstored has the bug that after 2^32 transactions
        it will allocate the transid 0 for an actual transaction.

        Clients using the provided xs.c bindings will send a single
        nul byte for the argument payload.  We recommend that future
        clients continue to do the same; any future extension will not
        use that syntax.

TRANSACTION_END         T|
TRANSACTION_END         F|
        tx_id must refer to existing transaction.  After this
        request the tx_id is no longer valid and may be reused by
        xenstore.  If F, the transaction is discarded.  If T,
        it is committed: if there were any other intervening writes
        then our END gets get EAGAIN.

        The plan is that in the future only intervening `conflicting'
        writes cause EAGAIN, meaning only writes or other commits
        which changed paths which were read or written in the
        transaction at hand.

---------- Domain management and xenstored communications ----------

INTRODUCE               <domid>|<mfn>|<evtchn>|?
        Notifies xenstored to communicate with this domain.

        INTRODUCE is currently only used by xend (during domain
        startup and various forms of restore and resume), and
        xenstored prevents its use other than by dom0.

        <domid> must be a real domain id (not 0 and not a special
        DOMID_... value).  <mfn> must be a machine page in that domain
        represented in signed decimal (!).  <evtchn> must be event
        channel is an unbound event channel in <domid> (likewise in
        decimal), on which xenstored will call bind_interdomain.
        Violations of these rules may result in undefined behaviour;
        for example passing a high-bit-set 32-bit mfn as an unsigned
        decimal will attempt to use 0x7fffffff instead (!).

RELEASE                 <domid>|
        Manually requests that xenstored disconnect from the domain.
        The event channel is unbound at the xenstored end and the page
        unmapped.  If the domain is still running it won't be able to
        communicate with xenstored.  NB that xenstored will in any
        case detect domain destruction and disconnect by itself.
        xenstored prevents the use of RELEASE other than by dom0.

GET_DOMAIN_PATH         <domid>|                <path>|
        Returns the domain's base path, as is used for relative
        transactions: ie, /local/domain/<domid> (with <domid>
        normalised).  The answer will be useless unless <domid> is a
        real domain id.

IS_DOMAIN_INTRODUCED    <domid>|                T| or F|
        Returns T if xenstored is in communication with the domain:
        ie, if INTRODUCE for the domain has not yet been followed by
        domain destruction or explicit RELEASE.

RESUME                  <domid>|

        Arranges that @releaseDomain events will once more be
        generated when the domain becomes shut down.  This might have
        to be used if a domain were to be shut down (generating one
        @releaseDomain) and then subsequently restarted, since the
        state-sensitive algorithm in xenstored will not otherwise send
        further watch event notifications if the domain were to be
        shut down again.

        It is not clear whether this is possible since one would
        normally expect a domain not to be restarted after being shut
        down without being destroyed in the meantime.  There are
        currently no users of this request in xen-unstable.

        xenstored prevents the use of RESUME other than by dom0.

---------- Miscellaneous ----------

DEBUG                   print|<string>|??           sends <string> to debug log
DEBUG                   print|<thing-with-no-nul>   EINVAL
DEBUG                   check|??                    checks xenstored innards
DEBUG                   <anything-else|>            no-op (future extension)

        These requests should not generally be used and may be
        withdrawn in the future.


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