diff -r 2435ba6c82e6 -r f0d47aca1d47 mercurial/help/internals/wireprotocol.txt --- a/mercurial/help/internals/wireprotocol.txt Mon Aug 22 19:48:31 2016 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/help/internals/wireprotocol.txt Mon Aug 22 19:49:59 2016 -0700 @@ -368,3 +368,50 @@ comma-delimited list. e.g. ``HG10GZ,HG10BZ,HG10UN``. The order of values reflects the priority/preference of that type, where the first value is the most preferred type. + +Handshake Protocol +================== + +While not explicitly required, it is common for clients to perform a +*handshake* when connecting to a server. The handshake accomplishes 2 things: + +* Obtaining capabilities and other server features +* Flushing extra server output (e.g. SSH servers may print extra text + when connecting that may confuse the wire protocol) + +This isn't a traditional *handshake* as far as network protocols go because +there is no persistent state as a result of the handshake: the handshake is +simply the issuing of commands and commands are stateless. + +The canonical clients perform a capabilities lookup at connection establishment +time. This is because clients must assume a server only supports the features +of the original Mercurial server implementation until proven otherwise (from +advertised capabilities). Nearly every server running today supports features +that weren't present in the original Mercurial server implementation. Rather +than wait for a client to perform functionality that needs to consult +capabilities, it issues the lookup at connection start to avoid any delay later. + +For HTTP servers, the client sends a ``capabilities`` command request as +soon as the connection is established. The server responds with a capabilities +string, which the client parses. + +For SSH servers, the client sends the ``hello`` command (no arguments) +and a ``between`` command with the ``pairs`` argument having the value +``0000000000000000000000000000000000000000-0000000000000000000000000000000000000000``. + +The ``between`` command has been supported since the original Mercurial +server. Requesting the empty range will return a ``\n`` string response, +which will be encoded as ``1\n\n`` (value length of ``1`` followed by a newline +followed by the value, which happens to be a newline). + +The ``hello`` command was later introduced. Servers supporting it will issue +a response to that command before sending the ``1\n\n`` response to the +``between`` command. Servers not supporting ``hello`` will send an empty +response (``0\n``). + +In addition to the expected output from the ``hello`` and ``between`` commands, +servers may also send other output, such as *message of the day (MOTD)* +announcements. Clients assume servers will send this output before the +Mercurial server replies to the client-issued commands. So any server output +not conforming to the expected command responses is assumed to be not related +to Mercurial and can be ignored.