--- a/mercurial/help/internals/wireprotocol.txt Mon Feb 05 18:04:40 2018 +0100
+++ b/mercurial/help/internals/wireprotocol.txt Tue Feb 06 10:51:15 2018 -0800
@@ -10,11 +10,43 @@
The protocol is synchronous and does not support multiplexing (concurrent
commands).
-Transport Protocols
-===================
+Handshake
+=========
+
+It is required or common for clients to perform a *handshake* when connecting
+to a server. The handshake serves the following purposes:
+
+* Negotiating protocol/transport level options
+* Allows the client to learn about server capabilities to influence
+ future requests
+* Ensures the underlying transport channel is in a *clean* state
-HTTP Transport
---------------
+An important goal of the handshake is to allow clients to use more modern
+wire protocol features. By default, clients must assume they are talking
+to an old version of Mercurial server (possibly even the very first
+implementation). So, clients should not attempt to call or utilize modern
+wire protocol features until they have confirmation that the server
+supports them. The handshake implementation is designed to allow both
+ends to utilize the latest set of features and capabilities with as
+few round trips as possible.
+
+The handshake mechanism varies by transport and protocol and is documented
+in the sections below.
+
+HTTP Protocol
+=============
+
+Handshake
+---------
+
+The client sends a ``capabilities`` command request (``?cmd=capabilities``)
+as soon as HTTP requests may be issued.
+
+The server responds with a capabilities string, which the client parses to
+learn about the server's abilities.
+
+HTTP Version 1 Transport
+------------------------
Commands are issued as HTTP/1.0 or HTTP/1.1 requests. Commands are
sent to the base URL of the repository with the command name sent in
@@ -112,11 +144,86 @@
``application/mercurial-0.*`` media type and the HTTP response is typically
using *chunked transfer* (``Transfer-Encoding: chunked``).
-SSH Transport
-=============
+SSH Protocol
+============
+
+Handshake
+---------
+
+For all clients, the handshake consists of the client sending 1 or more
+commands to the server using version 1 of the transport. Servers respond
+to commands they know how to respond to and send an empty response (``0\n``)
+for unknown commands (per standard behavior of version 1 of the transport).
+Clients then typically look for a response to the newest sent command to
+determine which transport version to use and what the available features for
+the connection and server are.
+
+Preceding any response from client-issued commands, the server may print
+non-protocol output. It is common for SSH servers to print banners, message
+of the day announcements, etc when clients connect. It is assumed that any
+such *banner* output will precede any Mercurial server output. So clients
+must be prepared to handle server output on initial connect that isn't
+in response to any client-issued command and doesn't conform to Mercurial's
+wire protocol. This *banner* output should only be on stdout. However,
+some servers may send output on stderr.
+
+Pre 0.9.1 clients issue a ``between`` command with the ``pairs`` argument
+having the value
+``0000000000000000000000000000000000000000-0000000000000000000000000000000000000000``.
+
+The ``between`` command has been supported since the original Mercurial
+SSH 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).
+
+For pre 0.9.1 clients and all servers, the exchange looks like::
+
+ c: between\n
+ c: pairs 81\n
+ c: 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000-0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
+ s: 1\n
+ s: \n
-The SSH transport is a custom text-based protocol suitable for use over any
-bi-directional stream transport. It is most commonly used with SSH.
+0.9.1+ clients send a ``hello`` command (with no arguments) before the
+``between`` command. The response to this command allows clients to
+discover server capabilities and settings.
+
+An example exchange between 0.9.1+ clients and a ``hello`` aware server looks
+like::
+
+ c: hello\n
+ c: between\n
+ c: pairs 81\n
+ c: 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000-0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
+ s: 324\n
+ s: capabilities: lookup changegroupsubset branchmap pushkey known getbundle ...\n
+ s: 1\n
+ s: \n
+
+And a similar scenario but with servers sending a banner on connect::
+
+ c: hello\n
+ c: between\n
+ c: pairs 81\n
+ c: 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000-0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
+ s: welcome to the server\n
+ s: if you find any issues, email someone@somewhere.com\n
+ s: 324\n
+ s: capabilities: lookup changegroupsubset branchmap pushkey known getbundle ...\n
+ s: 1\n
+ s: \n
+
+Note that output from the ``hello`` command is terminated by a ``\n``. This is
+part of the response payload and not part of the wire protocol adding a newline
+after responses. In other words, the length of the response contains the
+trailing ``\n``.
+
+SSH Version 1 Transport
+-----------------------
+
+The SSH transport (version 1) is a custom text-based protocol suitable for
+use over any bi-directional stream transport. It is most commonly used with
+SSH.
A SSH transport server can be started with ``hg serve --stdio``. The stdin,
stderr, and stdout file descriptors of the started process are used to exchange
@@ -463,53 +570,6 @@
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.
-
Content Negotiation
===================
@@ -519,8 +579,8 @@
well-defined response type and only certain commands needed to support
functionality like compression.
-Currently, only the HTTP transport supports content negotiation at the protocol
-layer.
+Currently, only the HTTP version 1 transport supports content negotiation
+at the protocol layer.
HTTP requests advertise supported response formats via the ``X-HgProto-<N>``
request header, where ``<N>`` is an integer starting at 1 allowing the logical
@@ -739,7 +799,7 @@
Boolean indicating whether phases data is requested.
The return type on success is a ``stream`` where the value is bundle.
-On the HTTP transport, the response is zlib compressed.
+On the HTTP version 1 transport, the response is zlib compressed.
If an error occurs, a generic error response can be sent.
@@ -842,13 +902,14 @@
The return type is a ``string``. The value depends on the transport protocol.
-The SSH transport sends a string encoded integer followed by a newline
-(``\n``) which indicates operation result. The server may send additional
-output on the ``stderr`` stream that should be displayed to the user.
+The SSH version 1 transport sends a string encoded integer followed by a
+newline (``\n``) which indicates operation result. The server may send
+additional output on the ``stderr`` stream that should be displayed to the
+user.
-The HTTP transport sends a string encoded integer followed by a newline
-followed by additional server output that should be displayed to the user.
-This may include output from hooks, etc.
+The HTTP version 1 transport sends a string encoded integer followed by a
+newline followed by additional server output that should be displayed to
+the user. This may include output from hooks, etc.
The integer result varies by namespace. ``0`` means an error has occurred
and there should be additional output to display to the user.
@@ -912,18 +973,18 @@
The encoding of the ``push response`` type varies by transport.
-For the SSH transport, this type is composed of 2 ``string`` responses: an
-empty response (``0\n``) followed by the integer result value. e.g.
-``1\n2``. So the full response might be ``0\n1\n2``.
+For the SSH version 1 transport, this type is composed of 2 ``string``
+responses: an empty response (``0\n``) followed by the integer result value.
+e.g. ``1\n2``. So the full response might be ``0\n1\n2``.
-For the HTTP transport, the response is a ``string`` type composed of an
-integer result value followed by a newline (``\n``) followed by string
+For the HTTP version 1 transport, the response is a ``string`` type composed
+of an integer result value followed by a newline (``\n``) followed by string
content holding server output that should be displayed on the client (output
hooks, etc).
In some cases, the server may respond with a ``bundle2`` bundle. In this
-case, the response type is ``stream``. For the HTTP transport, the response
-is zlib compressed.
+case, the response type is ``stream``. For the HTTP version 1 transport, the
+response is zlib compressed.
The server may also respond with a generic error type, which contains a string
indicating the failure.