ipc: document how to detect i3’s byte order in memory-safe languages (#2961)

related to issue #2958
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Michael Stapelberg 2017-09-18 17:15:28 +02:00 committed by GitHub
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@ -883,3 +883,63 @@ Rust::
* https://github.com/tmerr/i3ipc-rs
OCaml::
* https://github.com/Armael/ocaml-i3ipc
== Appendix A: Detecting byte order in memory-safe languages
Some programming languages such as Go dont offer a way to serialize data in the
native byte order of the machine theyre running on without resorting to tricks
involving the +unsafe+ package.
The following technique can be used (and will not be broken by changes to i3) to
detect the byte order i3 is using:
1. The byte order dependent fields of an IPC message are message type and
payload length.
* The message type +RUN_COMMAND+ (0) is the same in big and little endian, so
we can use it in either byte order to elicit a reply from i3.
* The payload length 65536 + 256 (+0x00 01 01 00+) is the same in big and
little endian, and also small enough to not worry about memory allocations
of that size. We must use payloads of length 65536 + 256 in every message
we send, so that i3 will be able to read the entire message regardless of
the byte order it uses.
2. Send a big endian encoded message of type +SUBSCRIBE+ (2) with payload `[]`
followed by 65536 + 256 - 2 +SPACE+ (ASCII 0x20) bytes.
* If i3 is running in big endian, this message is treated as a noop,
resulting in a +SUBSCRIBE+ reply with payload `{"success":true}`
footnote:[A small payload is important: that way, we circumvent dealing
with UNIX domain socket buffer sizes, whose size depends on the
implementation/operating system. Exhausting such a buffer results in an i3
deadlock unless you concurrently read and write, which — depending on the
programming language — makes the technique much more complicated.].
* If i3 is running in little endian, this message is read in its entirety due
to the byte order independent payload length, then
https://github.com/i3/i3/blob/d726d09d496577d1c337a4b97486f2c9fbc914f1/src/ipc.c#L1188[silently
discarded] due to the unknown message type.
3. Send a byte order independent message, i.e. type +RUN_COMMAND+ (0) with
payload +nop byte order detection. padding:+, padded to 65536 + 256 bytes
with +a+ (ASCII 0x61) bytes. i3 will reply to this message with a reply of
type +COMMAND+ (0).
* The human-readable prefix is in there to not confuse readers of the i3 log.
* This messages serves as a synchronization primitive so that we know whether
i3 discarded the +SUBSCRIBE+ message or didnt answer it yet.
4. Receive a message header from i3, decoding the message type as big endian.
* If the messages reply type is +COMMAND+ (0), i3 is running in little
endian (because the +SUBSCRIBE+ message was discarded). Decode the message
payload length as little endian, receive the message payload.
* If the messages reply type is anything else, i3 is running in big endian
(because our big endian encoded +SUBSCRIBE+ message was answered). Decode
the message payload length in big endian, receive the message
payload. Then, receive the pending +COMMAND+ message reply in big endian.
5. From here on out, send/receive all messages using the detected byte order.