blob: 02467dd19fad83b564ccb3b2f580acb783a1eea6 [file] [log] [blame] [view]
Erik van Oosten3f5fa5f2016-06-29 13:24:00 +02001Thrift Compact protocol encoding
2================================
3
Jens Geyer57679012016-09-21 22:18:44 +02004<!--
Erik van Oosten3f5fa5f2016-06-29 13:24:00 +02005--------------------------------------------------------------------
6
7Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one
8or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file
9distributed with this work for additional information
10regarding copyright ownership. The ASF licenses this file
11to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the
12"License"); you may not use this file except in compliance
13with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
14
15 http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
16
17Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing,
18software distributed under the License is distributed on an
19"AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY
20KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the
21specific language governing permissions and limitations
22under the License.
23
24--------------------------------------------------------------------
Jens Geyer57679012016-09-21 22:18:44 +020025-->
Erik van Oosten3f5fa5f2016-06-29 13:24:00 +020026
27This documents describes the wire encoding for RPC using the Thrift *compact protocol*.
28
29The information here is _mostly_ based on the Java implementation in the Apache thrift library (version 0.9.1) and
30[THRIFT-110 A more compact format](https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/THRIFT-110). Other implementation however,
31should behave the same.
32
33For background on Thrift see the [Thrift whitepaper (pdf)](https://thrift.apache.org/static/files/thrift-20070401.pdf).
34
35# Contents
36
37* Compact protocol
38 * Base types
39 * Message
40 * Struct
41 * List and Set
42 * Map
43* BNF notation used in this document
44
45# Compact protocol
46
47## Base types
48
49### Integer encoding
50
51The _compact protocol_ uses multiple encodings for ints: the _zigzag int_, and the _var int_.
52
53Values of type `int32` and `int64` are first transformed to a *zigzag int*. A zigzag int folds positive and negative
54numbers into the positive number space. When we read 0, 1, 2, 3, 4 or 5 from the wire, this is translated to 0, -1, 1,
55-2 or 2 respectively. Here are the (Scala) formulas to convert from int32/int64 to a zigzag int and back:
56
57```scala
58def intToZigZag(n: Int): Int = (n << 1) ^ (n >> 31)
59def zigzagToInt(n: Int): Int = (n >>> 1) ^ - (n & 1)
60def longToZigZag(n: Long): Long = (n << 1) ^ (n >> 63)
61def zigzagToLong(n: Long): Long = (n >>> 1) ^ - (n & 1)
62```
63
64The zigzag int is then encoded as a *var int*. Var ints take 1 to 5 bytes (int32) or 1 to 10 bytes (int64). The most
65significant bit of each byte indicates if more bytes follow. The concatenation of the least significant 7 bits from each
66byte form the number, where the first byte has the most significant bits (so they are in big endian or network order).
67
68Var ints are sometimes used directly inside the compact protocol to represent positive numbers.
69
70To encode an `int16` as zigzag int, it is first converted to an `int32` and then encoded as such. The type `int8` simply
71uses a single byte as in the binary protocol.
72
73### Enum encoding
74
75The generated code encodes `Enum`s by taking the ordinal value and then encoding that as an int32.
76
77### Binary encoding
78
79Binary is sent as follows:
80
81```
82Binary protocol, binary data, 1+ bytes:
83+--------+...+--------+--------+...+--------+
84| byte length | bytes |
85+--------+...+--------+--------+...+--------+
86```
87
88Where:
89
90* `byte length` is the length of the byte array, using var int encoding (must be >= 0).
91* `bytes` are the bytes of the byte array.
92
93### String encoding
94
95*String*s are first encoded to UTF-8, and then send as binary.
96
97### Double encoding
98
99Values of type `double` are first converted to an int64 according to the IEEE 754 floating-point "double format" bit
100layout. Most run-times provide a library to make this conversion. Both the binary protocol as the compact protocol then
101encode the int64 in 8 bytes in big endian order.
102
103### Boolean encoding
104
105Booleans are encoded differently depending on whether it is a field value (in a struct) or an element value (in a set,
106list or map). Field values are encoded directly in the field header. Element values of type `bool` are sent as an int8;
107true as `1` and false as `0`.
108
109## Message
110
111A `Message` on the wire looks as follows:
112
113```
114Compact protocol Message (4+ bytes):
115+--------+--------+--------+...+--------+--------+...+--------+--------+...+--------+
116|pppppppp|mmmvvvvv| seq id | name length | name |
117+--------+--------+--------+...+--------+--------+...+--------+--------+...+--------+
118```
119
120Where:
121
122* `pppppppp` is the protocol id, fixed to `1000 0010`, 0x82.
123* `mmm` is the message type, an unsigned 3 bit integer.
124* `vvvvv` is the version, an unsigned 5 bit integer, fixed to `00001`.
125* `seq id` is the sequence id, a signed 32 bit integer encoded as a var int.
126* `name length` is the byte length of the name field, a signed 32 bit integer encoded as a var int (must be >= 0).
127* `name` is the method name to invoke, a UTF-8 encoded string.
128
129Message types are encoded with the following values:
130
131* _Call_: 1
132* _Reply_: 2
133* _Exception_: 3
134* _Oneway_: 4
135
136### Struct
137
138A *Struct* is a sequence of zero or more fields, followed by a stop field. Each field starts with a field header and
139is followed by the encoded field value. The encoding can be summarized by the following BNF:
140
141```
142struct ::= ( field-header field-value )* stop-field
143field-header ::= field-type field-id
144```
145
146Because each field header contains the field-id (as defined by the Thrift IDL file), the fields can be encoded in any
147order. Thrift's type system is not extensible; you can only encode the primitive types and structs. Therefore is also
148possible to handle unknown fields while decoding; these are simply ignored. While decoding the field type can be used to
149determine how to decode the field value.
150
151Note that the field name is not encoded so field renames in the IDL do not affect forward and backward compatibility.
152
153The default Java implementation (Apache Thrift 0.9.1) has undefined behavior when it tries to decode a field that has
Klaus Trainere41e47c2017-05-17 11:11:19 +0200154another field-type than what is expected. Theoretically this could be detected at the cost of some additional checking.
Erik van Oosten3f5fa5f2016-06-29 13:24:00 +0200155Other implementation may perform this check and then either ignore the field, or return a protocol exception.
156
157A *Union* is encoded exactly the same as a struct with the additional restriction that at most 1 field may be encoded.
158
159An *Exception* is encoded exactly the same as a struct.
160
161### Struct encoding
162
163```
164Compact protocol field header (short form) and field value:
165+--------+--------+...+--------+
166|ddddtttt| field value |
167+--------+--------+...+--------+
168
169Compact protocol field header (1 to 3 bytes, long form) and field value:
170+--------+--------+...+--------+--------+...+--------+
171|0000tttt| field id | field value |
172+--------+--------+...+--------+--------+...+--------+
173
174Compact protocol stop field:
175+--------+
176|00000000|
177+--------+
178```
179
180Where:
181
182* `dddd` is the field id delta, an unsigned 4 bits integer, strictly positive.
183* `tttt` is field-type id, an unsigned 4 bit integer.
184* `field id` the field id, a signed 16 bit integer encoded as zigzag int.
185* `field-value` the encoded field value.
186
187The field id delta can be computed by `current-field-id - previous-field-id`, or just `current-field-id` if this is the
188first of the struct. The short form should be used when the field id delta is in the range 1 - 15 (inclusive).
189
190The following field-types can be encoded:
191
192* `BOOLEAN_TRUE`, encoded as `1`
193* `BOOLEAN_FALSE`, encoded as `2`
194* `BYTE`, encoded as `3`
195* `I16`, encoded as `4`
196* `I32`, encoded as `5`
197* `I64`, encoded as `6`
198* `DOUBLE`, encoded as `7`
199* `BINARY`, used for binary and string fields, encoded as `8`
200* `LIST`, encoded as `9`
201* `SET`, encoded as `10`
202* `MAP`, encoded as `11`
203* `STRUCT`, used for both structs and union fields, encoded as `12`
204
205Note that because there are 2 specific field types for the boolean values, the encoding of a boolean field value has no
206length (0 bytes).
207
208## List and Set
209
210List and sets are encoded the same: a header indicating the size and the element-type of the elements, followed by the
211encoded elements.
212
213```
214Compact protocol list header (1 byte, short form) and elements:
215+--------+--------+...+--------+
216|sssstttt| elements |
217+--------+--------+...+--------+
218
219Compact protocol list header (2+ bytes, long form) and elements:
220+--------+--------+...+--------+--------+...+--------+
221|1111tttt| size | elements |
222+--------+--------+...+--------+--------+...+--------+
223```
224
225Where:
226
227* `ssss` is the size, 4 bit unsigned int, values `0` - `14`
228* `tttt` is the element-type, a 4 bit unsigned int
229* `size` is the size, a var int (int32), positive values `15` or higher
230* `elements` are the encoded elements
231
232The short form should be used when the length is in the range 0 - 14 (inclusive).
233
234The following element-types are used (note that these are _different_ from the field-types):
235
236* `BOOL`, encoded as `2`
237* `BYTE`, encoded as `3`
238* `DOUBLE`, encoded as `4`
239* `I16`, encoded as `6`
240* `I32`, encoded as `8`
241* `I64`, encoded as `10`
242* `STRING`, used for binary and string fields, encoded as `11`
243* `STRUCT`, used for structs and union fields, encoded as `12`
244* `MAP`, encoded as `13`
245* `SET`, encoded as `14`
246* `LIST`, encoded as `15`
247
248
249The maximum list/set size is configurable. By default there is no limit (meaning the limit is the maximum int32 value:
2502147483647).
251
252## Map
253
254Maps are encoded with a header indicating the size, the type of the keys and the element-type of the elements, followed
255by the encoded elements. The encoding follows this BNF:
256
257```
258map ::= empty-map | non-empty-map
259empty-map ::= `0`
260non-empty-map ::= size key-element-type value-element-type (key value)+
261```
262
263```
264Compact protocol map header (1 byte, empty map):
265+--------+
266|00000000|
267+--------+
268
269Compact protocol map header (2+ bytes, non empty map) and key value pairs:
270+--------+...+--------+--------+--------+...+--------+
271| size |kkkkvvvv| key value pairs |
272+--------+...+--------+--------+--------+...+--------+
273```
274
275Where:
276
277* `size` is the size, a var int (int32), strictly positive values
278* `kkkk` is the key element-type, a 4 bit unsigned int
279* `vvvv` is the value element-type, a 4 bit unsigned int
280* `key value pairs` are the encoded keys and values
281
282The element-types are the same as for lists. The full list is included in the 'List and set' section.
283
284The maximum map size is configurable. By default there is no limit (meaning the limit is the maximum int32 value:
2852147483647).
286
287# BNF notation used in this document
288
289The following BNF notation is used:
290
291* a plus `+` appended to an item represents repetition; the item is repeated 1 or more times
292* a star `*` appended to an item represents optional repetition; the item is repeated 0 or more times
293* a pipe `|` between items represents choice, the first matching item is selected
294* parenthesis `(` and `)` are used for grouping multiple items