| Haproxy's peers v2.0 protocol 08/18/2016 |
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| Author: Emeric Brun ebrun@haproxy.com |
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| I) Encoded Integer and Bitfield. |
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| 0 <= X < 240 : 1 byte (7.875 bits) [ XXXX XXXX ] |
| 240 <= X < 2288 : 2 bytes (11 bits) [ 1111 XXXX ] [ 0XXX XXXX ] |
| 2288 <= X < 264432 : 3 bytes (18 bits) [ 1111 XXXX ] [ 1XXX XXXX ] [ 0XXX XXXX ] |
| 264432 <= X < 33818864 : 4 bytes (25 bits) [ 1111 XXXX ] [ 1XXX XXXX ]*2 [ 0XXX XXXX ] |
| 33818864 <= X < 4328786160 : 5 bytes (32 bits) [ 1111 XXXX ] [ 1XXX XXXX ]*3 [ 0XXX XXXX ] |
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| I) Handshake |
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| Each peer try to connect to each others, and each peer is listening |
| for a connect from other peers. |
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| Client Server |
| Hello Message |
| ------------------------> |
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| Status Message |
| <------------------------ |
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| 1) Hello Message |
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| Hello message is composed of 3 lines: |
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| <protocol> <version> |
| <remotepeerid> |
| <localpeerid> <processpid> <relativepid> |
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| protocol: current value is "HaproxyS" |
| version: current value is "2.0" |
| remotepeerid: is the name of the target peer as defined in the configuration peers section. |
| localpeerid: is the name of the local peer as defined on cmdline or using hostname. |
| processid: is the system process id of the local process. |
| relativepid: is the haproxy's relative pid (0 if nbproc == 1) |
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| 2) Status Message |
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| Status message is a code followed by a LF. |
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| 200: Handshake succeeded |
| 300: Try again later |
| 501: Protocol error |
| 502: Bad version |
| 503: Local peer name mismatch |
| 504: Remote peer name mismatch |
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| IV) Messages |
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| Messages: |
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| 0 - - - - - - - 8 - - - - - - - 16 |
| Message Class| Message Type |
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| if Message Type >= 128 |
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| 0 - - - - - - - 8 - - - - - - - 16 ..... |
| Message Class| Message Type | encoded data length | data |
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| Message Classes: |
| 0: control |
| 1: error |
| 10: related to stick table updates |
| 255: reserved |
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| 1) Control Messages Class |
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| Available message Types for class control: |
| 0: resync request |
| 1: resync finished |
| 2: resync partial |
| 3: resync confirm |
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| a) Resync Request Message |
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| This message is used to request a full resync from a peer |
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| b) Resync Finished Message |
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| This message is used to signal remote peer that locally known updates have been pushed, and local peer was considered up to date. |
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| c) Resync Partial Message |
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| This message is used to signal remote peer that locally known updates have been pushed, and but the local peer is not considered up to date. |
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| d) Resync Confirm Message |
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| This message is an ack for Resync Partial or Finished Messages. |
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| It's allow the remote peer to go back to "on the fly" update process. |
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| 2) Messages Class |
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| Available message Types for this class are: |
| 0: protocol error |
| 1: size limit reached |
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| a) Protocol Message |
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| To signal that a protocol error occured. Connection will be shutdown just after sending this message. |
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| b) Size Limit Error Message |
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| To signal that a message is outsized and can not be correctly handled. Connection will be broken. |
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| 3) Stick Table Updates Messages Class |
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| Available message Types for this class are: |
| 0: Entry update |
| 1: Incremental entry update |
| 2: table definition |
| 3: table switch |
| 4: updates ack message. |
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| a) Update Message |
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| 0 - - - - - - - 8 - - - - - - - 16 ..... |
| Message class | Message Type | encoded data length | data |
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| data is composed like this |
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| 0 - - - - - - - 32 ............................. |
| Local Update ID | Key value | data values .... |
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| Update ID in a 32bits identifier of the local update. |
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| Key value format depends of the table key type: |
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| - for keytype string |
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| 0 ................................. |
| encoded string length | string value |
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| - for keytype integer |
| 0 - - - - - - - - - - 32 |
| encoded integer value | |
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| - for other key type |
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| The value length is annonced in table definition message |
| 0 .................... |
| value |
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| b) Incremental Update Message |
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| Same format than update message except the Update ID is not present, the receiver should |
| consider that the update ID is an increment of 1 of the previous considered update message (partial or not) |
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| c) Table Definition Message |
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| This message is used by the receiver to identify the stick table concerned by next update messages and |
| to know which data is pushed in these updates. |
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| 0 - - - - - - - 8 - - - - - - - 16 ..... |
| Message class | Message Type | encoded data length | data |
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| data is composed like this |
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| 0 ................................................................... |
| Encoded Sender Table Id | Encoded Local Table Name Length | Table Name | Encoded Table Type | Encoded Table Keylen | Encoded Table Data Types Bitfield |
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| Encoded Sender Table ID present a the id numerical ID affected to that table by the sender |
| It will be used by "Updates Aknowlegement Messages" and "Table Switch Messages". |
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| Encoded Local Table Name Length present the length to read the table name. |
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| "Table Name" is the shared identifier of the table (name of the current table in the configuration) |
| It permits the receiver to identify the concerned table. The receiver should keep in memory the matching |
| between the "Sender Table ID" to identify it directly in case of "Table Switch Message". |
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| Table Type present the numeric type of key used to store stick table entries: |
| integer |
| 0: signed integer |
| 1: IPv4 address |
| 2: IPv6 address |
| 3: string |
| 4: binary |
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| Table Keylen present the key length or max length in case of strings or binary (padded with 0). |
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| Data Types Bitfield present the types of data linearly pushed in next updates message (they will be linearly pushed in the update message) |
| Known types are |
| bit |
| 0: server id |
| 1: gpt0 |
| 2: gpc0 |
| 3: gpc0 rate |
| 4: connections counter |
| 5: connection rate |
| 6: number of current connections |
| 7: sessions counter |
| 8: session rate |
| 9: http requests counter |
| 10: http requests rate |
| 11: errors counter |
| 12: errors rate |
| 13: bytes in counter |
| 14: bytes in rate |
| 15: bytes out rate |
| 16: bytes out rate |
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| d) Table Switch Message |
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| After a Table Message Define, this message can be used by the receiver to identify the stick table concerned by next update messages. |
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| 0 - - - - - - - 8 - - - - - - - 16 ..... |
| Message class | Message Type | encoded data length | data |
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| data is composed like this |
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| 0 ..................... |
| encoded Sender Table Id |
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| c) Update Ack Message |
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| 0 - - - - - - - 8 - - - - - - - 16 ..... |
| Message class | Message Type | encoded data length | data |
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| data is composed like this |
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| 0 ....................... - - - - - - - - 32 |
| Encoded Remote Table Id | Update Id |
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| Remote Table Id is the numeric identifier of the table on the remote side. |
| Update Id is the id of the last update locally commited. |
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| If a re-connection occured, the sender should know he will have to restart the push of updates from this point. |
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| III) Initial full resync process. |
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| a) Resync from local old process |
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| An old soft-stopped process will close all established sessions with remote peers and will try to connect to a new |
| local process to push all known ending with a Resync Finished Message or a Resync Partial Message (if it it does not consider itself as full updated). |
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| A new process will wait for a an incoming connection from a local process during 5 seconds. It will learn the updates from this |
| process until he will receive a Resync Finished Message or a Resync Partial Message. If it receive a Resync Finished Message it will consider itself |
| as fully updated and stops to ask for resync. If it receive a Resync Partial Message it will wait once again for 5 seconds for an other incoming connection from a local process. |
| Same thing if the session was broken before receiving any "Resync Partial Message" or "Resync Finished Message". |
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| If one of these 5 seconds timeout expire, the process will try to request resync from a remote connected peer (see b). The process will wait until 5seconds |
| if no available remote peers are found. |
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| If the timeout expire, the process will consider itself ass fully updated |
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| b) Resync from remote peers |
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| The process will randomly choose a remote connected peer and ask for a full resync using a Resync Request Message. The process will wait until 5seconds |
| if no available remote peers are found. |
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| The chosen remote peer will push its all known data ending with a Resync Finished Message or a Resync Partial Message (if it it does not consider itself as full updated). |
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| If it receive a Resync Finished Message it will consider itself as fully updated and stops to ask for resync. |
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| If it receive a Resync Partial Message, the current peer will be flagged to anymore be requested and any other connected peer will be randomly chosen for a resync request (5s). |
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| If the session is broken before receiving any ot these messages any other connected peer will be randomly chosen for a resync request (5s). |
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| If the timeout expire, the process will consider itself as fully updated |
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