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// Copyright 2017 The Fuchsia Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
// found in the LICENSE file.
#ifndef SYSROOT_ZIRCON_FIDL_H_
#define SYSROOT_ZIRCON_FIDL_H_
#include <assert.h> // NOLINT(modernize-deprecated-headers, foobar)
#include <stdalign.h> // NOLINT(modernize-deprecated-headers)
#include <stdint.h> // NOLINT(modernize-*)
#include <zircon/compiler.h>
#include <zircon/types.h>
__BEGIN_CDECLS
// Fidl data types have a representation in a wire format. This wire
// format is shared by all language bindings, including C11 and C++.
//
// The C bindings also define a representation of fidl data types. For
// a given type, the size and alignment of all parts of the type agree
// with the wire format's representation. The C representation differs
// in the representation of pointers to out-of-line allocations. On
// the wire, allocations are encoded as either present or not. In C,
// they are actual pointers. The C representation also places any
// transferred handle types (including requests) inline. The wire
// format tracks handles separately, just like the underlying channel
// transport does.
//
// Turning the wire format into the C format is called decoding.
//
// Turning the C format into the wire format is called encoding.
//
// The formats are designed to allow for in-place coding, assuming all
// out-of-line allocations placed are in traversal order (defined
// below) with natural alignment.
// Bounds.
// Various fidl types, such as strings and vectors, may be bounded. If
// no explicit bound is given, then FIDL_MAX_SIZE is implied.
#define FIDL_MAX_SIZE UINT32_MAX
// Out of line allocations.
// The fidl wire format represents potential out-of-line allocations
// (corresponding to actual pointer types in the C format) as
// uintptr_t. For allocations that are actually present and that will
// be patched up with pointers during decoding, the FIDL_ALLOC_PRESENT
// value is used. For non-present nullable allocations, the
// FIDL_ALLOC_ABSENT value is used.
#define FIDL_ALLOC_PRESENT ((uintptr_t)UINTPTR_MAX)
#define FIDL_ALLOC_ABSENT ((uintptr_t)0)
// Out of line allocations are all 8 byte aligned.
// TODO(fxb/42792): Remove either this FIDL_ALIGN macro or the FidlAlign function in
// fidl/internal.h.
#define FIDL_ALIGNMENT ((size_t)8)
#define FIDL_ALIGN(a) (((a) + 7u) & ~7u)
#define FIDL_ALIGNDECL alignas(FIDL_ALIGNMENT)
// An opaque struct representing the encoding of a particular fidl
// type.
typedef struct fidl_type fidl_type_t;
// Primitive types.
// Both on the wire and once deserialized, primitive fidl types
// correspond directly to C types. There is no intermediate layer of
// typedefs. For instance, fidl's float64 is generated as double.
// All primitive types are non-nullable.
// All primitive types are naturally sized and aligned on the wire.
// fidl C Meaning.
// ---------------------------------------------
// bool bool A boolean.
// int8 int8_t An 8 bit signed integer.
// int16 int16_t A 16 bit signed integer.
// int32 int32_t A 32 bit signed integer.
// int64 int64_t A 64 bit signed integer.
// uint8 uint8_t An 8 bit unsigned integer.
// uint16 uint16_t A 16 bit unsigned integer.
// uint32 uint32_t A 32 bit unsigned integer.
// uint64 uint64_t A 64 bit unsigned integer.
// float32 float A 32 bit IEEE-754 float.
// float64 double A 64 bit IEEE-754 float.
// Enums.
// Fidl enums have an undering integer type (one of int8, int16,
// int32, int64, uint8, uint16, uint32, or uint64). The wire format of
// an enum and the C format of an enum are the same as the
// corresponding primitive type.
// String types.
// Fidl strings are variable-length UTF-8 strings. Strings can be
// nullable (string?) or nonnullable (string); if nullable, the null
// string is distinct from the empty string. Strings can be bounded to
// a fixed byte length (e.g. string:40? is a nullable string of at
// most 40 bytes).
// Strings are not guaranteed to be nul terminated. Strings can
// contain embedded nuls throughout their length.
// The fidl wire format dictates that strings are valid UTF-8. It is
// up to clients to provide well-formed UTF-8 and servers to check for
// it. Message encoding and decoding can, but does not by default,
// perform this check.
// All deserialized string types are represented by the fidl_string_t
// structure. This structure consists of a size (in bytes) and a
// pointer to an out-of-line allocation of uint8_t, guaranteed to be
// at least as long as the length.
// The bound on a string type is not present in the serialized format,
// but is checked as part of validation.
typedef struct fidl_string {
// Number of UTF-8 code units (bytes), must be 0 if |data| is null.
uint64_t size;
// Pointer to UTF-8 code units (bytes) or null
char* data;
} fidl_string_t;
// When encoded, an absent nullable string is represented as a
// fidl_string_t with size 0 and FIDL_ALLOC_ABSENT data, with no
// out-of-line allocation associated with it. A present string
// (nullable or not) is represented as a fidl_string_t with some size
// and with data equal to FIDL_ALLOC_PRESENT, which the decoding
// process replaces with an actual pointer to the next out-of-line
// allocation.
// All string types:
// fidl C Meaning
// -----------------------------------------------------------------
// string fidl_string_t A string of arbitrary length.
// string? fidl_string_t An optional string of arbitrary length.
// string:N fidl_string_t A string up to N bytes long.
// string:N? fidl_string_t An optional string up to N bytes long.
// Arrays.
// On the wire, an array of N objects of type T (array<T, N>) is
// represented the same as N contiguous Ts. Equivalently, it is
// represented the same as a nonnullable struct containing N fields
// all of type T.
// In C, this is just represented as a C array of the corresponding C
// type.
// Vector types.
// Fidl vectors are variable-length arrays of a given type T. Vectors
// can be nullable (vector<T>?) or nonnullable (vector<T>); if
// nullable, the null vector is distinct from the empty
// vector. Vectors can be bounded to a fixed element length
// (e.g. vector<T>:40? is a nullable vector of at most 40 Ts).
// All deserialized vector types are represented by the fidl_vector_t
// structure. This structure consists of a count and a pointer to the
// bytes.
// The bound on a vector type is not present in the serialized format,
// but is checked as part of validation.
typedef struct fidl_vector {
// Number of elements, must be 0 if |data| is null.
uint64_t count;
// Pointer to element data or null.
void* data;
} fidl_vector_t;
// When encoded, an absent nullable vector is represented as a
// fidl_vector_t with size 0 and FIDL_ALLOC_ABSENT data, with no
// out-of-line allocation associated with it. A present vector
// (nullable or not) is represented as a fidl_vector_t with some size
// and with data equal to FIDL_ALLOC_PRESENT, which the decoding
// process replaces with an actual pointer to the next out-of-line
// allocation.
// All vector types:
// fidl C Meaning
// --------------------------------------------------------------------------
// vector<T> fidl_vector_t A vector of T, of arbitrary length.
// vector<T>? fidl_vector_t An optional vector of T, of arbitrary length.
// vector<T>:N fidl_vector_t A vector of T, up to N elements.
// vector<T>:N? fidl_vector_t An optional vector of T, up to N elements.
// Envelope.
// An efficient way to encapsulate uninterpreted FIDL messages.
// - Stores a variable size uninterpreted payload out-of-line.
// - Payload may contain an arbitrary number of bytes and handles.
// - Allows for encapsulation of one FIDL message inside of another.
// - Building block for extensible structures such as tables & extensible
// unions.
// When encoded for transfer, |data| indicates presence of content:
// - FIDL_ALLOC_ABSENT : envelope is null
// - FIDL_ALLOC_PRESENT : envelope is non-null, |data| is the next out-of-line object
// When decoded for consumption, |data| is a pointer to content.
// - nullptr : envelope is null
// - <valid pointer> : envelope is non-null, |data| is at indicated memory address
typedef struct {
// The size of the entire envelope contents, including any additional
// out-of-line objects that the envelope may contain. For example, a
// vector<string>'s num_bytes for ["hello", "world"] would include the
// string contents in the size, not just the outer vector. Always a multiple
// of 8; must be zero if envelope is null.
uint32_t num_bytes;
// The number of handles in the envelope, including any additional
// out-of-line objects that the envelope contains. Must be zero if envelope is null.
uint32_t num_handles;
// A pointer to the out-of-line envelope data in decoded form, or
// FIDL_ALLOC_(ABSENT|PRESENT) in encoded form.
union {
void* data;
uintptr_t presence;
};
} fidl_envelope_t;
// Handle types.
// Handle types are encoded directly. Just like primitive types, there
// is no fidl-specific handle type. Generated fidl structures simply
// mention zx_handle_t.
// Handle types are either nullable (handle?), or not (handle); and
// either explicitly typed (e.g. handle<Channel> or handle<Job>), or
// not.
// All fidl handle types, regardless of subtype, are represented as
// zx_handle_t. The encoding tables do know the handle subtypes,
// however, for clients which wish to perform explicit checking.
// The following are the possible handle subtypes.
// process
// thread
// vmo
// channel
// event
// port
// interrupt
// iomap
// pci
// log
// socket
// resource
// eventpair
// job
// vmar
// fifo
// hypervisor
// guest
// timer
// All handle types are 4 byte sized and aligned on the wire.
// When encoded, absent nullable handles are represented as
// FIDL_HANDLE_ABSENT. Present handles, whether nullable or not, are
// represented as FIDL_HANDLE_PRESENT, which the decoding process will
// overwrite with the next handle value in the channel message.
#define FIDL_HANDLE_ABSENT ((zx_handle_t)ZX_HANDLE_INVALID)
#define FIDL_HANDLE_PRESENT ((zx_handle_t)UINT32_MAX)
// fidl C Meaning
// ------------------------------------------------------------------
// handle zx_handle_t Any valid handle.
// handle? zx_handle_t Any valid handle, or ZX_HANDLE_INVALID.
// handle<T> zx_handle_t Any valid T handle.
// handle<T>? zx_handle_t Any valid T handle, or ZX_HANDLE_INVALID.
// Unions.
// Fidl unions are a tagged sum type. The tag is a 4 bytes. For every
// union type, the fidl compiler generates an enum representing the
// different variants of the enum. This is followed, in C and on the
// wire, by large enough and aligned enough storage for all members of
// the union.
// Unions may be nullable. Nullable unions are represented as a
// pointer to an out of line allocation of tag-and-member. As with
// other out-of-line allocations, ones present on the wire take the
// value FIDL_ALLOC_PRESENT and those that are not are represented by
// FIDL_ALLOC_NULL. Nonnullable unions are represented inline as a
// tag-and-member.
// For each fidl union type, a corresponding C type is generated. They
// are all structs consisting of a fidl_union_tag_t discriminant,
// followed by an anonymous union of all the union members.
typedef uint32_t fidl_union_tag_t;
// fidl C Meaning
// --------------------------------------------------------------------
// union foo {...} struct union_foo { An inline union.
// fidl_union_tag_t tag;
// union {...};
// }
//
// union foo {...}? struct union_foo* A pointer to a
// union_foo, or else
// FIDL_ALLOC_ABSENT.
// Tables.
// Tables are 'flexible structs', where all members are optional, and new
// members can be added, or old members removed while preserving ABI
// compatibility. Each table member is referenced by ordinal, sequentially
// assigned from 1 onward, with no gaps. Each member content is stored
// out-of-line in an envelope, and a table is simply a vector of these envelopes
// with the requirement that the last envelope must be present in order
// to guarantee a canonical representation.
typedef struct {
fidl_vector_t envelopes;
} fidl_table_t;
// Extensible unions.
// Extensible unions, or "xunions" (colloquially pronounced "zoo-nions") are
// similar to unions, except that storage for union members are out-of-line
// rather than inline. This enables union members to be added and removed while
// preserving ABI compatibility with the existing xunion definition.
typedef uint64_t fidl_xunion_tag_t;
enum {
kFidlXUnionEmptyTag = 0, // The tag representing an empty xunion.
};
typedef struct {
fidl_xunion_tag_t tag;
fidl_envelope_t envelope;
} fidl_xunion_t;
// Messages.
// All fidl messages share a common 16 byte header.
enum {
kFidlWireFormatMagicNumberInitial = 1,
};
typedef struct fidl_message_header {
zx_txid_t txid;
uint8_t flags[3];
// This value indicates the message's wire format. Two sides with different
// wire formats are incompatible with each other
uint8_t magic_number;
uint64_t ordinal;
} fidl_message_header_t;
// Messages which do not have a response use zero as a special
// transaction id.
#define FIDL_TXID_NO_RESPONSE 0ul
// A FIDL message.
typedef struct fidl_msg {
// The bytes of the message.
//
// The bytes of the message might be in the encoded or decoded form.
// Functions that take a |fidl_msg_t| as an argument should document whether
// the expect encoded or decoded messages.
//
// See |num_bytes| for the number of bytes in the message.
void* bytes;
// The handles of the message.
//
// See |num_bytes| for the number of bytes in the message.
zx_handle_t* handles;
// The number of bytes in |bytes|.
uint32_t num_bytes;
// The number of handles in |handles|.
uint32_t num_handles;
} fidl_msg_t;
// An outstanding FIDL transaction.
typedef struct fidl_txn fidl_txn_t;
struct fidl_txn {
// Replies to the outstanding request and complete the FIDL transaction.
//
// Pass the |fidl_txn_t| object itself as the first parameter. The |msg|
// should already be encoded. This function always consumes any handles
// present in |msg|.
//
// Call |reply| only once for each |txn| object. After |reply| returns, the
// |txn| object is considered invalid and might have been freed or reused
// for another purpose.
zx_status_t (*reply)(fidl_txn_t* txn, const fidl_msg_t* msg);
};
// An epitaph is a message that a server sends just prior to closing the
// connection. It provides an indication of why the connection is being closed.
// Epitaphs are defined in the FIDL wire format specification. Once sent down
// the wire, the channel should be closed.
typedef struct fidl_epitaph {
FIDL_ALIGNDECL
// The method ordinal for all epitaphs must be kFidlOrdinalEpitaph
fidl_message_header_t hdr;
// The error associated with this epitaph is stored as a struct{int32} in
// the message payload. System errors must be constants of type zx_status_t,
// which are all negative. Positive numbers should be used for application
// errors. A value of ZX_OK indicates no error.
zx_status_t error;
} fidl_epitaph_t;
// This ordinal value is reserved for Epitaphs.
enum {
kFidlOrdinalEpitaph = 0xFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF,
};
// Assumptions.
// Ensure that FIDL_ALIGNMENT is sufficient.
static_assert(alignof(bool) <= FIDL_ALIGNMENT, "");
static_assert(alignof(int8_t) <= FIDL_ALIGNMENT, "");
static_assert(alignof(int16_t) <= FIDL_ALIGNMENT, "");
static_assert(alignof(int32_t) <= FIDL_ALIGNMENT, "");
static_assert(alignof(int64_t) <= FIDL_ALIGNMENT, "");
static_assert(alignof(uint8_t) <= FIDL_ALIGNMENT, "");
static_assert(alignof(uint16_t) <= FIDL_ALIGNMENT, "");
static_assert(alignof(uint32_t) <= FIDL_ALIGNMENT, "");
static_assert(alignof(uint64_t) <= FIDL_ALIGNMENT, "");
static_assert(alignof(float) <= FIDL_ALIGNMENT, "");
static_assert(alignof(double) <= FIDL_ALIGNMENT, "");
static_assert(alignof(void*) <= FIDL_ALIGNMENT, "");
static_assert(alignof(fidl_union_tag_t) <= FIDL_ALIGNMENT, "");
static_assert(alignof(fidl_message_header_t) <= FIDL_ALIGNMENT, "");
__END_CDECLS
#endif // SYSROOT_ZIRCON_FIDL_H_