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# API style guidelines
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Generally follow guidance at https://cloud.google.com/apis/design/, in
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particular for proto3 as described at:
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* https://cloud.google.com/apis/design/proto3
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* https://cloud.google.com/apis/design/naming_convention
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* https://developers.google.com/protocol-buffers/docs/style
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A key aspect of our API style is maintaining stability by following the [API versioning
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guidelines](API_VERSIONING.md). All developers must familiarize themselves with these guidelines,
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any PR which makes breaking changes to the API will not be merged.
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In addition, the following conventions should be followed:
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* Every proto directory should have a `README.md` describing its content. See
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for example [envoy.service](envoy/service/README.md).
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* The data plane APIs are primarily intended for machine generation and consumption.
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It is expected that the management server is responsible for mapping higher
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level configuration concepts to concrete API concepts. Similarly, static configuration
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fragments may be generated by tools and UIs, etc. The APIs and tools used
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to generate xDS configuration are beyond the scope of the definitions in this
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repository.
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* Use [wrapped scalar
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types](https://github.com/google/protobuf/blob/master/src/google/protobuf/wrappers.proto)
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if there is any potential need for a field to have a default value that does not
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match the proto3 defaults (0/false/""). For example, new features whose
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default value may change in the future or security mitigations that should be
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default safe in the future but are temporarily not enabled.
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* Use a `[#not-implemented-hide:]` `protodoc` annotation in comments for fields that lack Envoy
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implementation. These indicate that the entity is not implemented in Envoy and the entity
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should be hidden from the Envoy documentation.
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* Always use plural field names for `repeated` fields, such as `filters`.
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* Due to the fact that we consider JSON/YAML to be first class inputs, we cannot easily change a
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a singular field to a repeated field (both due to JSON/YAML array structural differences as well
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as singular vs. plural field naming). If there is a reasonable expectation that a field may need
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to be repeated in the future, but we don't need it to be repeated right away, consider making it
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repeated now but using constraints to enforce a maximum repeated size of 1. E.g.:
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```proto
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repeated OutputSink sinks = 1 [(validate.rules).repeated = {min_items: 1, max_items: 1}];
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```
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* Always use upper camel case names for message types and enum types without embedded
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acronyms, such as `HttpRequest`.
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* Prefer `oneof` selections to boolean overloads of fields, for example, prefer:
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```proto
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oneof path_specifier {
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string simple_path = 1;
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string regex_path = 2;
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}
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```
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to
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```proto
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string path = 1;
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bool path_is_regex = 2;
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```
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This is more efficient, extendable and self-describing.
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* The API includes two types for representing [percents](envoy/type/percent.proto). `Percent` is
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effectively a double value in the range 0.0-100.0. `FractionalPercent` is an integral fraction
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that can be used to create a truncated percentage also in the range 0.0-100.0. In high performance
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paths, `FractionalPercent` is preferred as randomness calculations can be performed using integral
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modulo and comparison operations only without any floating point conversions. Typically, most
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users do not need infinite precision in these paths.
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* For enum types, if one of the enum values is used for most cases, make it the
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first enum value with `0` numeric value. Otherwise, define the first enum
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value like `TYPE_NAME_UNSPECIFIED = 0`, and treat it as an error. This design
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pattern forces developers to explicitly choose the correct enum value for
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their use case, and avoid misunderstanding of the default behavior.
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* For time-related fields, prefer using the well-known types `google.protobuf.Duration` or
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`google.protobuf.Timestamp` instead of raw integers for seconds.
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* If a field is going to contain raw bytes rather than a human-readable string, the field should
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be of type `bytes` instead of `string`.
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* Proto fields should be sorted logically, not by field number.
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## Package organization
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API definitions are layered hierarchically in packages from top-to-bottom as following:
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- `envoy.extensions` contains all definitions for the extensions, the package should match the structure of the `source` directory.
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- `envoy.service` contains gRPC definitions of supporting services and top-level messages for the services.
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e.g. `envoy.service.route.v3` contains RDS, `envoy.service.listener.v3` contains LDS.
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- `envoy.config` contains other definitions for service configuration, bootstrap and some legacy core types.
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- `envoy.data` contains data format declaration for data types that Envoy produces.
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- `envoy.type` contains common protobuf types such as percent, range and matchers.
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Extensions should use the regular hierarchy. For example, configuration for network filters belongs
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in a package under `envoy.extensions.filter.network`.
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## Adding an extension configuration to the API
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Extensions must currently be added as v3 APIs following the [package
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organization](#package-organization) above.
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To add an extension config to the API, the steps below should be followed:
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1. If this is still WiP and subject to breaking changes, use `vNalpha` instead of `vN` in steps
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below. Refer to the [Cache filter config](envoy/extensions/filter/http/cache/v3alpha/cache.proto)
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as an example of `v3alpha`, and the
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[Buffer filter config](envoy/extensions/filter/http/buffer/v3/buffer.proto) as an example of `v3`.
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1. Place the v3 extension configuration `.proto` in `api/envoy/extensions`, e.g.
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`api/envoy/extensions/filter/http/foobar/v3/foobar.proto` together with an initial BUILD file:
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```bazel
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load("@envoy_api//bazel:api_build_system.bzl", "api_proto_package")
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licenses(["notice"]) # Apache 2
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api_proto_package(
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deps = ["@com_github_cncf_udpa//udpa/annotations:pkg"],
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)
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```
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1. Add to the v3 extension config proto `import "udpa/annotations/status.proto";`
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1. If this is still WiP and subject to breaking changes, set
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`option (udpa.annotations.file_status).work_in_progress = true;`.
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1. Add to the v3 extension config proto a file level
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`option (udpa.annotations.file_status).package_version_status = ACTIVE;`.
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This is required to automatically include the config proto in [api/versioning/BUILD](versioning/BUILD).
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1. Add a reference to the v3 extension config in (1) in [api/versioning/BUILD](versioning/BUILD) under `active_protos`.
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1. Run `./tools/proto_format/proto_format.sh fix`. This should regenerate the `BUILD` file,
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reformat `foobar.proto` as needed and also generate the v4alpha extension config (if needed),
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together with shadow API protos.
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1. `git add api/ generated_api_shadow/` to add any new files to your Git index.
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## API annotations
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A number of annotations are used in the Envoy APIs to provide additional API
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metadata. We describe these annotations below by category.
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### Field level
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* `[deprecated = true]` to denote fields that are deprecated in a major version.
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These fields are slated for removal at the next major cycle and follow the
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[breaking change policy](../CONTRIBUTING.md#breaking-change-policy).
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* `[envoy.annotations.disallowed_by_default = true]` to denote fields that have
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been disallowed by default as per the [breaking change policy](../CONTRIBUTING.md#breaking-change-policy).
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* `[(udpa.annotations.field_migrate).rename = "<new field name>"]` to denote that
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the field will be renamed to a given name in the next API major version.
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* `[(udpa.annotations.field_migrate).oneof_promotion = "<oneof name>"]` to denote that
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the field will be promoted to a given `oneof` in the next API major version.
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* `[(udpa.annotations.sensitive) = true]` to denote sensitive fields that
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should be redacted in output such as logging or configuration dumps.
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* [PGV annotations](https://github.com/envoyproxy/protoc-gen-validate) to denote field
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value constraints.
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### Enum value level
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* `[(udpa.annotations.enum_value_migrate).rename = "new enum value name"]` to denote that
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the enum value will be renamed to a given name in the next API major version.
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### Message level
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* `option (udpa.annotations.versioning).previous_message_type = "<message type
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name>";` to denote the previous type name for an upgraded message. You should
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never have to write these manually, they are generated by `protoxform`.
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### Service level
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* `option (envoy.annotations.resource).type = "<resource type name>";` to denote
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the resource type for an xDS service definition.
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### File level
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* `option (udpa.annotations.file_migrate).move_to_package = "<package name>";`
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to denote that in the next major version of the API, the file will be moved to
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the given package. This is consumed by `protoxform`.
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* `option (udpa.annotations.file_status).work_in_progress = true;` to denote a
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file that is still work-in-progress and subject to breaking changes.
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## Principles
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The following principles should be adhered to when extending or modifying the
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xDS APIs:
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* The xDS APIs have a logical distinction between transport and data model:
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- The xDS transport protocol describes the network transport on which xDS
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configuration resources are delivered to clients. A versioned gRPC streaming
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protocol with support for ACK/NACK is provided by xDS; this is known as the
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xDS transport protocol (xDS-TP). xDS configuration resources can also be
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delivered on other transports, e.g. HTTP or filesystem, with some
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limitations (e.g. no version feedback).
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- The xDS data model describes the xDS configuration resources themselves,
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e.g. listeners, route configurations, clusters, endpoints, secrets.
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* The xDS APIs are directionally client and server neutral. While many aspects
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of the APIs reflect the history of their origin as Envoy's control plane APIs,
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API decisions going forward should reflect the principle of client neutrality.
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* The xDS APIs are expressed canonically as [Proto3](https://developers.google.com/protocol-buffers/docs/proto3).
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Both JSON and YAML are also supported formats, with the standard JSON-proto3
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conversion used during client configuration ingestion.
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* xDS APIs are eventual consistency first. For example, if RDS references a
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cluster that has not yet been supplied by CDS, it should be silently ignored
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and traffic not forwarded until the CDS update occurs. Stronger consistency
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guarantees are possible if the management server is able to sequence the xDS
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APIs carefully (for example by using the ADS API below). By following the
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`[CDS, EDS, LDS, RDS]` sequence for all pertinent resources, it will be
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possible to avoid traffic outages during configuration update.
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* The API is primarily intended for machine generation and consumption. It is
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expected that the management server is responsible for mapping higher level
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configuration concepts to API responses. Similarly, static configuration
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fragments may be generated by templating tools, etc. With that consideration,
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we also aim to have API artifacts readable by humans for debugging and
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understanding applied configuration. This implies that APIs do not have to
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have ergonomics as the main driver, but should still be reasonable to read by
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humans. The APIs and tools used to generate xDS configuration are beyond the
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scope of the definitions in this repository.
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* All supported transports (xDS-TP, HTTP, filesystem) support basic singleton xDS
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subscription services CDS/EDS/LDS/RDS/SDS. Advanced APIs such as HDS, ADS and
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EDS multi-dimensional LB are xDS-TP only. This avoids having to map
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complicated bidirectional stream semantics onto REST, etc..
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* Versioning follows the scheme described [here](API_VERSIONING.md). A key
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principle that we target is that API consumers should not be exposed to
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breaking changes where there is no substantial gain in functionality,
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performance, security or implementation simplification. We will tolerate
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technical debt in the API itself, e.g. in the form of vestigial deprecated
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fields or reduced ergnomics (such as not using `oneof` when we would prefer
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to), in order to meet this principle.
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* Namespaces for extensions, metadata, etc. use a reverse DNS naming scheme,
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e.g. `com.google.widget`, `com.lyft.widget`. Client built-ins may be prefixed
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with client name, e.g. `envoy.foo`, `grpc.bar`.
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