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# gRPC Name Resolution
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## Overview
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gRPC supports DNS as the default name-system. A number of alternative
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name-systems are used in various deployments. We support an API that is
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general enough to support a range of name-systems and the corresponding
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syntax for names. The gRPC client library in various languages will
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provide a plugin mechanism so resolvers for different name-systems can
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be plugged in.
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## Detailed Design
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### Name Syntax
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A fully qualified, self contained name used for gRPC channel construction
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uses URI syntax as defined in [RFC 3986](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3986).
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The URI scheme indicates what resolver plugin to use. If no scheme
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prefix is specified or the scheme is unknown, the `dns` scheme is used
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by default.
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The URI path indicates the name to be resolved.
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Most gRPC implementations support the following URI schemes:
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- `dns:[//authority/]host[:port]` -- DNS (default)
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- `host` is the host to resolve via DNS.
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- `port` is the port to return for each address. If not specified,
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443 is used (but some implementations default to 80 for insecure
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channels).
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- `authority` indicates the DNS server to use, although this is only
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supported by some implementations. (In C-core, the default DNS
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resolver does not support this, but the c-ares based resolver
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supports specifying this in the form "IP:port".)
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- `unix:path`, `unix://absolute_path` -- Unix domain sockets (Unix systems only)
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- `path` indicates the location of the desired socket.
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- In the first form, the path may be relative or absolute; in the
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second form, the path must be absolute (i.e., there will actually be
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three slashes, two prior to the path and another to begin the
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absolute path).
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- `unix-abstract:abstract_path` -- Unix domain socket in abstract namespace (Unix systems only)
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- `abstract_path` indicates a name in the abstract namespace.
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- The name has no connection with filesystem pathnames.
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- No permissions will apply to the socket - any process/user may access the socket.
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- The underlying implementation of Abstract sockets uses a null byte ('\0')
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as the first character; the implementation will prepend this null. Do not include
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the null in `abstract_path`.
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- `vsock:cid:port` -- VSOCK (Linux systems only)
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- `cid` is 32-bit Context Identifier (CID). It indicates the source or
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destination, which is either a virtual machine or the host.
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- `port` is a 32-bit port number. It differentiates between multiple
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services running on a single machine.
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The following schemes are supported by the gRPC C-core implementation,
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but may not be supported in other languages:
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- `ipv4:address[:port][,address[:port],...]` -- IPv4 addresses
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- Can specify multiple comma-delimited addresses of the form `address[:port]`:
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- `address` is the IPv4 address to use.
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- `port` is the port to use. If not specified, 443 is used.
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- `ipv6:address[:port][,address[:port],...]` -- IPv6 addresses
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- Can specify multiple comma-delimited addresses of the form `address[:port]`:
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- `address` is the IPv6 address to use. To use with a `port` the `address`
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must enclosed in literal square brackets (`[` and `]`). Example:
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`ipv6:[2607:f8b0:400e:c00::ef]:443` or `ipv6:[::]:1234`
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- `port` is the port to use. If not specified, 443 is used.
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In the future, additional schemes such as `etcd` could be added.
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### Resolver Plugins
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The gRPC client library will use the specified scheme to pick the right
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resolver plugin and pass it the fully qualified name string.
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Resolvers should be able to contact the authority and get a resolution
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that they return back to the gRPC client library. The returned contents
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include:
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- A list of resolved addresses (both IP address and port). Each address
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may have a set of arbitrary attributes (key/value pairs) associated with
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it, which can be used to communicate information from the resolver to the
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[load balancing](load-balancing.md) policy.
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- A [service config](service_config.md).
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The plugin API allows the resolvers to continuously watch an endpoint
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and return updated resolutions as needed.
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