Merge pull request #5641 from dgquintas/publish_compression_spec
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## **gRPC Compression** |
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The keywords "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", |
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"SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be |
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interpreted as described in [RFC 2119](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2119.txt). |
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### Intent |
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Compression is used to reduce the amount of bandwidth used between peers. The |
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compression supported by gRPC acts _at the individual message level_, taking |
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_message_ [as defined in the wire format |
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document](PROTOCOL-HTTP2.md). |
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The implementation supports different compression algorithms. A _default |
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compression level_, to be used in the absence of message-specific settings, MAY |
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be specified for during channel creation. |
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The ability to control compression settings per call and to enable/disable |
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compression on a per message basis MAY be used to prevent CRIME/BEAST attacks. |
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It also allows for asymmetric compression communication, whereby a response MAY |
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be compressed differently, if at all. |
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### Specification |
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Compression MAY be configured by the Client Application by calling the |
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appropriate API method. There are two scenarios where compression MAY be |
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configured: |
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+ At channel creation time, which sets the channel default compression and |
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therefore the compression that SHALL be used in the absence of per-RPC |
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compression configuration. |
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+ At response time, via: |
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+ For unary RPCs, the {Client,Server}Context instance. |
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+ For streaming RPCs, the {Client,Server}Writer instance. In this case, |
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configuration is reduced to disabling compression altogether. |
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### Compression Method Asymmetry Between Peers |
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A gRPC peer MAY choose to respond using a different compression method to that |
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of the request, including not performing any compression, regardless of channel |
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and RPC settings (for example, if compression would result in small or negative |
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gains). |
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When a message from a client compressed with an unsupported algorithm is |
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processed by a server, it WILL result in an INVALID\_ARGUMENT error on the |
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server. The server will then include in its response a `grpc-accept-encoding` |
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header specifying the algorithms it does accept. If an INTERNAL error is |
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returned from the server despite having used one of the algorithms from the |
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`grpc-accept-encoding` header, the cause MUST NOT be related to compression. |
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Data sent from a server compressed with an algorithm not supported by the client |
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WILL result in an INTERNAL error on the client side. |
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Note that a peer MAY choose to not disclose all the encodings it supports. |
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However, if it receives a message compressed in an undisclosed but supported |
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encoding, it MUST include said encoding in the response's `grpc-accept-encoding |
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h`eader. |
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For every message a server is requested to compress using an algorithm it knows |
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the client doesn't support (as indicated by the last `grpc-accept-encoding` |
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header received from the client), it SHALL send the message uncompressed. |
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### Specific Disabling of Compression |
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If the user (through the previously described mechanisms) requests to disable |
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compression the next message MUST be sent uncompressed. This is instrumental in |
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preventing BEAST/CRIME attacks. This applies to both the the unary and streaming |
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cases. |
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### Compression Levels and Algorithms |
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The set of supported algorithm is implementation dependent. In order to simplify |
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the public API and to operate seamlessly across implementations (both in terms |
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of languages but also different version of the same one), we introduce the idea |
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of _compression levels_ (such as "low", "medium", "high"). |
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Levels map to concrete algorithms and/or their settings (such as "low" mapping |
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to "gzip -3" and "high" mapping to "gzip -9") automatically depending on what a |
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peer is known to support. A server is always aware of what its clients support, |
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as clients disclose it in their Message-Accept-Encoding header as part of their |
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initial call. A client doesn't a priori (presently) know which algorithms a |
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server supports. This issue can be addressed with an initial negotiation of |
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capabilities or an automatic retry mechanism. These features will be implemented |
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in the future. Currently however, compression levels are only supported at the |
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server side, which is aware of the client's capabilities through the incoming |
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Message-Accept-Encoding header. |
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### Propagation to child RPCs |
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The inheritance of the compression configuration by child RPCs is left up to the |
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implementation. Note that in the absence of changes to the parent channel, its |
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configuration will be used. |
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### Test cases |
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1. When a compression level is not specified for either the channel or the |
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message, the default channel level _none_ is considered: data MUST NOT be |
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compressed. |
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1. When per-RPC compression configuration isn't present for a message, the |
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channel compression configuration MUST be used. |
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1. When a compression method (including no compression) is specified for an |
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outgoing message, the message MUST be compressed accordingly. |
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1. A message compressed in a way not supported by its endpoint MUST fail with |
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INVALID\_ARGUMENT status, its associated description indicating the unsupported |
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condition as well as the supported ones. The returned `grpc-accept-encoding` |
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header MUST NOT contain the compression method (encoding) used. |
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1. An ill-constructed message with its [Compressed-Flag |
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bit](PROTOCOL-HTTP2.md#compressed-flag) |
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set but lacking a |
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"[grpc-encoding](PROTOCOL-HTTP2.md#message-encoding)" |
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entry different from _identity_ in its metadata MUST fail with INTERNAL status, |
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its associated description indicating the invalid Compressed-Flag condition. |
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