HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

The Data Stream Interface (DSI) is a session layer used to carry
Apple Filing Protocol The Apple Filing Protocol (AFP), formerly AppleTalk Filing Protocol, is a proprietary network protocol, and part of the Apple File Service (AFS), that offers file services for macOS and the classic Mac OS. In Mac OS 9 and earlier, AFP was t ...
traffic over
Transmission Control Protocol The Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) is one of the main protocols of the Internet protocol suite. It originated in the initial network implementation in which it complemented the Internet Protocol (IP). Therefore, the entire suite is common ...
.


Overview

When Apple introduced TCP with
MacTCP MacTCP was the standard TCP/IP implementation for the classic Mac OS through version 7.5.1. It was the first application-independent implementation of a TCP stack for a non-Unix platform and predates Winsock by over 5 years. Released in 1988, it is ...
and
Open Transport Open Transport was the name given by Apple Inc. to its implementation of the Unix-originated System V STREAMS networking stack. Based on code licensed from Mentat's Portable Streams product, Open Transport was built to provide the classic Mac OS ...
in
System 7 System 7, codenamed "Big Bang", and also known as Mac OS 7, is a graphical user interface-based operating system for Macintosh computers and is part of the classic Mac OS series of operating systems. It was introduced on May 13, 1991, by Apple Co ...
in the 1990s, they needed their file sharing protocol (AFP) to run on both TCP and
AppleTalk AppleTalk is a discontinued proprietary suite of networking protocols developed by Apple Computer for their Macintosh computers. AppleTalk includes a number of features that allow local area networks to be connected with no prior setup or the ...
. They introduced AppleTalk Session Protocol (ASP) and DSI for TCP coincidentally with AFP 2.x. DSI is implemented directly into AFP clients such as in Mac OS and afpfs-ng.


Protocol

DSI is spoken between a client and an AFP server. All DSI communication contains the following DSI header:


Packet structure

The fields are: * Flags: whether the packet is a request (0x00) or a reply (0x01) * Command: one of 7 possible commands (see below) * Request ID: a sequential identifier set on the request and copied in the reply * Error code/ enclosed data offset: ** For requests, this is left as 0, except when using the DSIWrite command. ** For replies, this is an error code. * Total data length: the entire length of data after the DSI header * Reserved: for future expansion * Payload: this is where limited DSI data or more commonly AFP header is placed


Commands

There are seven possible commands:


Requests and replies

Upon receiving most DSI requests, the client or server sends a reply message. This reply contains: * the flags field set to 0x01 (reply) * the command field set to the same value as the request's command field * the same request ID sent in the request (used for the client to find the request being acknowledged) * totalDataLength set to the payload length (if applicable). * where applicable, the data payload itself following the DSI header. (See the individual command for details.) The DSITickle and DSICloseSession commands do not trigger a reply.


Session creation, maintenance and teardown

A session is set up by the client sending a DSIOpenSession, which will include the size of the receive buffer the client has for packets (called the request quantum, typically 1024 bytes). The server acknowledges the request and returns the size of its data receive buffer (typically 256k on Mac OS X Leopard). Session closure can be initiated by either side by sending DSICloseSession. The sender does not need to wait for a reply and should immediately close the session after sending the message. Maintaining the connection is done by ''tickling''. DSI provides a mechanism for ensuring that client and server know that the other is still active. Every 30 seconds of inactivity, the server sends a tickle request to the client. Similarly, the client also sends its own tickle. (This is NOT a response packet.) Either the client or server can terminate the DSI session if they fail to hear from the other for 120 seconds. The client may also disconnect if a request is in flight and neither a response nor tickle is received within 60 seconds (in Mac OS X v.10.2 and later).


Getting server information with GetStatus

This DSI command encapsulates an FPGetSrvrInfo packet. It is used by a client to get information from a server it isn't logged into. The data elements are organized in the packet with a catalog of indices pointing to structured data. The request to a DSIGetStatus request will cause the server to respond with the following information: * flags for basic server characteristics * server name (7-bit ASCII and UTF-8) * signature: used to uniquely identify the server for other AFP transactions * server type: typically "Macintosh" or "Netatalk" * a list of strings describing AFP versions spoken (e.g. "AFP3.2") * UAM list: a list of strings describing User Authentication Methods (e.g. "DHX2") * a 64x64 pixel icon * directory server list DSIGetStatus reply format is identical to AFP's FPGetSrvrInfo and is used for ASPGetStatus.


Error codes

The error codes returned are AFP result codes."Result Codes" in "Apple Filing Protocol Reference"
/ref>


Further research

DSI is never documented separately, and is sufficiently simple and static that older references are suitable for modern implementations. The concepts of DSI are identical to AppleTalk Session Protocol (ASP), and the overview in ''Inside AppleTalk, Second Edition'' can be helpful. The most succinct guide is th

chapter o

A significant source of information in understanding DSI can be found by analyzing communication between AFP clients and servers using a packet sniffer.


Footnotes


References

* AppleTalk Filing Protocol Version 2.1 and 2.

* Inside AppleTalk {{Citation , last1 = Sidhu , first1 = Gurharan S. , last2 = Andrews , first2 = Richard F. , last3 = Oppenheimer , first3 = Alan B. , title = Inside AppleTalk, Second Edition , publisher = Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, Inc. , date = May 1990 , isbn = 0-201-55021-0 * Apple Filing Protocol Programming Guid

* Apple Filing Protocol Referenc

Apple Inc. software Network protocols Network file systems Session layer protocols