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@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ |
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title = "Decoding the FAST Protocol: Examples" |
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title = "Decoding the FAST Protocol: Examples" |
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date = 2022-01-10 |
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date = 2022-01-11 |
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draft = true |
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draft = true |
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[taxonomies] |
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[taxonomies] |
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@ -98,7 +98,7 @@ Let's expand our example to have a sequence and a few more operators: |
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<length name="NoInnerSequence" id="25"/> |
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<length name="NoInnerSequence" id="25"/> |
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<string name="Username" id="4"/> |
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<string name="Username" id="4"/> |
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<uInt32 name="ID" id="32" presence="optional"> |
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<uInt32 name="ID" id="32" presence="optional"> |
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<delta/> |
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<increment/> |
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</uInt32> |
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</uInt32> |
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</sequence> |
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</sequence> |
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</sequence> |
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</sequence> |
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@ -114,7 +114,80 @@ list of users and their IDs. |
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## Incoming Data |
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## Incoming Data |
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``` |
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``` |
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1100_0000 1000_0010 |
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1100_0000 1000_0010 1000_0011 0000_0011 |
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0010_0011 0001_1000 1110_0111 1000_0010 |
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1100_0000 0101_0101 0111_0011 0110_0101 |
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0111_0010 1011_0001 1000_0100 1000_0000 |
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0101_0101 0111_0011 0110_0101 0111_0010 |
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1011_0010 |
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``` |
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``` |
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## Processing |
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## Processing |
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As mentioned before, the first byte, `1100_0000` is the Presence Map of the |
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root element with the leading Template ID. There is only one bit set, which |
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means the Template ID is present. |
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The second byte, `1000_0010` is the Template ID. Because it have the stop bit, |
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that's the only byte for it. Removing the high order bit gives us `000_0010`, |
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which is "2", so we know we are dealing with the "SequenceOfSequences" |
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template. |
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Now that we have the template and know the fields, we know what to read. The |
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first field in our template is the sequence. The first thing we have in the |
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sequence (and this is the first thing for *every* sequence) is the length of |
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it. So we read the next byte, `1000_0011`, which is the only byte we need to |
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read. It represents an unsigned int, which is "3", so this sequence have 3 |
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elements -- and using our description in the previous sections, we know now |
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that we have 3 groups. |
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One point here: Because all fields in this sequence don't have any operators, |
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it means the Presence Map doesn't exist. For sequences, every start of a new |
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record contains a Presence Map only if at least one of the fields in the |
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sequence require a Presence Map. That's not the case here. |
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Because there is no Presence Map for the "OuterSequence", the next bytes are |
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the "GroupID" field. We should read everything till we find the stop bit, so we |
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get `0000_0011`, `0010_0011`, `0001_1000` and `1110_0111`. For every byte we |
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remove the high order bit and then join everything into a single thing, in this |
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case `000_0011 010_0011 001_1000 110_0111` or simply |
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`0000_0110_1000_1100_1100_0110_0111`; this value, being an unsigned int, is |
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"6868070". Here is a good point to remind that, because the field is mandatory, |
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it means that's actually the value of "GroupID"; if the field as optional, the |
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actual value would be "6868069". |
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Now for he "InnerSequence" field. The first step is to gather the number of |
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elements (the length of the sequence). That's the `1000_0010` byte, which is |
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"2". So there are two users in this group. |
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Because "InnerSequence" has a field that uses the Presence Map ("ID" uses the |
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Increment operator, so we need to check if there is an incoming value for it or |
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we should just increment the value), the first thing after the length is the |
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Presence Map for this record. The byte `1100_0000` indicates that the first |
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field that requires a Presence Map is present. |
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But that's not the time to use the Presence Map yet. The field after the length |
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is the "Username", which is a mandatory string. Mandatory strings with no |
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operators are always present and we don't need to check the map. Same as we did |
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with "String" in the example for Hello World, we read the bytes till the stop |
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bit, but don't merge them: `0101_0101` (85), `0111_0011` (115), `0110_0101` |
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(101), `0111_0010` (114) and `1011_0001` (49, if we remove the stop bit, that |
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is), which converted by the ASCII table gives us "User1". |
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Remember that we jumped the Presence Map? Now it is the time to use it, since |
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we are reading "ID" and it has an operator that requires the Presence Map. The |
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Presence Map we read before was `100_0000` (with the stop bit removed), so |
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yeah, the "ID" is present. We read the next byte, `1000_0100`, which is "4". |
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But there is a gotcha here: The field is optional. So although we read "4", the |
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actual value is "3" -- if the value read was "0" it meant that the ID is Null. |
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Good. We just finished reading the first record of "InnerSequence". Now we read |
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the second record. |
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We don't need to read the length again, but we need to read the Presence Map |
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for this record. It is the byte `1000_0000`, a Presence Map indicating that |
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none of the fields with operators are present. But, again, it is not the time |
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for the Presence Map, but for the "Username". The bytes for the field are |
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`0101_0101` (85), `0111_0011` (115), `0110_0101` (101), `0111_0010` (114) and |
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`1011_0001` (50), which is "User2". |
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