Ciao
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ciao
is a RFC 6763 compliant dns-sd
library,
advertising on multicast dns (RFC 6762)
implemented in plain Typescript/JavaScript.
It is used in HAP-NodeJS and is the successor of the
bonjour-hap (and bonjour) library,
aiming to be more robust, more maintainable and RFC compliant (read Notice).
ciao
features a multicast dns responder to publish service on the local network.
It will eventually gain browsing functionality in the future to also discover services on the local network
(There is currently no schedule when discover functionality will arrive.
A possible querier implementation is limited as explained in RFC 6762 15.1.
as it can't receive unicast responses).
ciao
passes the Bonjour Conformance Test
as defined and required by Apple.
The full documentation can be found here.
Installation
Add ciao
as a dependency to your project by running the following command:
npm install --save @homebridge/ciao
Example
const ciao = require("@homebridge/ciao");
const responder = ciao.getResponder();
const service = responder.createService({
name: 'My Web Server',
type: 'http',
port: 3000,
txt: {
key: "value",
}
})
service.advertise().then(() => {
console.log("Service is published :)");
});
service.updateTxt({
newKey: "newValue",
});
service.end().then(() => {
});
service.destroy();
Documentation
The full documentation can be found here.
API overview
This section links to the most important aspects of the documentation as used in the example above.
First of all the getResponder function
should be used to get a reference to a Responder object.
The function takes some optional options
to configure the underlying mdns server.
The createService method of the Responder
object can now be used to create a new CiaoService
supplying the desired configuration
as the first parameter. You might have a look at the
restrictedAddresses
(and disabledIpv6) configuration
if you don't want to advertise on all available addresses/network interfaces.
The advertise method can now be called
on the service
object to start advertising the service on the network.
An application should ideally listen to the NAME_CHANGED
event, in oder to persist any changes happening to the service name resulting of the conflict resolution algorithm.
The method updateTxt can be used
to update the contest of the txt exposed by the service.
Any application SHOULD hook up a listener on events like SIGTERM or SIGINT and call the
shutdown method of the responder object.
This will ensure, that goodbye packets are sent out on all connected network interfaces and all hosts
on the network get instantly notified of the shutdown.
Otherwise, stale data will remain in the caches of surrounding mdns browsers.
MTU
As of RFC 6762 17. Multicast DNS Message Size DNS packets must avoid
IP Fragmentation and ensure that all sent packets are smaller than the Maximum Transmission Unit (MTU) defined by
the network interface. The MTU defaults to 1500 Bytes on pretty much all network cards for Ethernet and Wi-Fi.
ciao
can't reliable detect modifications made to this default MTU size.
Thus , we rely on a hardcoded value, which is 1440
for the UDP Payload Size (Remember: the MTU defines the amount
of bytes Ethernet or Wi-Fi can transport on the local link. There is additional overhead caused by the IP Header
and the UDP Header. So the amount of bytes we are able to fit into a single UDP packet is smaller).
If you know, that the MTU differs on your machine, you can set the true UDP Payload Size in bytes
using the CIAO_UPS
environment variable.
Notice on native mDNS responders
As described in RFC 6762 15.:
"It is possible to have more than one Multicast DNS responder and/or
querier implementation coexist on the same machine, but there are some known issues."
The RFC lists three possible issues:
- 15.1. Receiving Unicast Responses:
As multiple sockets (from multiple responders) are bound to the port 5353, only one can receive unicast responses.
Unicast responses is a way to reduce traffic on the multicast address, as answers to a particular question can be
sent directly to the querier. As ciao does not hold the primary socket on port 5353, it can't receive unicast responses
and thus must sent any queries without setting the QU (unicast response) flag. Any responses to our questions are
sent on multicast and thus increase the load on the network.
This currently isn't really a problem, as the only time we send queries is in the probing step before we
advertise a new service (Future query functionality is much more affected). - 15.2. Multipacket Known-Answer lists:
When the known-answer list of a query is too large to fit into a single dns packet, a querier can split those
records into multiple packets (and setting the truncation flag).
A responder will then reassemble those packets, which are identified by their originating ip address.
Thus, known-answer lists could be messed up when two queriers are sending at the same time.
Again ciao currently only sends queries when probing, so the probability of this happening is pretty low. - 15.3. Efficiency:
The last point is pretty simple. Two independently running responders use twice the memory and twice the computing power.
It doesn't improve the situation that this is running using an interpreted language.
So yes, it's probably not very efficient.
As the RFC also states in 15.4, it is recommended to use
a single mDNS implementation where possible. It is recommended to use the mdns
library where possible, as the library is pretty much a binding for existing mDNS implementations running on your
system (like mDNSResponder
on macOS or avahi
on most linux based systems).
The one downside with the mdns
library is that running it on Windows is not really straight forward.
Generally we experienced with homebridge
that many users run into problems when trying to install mdns
.
Thus bonjour-hap
and then ciao
was created to provide a much easier to set up system.