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// Copyright 2018 Parity Technologies (UK) Ltd.
//
// Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a
// copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"),
// to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation
// the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense,
// and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the
// Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
//
// The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
// all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
//
// THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS
// OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
// FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
// AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
// LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING
// FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER
// DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.

//! Contains everything related to upgrading a connection or a substream to use a protocol.
//!
//! After a connection with a remote has been successfully established or a substream successfully
//! opened, the next step is to *upgrade* this connection or substream to use a protocol.
//!
//! This is where the `UpgradeInfo`, `InboundUpgrade` and `OutboundUpgrade` traits come into play.
//! The `InboundUpgrade` and `OutboundUpgrade` traits are implemented on types that represent a
//! collection of one or more possible protocols for respectively an ingoing or outgoing
//! connection or substream.
//!
//! > **Note**: Multiple versions of the same protocol are treated as different protocols.
//! >           For example, `/foo/1.0.0` and `/foo/1.1.0` are totally unrelated as far as
//! >           upgrading is concerned.
//!
//! # Upgrade process
//!
//! An upgrade is performed in two steps:
//!
//! - A protocol negotiation step. The `UpgradeInfo::protocol_info` method is called to determine
//!   which protocols are supported by the trait implementation. The `multistream-select` protocol
//!   is used in order to agree on which protocol to use amongst the ones supported.
//!
//! - A handshake. After a successful negotiation, the `InboundUpgrade::upgrade_inbound` or
//!   `OutboundUpgrade::upgrade_outbound` method is called. This method will return a `Future` that
//!   performs a handshake. This handshake is considered mandatory, however in practice it is
//!   possible for the trait implementation to return a dummy `Future` that doesn't perform any
//!   action and immediately succeeds.
//!
//! After an upgrade is successful, an object of type `InboundUpgrade::Output` or
//! `OutboundUpgrade::Output` is returned. The actual object depends on the implementation and
//! there is no constraint on the traits that it should implement, however it is expected that it
//! can be used by the user to control the behaviour of the protocol.
//!
//! > **Note**: You can use the `apply_inbound` or `apply_outbound` methods to try upgrade a
//!             connection or substream. However if you use the recommended `Swarm` or
//!             `ConnectionHandler` APIs, the upgrade is automatically handled for you and you don't
//!             need to use these methods.
//!

mod apply;
mod denied;
mod either;
mod error;
mod pending;
mod ready;
mod select;
mod transfer;

pub(crate) use apply::{
    apply, apply_inbound, apply_outbound, InboundUpgradeApply, OutboundUpgradeApply,
};
pub(crate) use error::UpgradeError;
use futures::future::Future;

pub use self::{
    denied::DeniedUpgrade,
    pending::PendingUpgrade,
    ready::ReadyUpgrade,
    select::SelectUpgrade,
    transfer::{read_length_prefixed, read_varint, write_length_prefixed, write_varint},
};
pub use crate::Negotiated;
pub use multistream_select::{NegotiatedComplete, NegotiationError, ProtocolError, Version};

/// Common trait for upgrades that can be applied on inbound substreams, outbound substreams,
/// or both.
pub trait UpgradeInfo {
    /// Opaque type representing a negotiable protocol.
    type Info: AsRef<str> + Clone;
    /// Iterator returned by `protocol_info`.
    type InfoIter: IntoIterator<Item = Self::Info>;

    /// Returns the list of protocols that are supported. Used during the negotiation process.
    fn protocol_info(&self) -> Self::InfoIter;
}

/// Possible upgrade on an inbound connection or substream.
pub trait InboundUpgrade<C>: UpgradeInfo {
    /// Output after the upgrade has been successfully negotiated and the handshake performed.
    type Output;
    /// Possible error during the handshake.
    type Error;
    /// Future that performs the handshake with the remote.
    type Future: Future<Output = Result<Self::Output, Self::Error>>;

    /// After we have determined that the remote supports one of the protocols we support, this
    /// method is called to start the handshake.
    ///
    /// The `info` is the identifier of the protocol, as produced by `protocol_info`.
    fn upgrade_inbound(self, socket: C, info: Self::Info) -> Self::Future;
}

/// Possible upgrade on an outbound connection or substream.
pub trait OutboundUpgrade<C>: UpgradeInfo {
    /// Output after the upgrade has been successfully negotiated and the handshake performed.
    type Output;
    /// Possible error during the handshake.
    type Error;
    /// Future that performs the handshake with the remote.
    type Future: Future<Output = Result<Self::Output, Self::Error>>;

    /// After we have determined that the remote supports one of the protocols we support, this
    /// method is called to start the handshake.
    ///
    /// The `info` is the identifier of the protocol, as produced by `protocol_info`.
    fn upgrade_outbound(self, socket: C, info: Self::Info) -> Self::Future;
}