3 KiB
QMK Firmware XAP Specs
This document describes the requirements of the QMK XAP ("extensible application protocol") API.
Types
All integral types are little-endian.
Name | Definition |
---|---|
type[n] | An array of type , with array extent of N -- e.g. u8[2] signifies two consecutive octets. |
u16 | An unsigned 16-bit integral, commonly seen as uint16_t from stdint.h. |
u32 | An unsigned 32-bit integral, commonly seen as uint32_t from stdint.h. |
u8 | An unsigned 8-bit integral (octet, or byte), commonly seen as uint8_t from stdint.h. |
Definitions
This list defines the terms used across the entire set of XAP protocol documentation.
Name | Definition |
---|---|
Handler | A piece of code that is executed when a specific route is received. |
ID | A single octet / 8-bit byte. |
Payload | Any received data appended to the route, which gets delivered to the handler when received. |
Response | The data sent back to the host during execution of a handler. |
Response Flags | An u8 containing the status of the request. |
Route | A sequence of IDs describing the route to invoke a handler. |
Subsystem | A high-level area of functionality within XAP. |
Token | A u16 associated with a specific request as well as its corresponding response. |
Requests and Responses
Communication generally follows a request/response pattern.
Each request needs to include a token -- this u16
value prefixes each outbound request from the host application and its corresponding response, allowing repsonse messages to be correlated with their request, even if multiple host applications are communicating with the firmware simultaneously. Host applications should randomly generate a token ID for every outbound request, unless using a reserved token defined below.
This token is followed by a u8
signifying the length of data in the request.
Response messages will always be prefixed by the originating request token, directly followed by that request's response flags, then the response payload length:
Bit 7 | Bit 6 | Bit 5 | Bit 4 | Bit 3 | Bit 2 | Bit 1 | Bit 0 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
SUCCESS |
- Bit 0 (
SUCCESS
): When this bit is set, the request was successfully handled. If not set, all payload data should be disregarded, and the request retried if appropriate (with a new token).
Example "conversation":
Request -- version query:
Byte | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Purpose | Token | Token | Payload Length | Route | Route |
Value | 0x43 |
0x2B |
0x02 |
0x00 |
0x00 |
Response -- matching token, successful flag, payload of 0x03170192
= 3.17.192:
Byte | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Purpose | Token | Token | Response Flags | Payload Length | Payload | Payload | Payload | Payload |
Value | 0x43 |
0x2B |
0x01 |
0x04 |
0x92 |
0x01 |
0x17 |
0x03 |