Streaming NDJSON in Routing HTTP API
The main motivation for this change is to allow servers to respond faster to the client with provider records, as soon as they are available. In the current state, the client requests a list of providers for a CID from the server. Then, the client has to wait for the server to collect their final list of providers. After that, the server can respond with the full list of providers. This is a big
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Summary
Introduce backwards-compatible streaming support to the Routing V1 HTTP API.
For this, we use the Accept HTTP header (:cite[rfc9110]) for content type negotiation, as well
as the Newline Delimited JSON (NDJSON) format.
Motivation
The main motivation for this change is to allow servers to respond faster to the client with provider records, as soon as they are available. In the current state, the client requests a list of providers for a CID from the server. Then, the client has to wait for the server to collect their final list of providers. After that, the server can respond with the full list of providers.
This is a big source of latency when /routing/v1 is used for delegating DHT lookups,
where the client is forced to wait for the server to finish DHT walk.
With streaming support, the server is able to respond with provider records as soon as they are available. This reduces latency and allows for faster content discovery.
In addition, streaming responses may produce an unlimited amount of results, which is not the case for non-streamed responses.
Detailed Design
In summary, streaming is supported by using the Accept HTTP header, which is used
for content type negotiation as described in :cite[rfc9110]. The client sends an
Accept HTTP header starting with application/x-ndjson, which is the content
type for NDJSON. The following happens:
- The client adds the
AcceptHTTP header in the request starting withapplication/x-ndjson. - The server checks the
AcceptHTTP header from the request and, if it containsapplication/x-ndjson, they reply with NDJSON. If they don't support NDJSON, they can reply with JSON. - The server response MUST contain a
Content-TypeHTTP header indicating the response type, which may be eitherapplication/jsonfor non-streaming responses, andapplication/x-ndjsonfor streamed responses.
For more details regarding the design, check :cite[http-routing-v1].
Design Rationale
This feature is designed such that it does not break compatibility with existing
clients and servers. The Accept HTTP header is OPTIONAL. By default, the server
MUST respond with application/json unless the client explicitly asked for
application/x-ndjson. If the server does not support NDJSON, it is allowed
to still respond with non-streamed JSON.
User Benefit
Users (clients) will benefit from this change as the servers will now be able to respond more promptly to provider record requests. Instead of waiting for the whole list to be constructed, servers can now return each provider record one by one, in a streaming fashion.
The client will be able to close connection at any time, reducing load on both ends.
The main use cases for this IPIP are light clients and services which want to delegate DHT lookups to external service. With streaming, clients will be able to receive results as soon the delegated service learns about new record, which directly impacts the content load speeds perceived by the end user.
Compatibility
The introduced changes are backwards-compatible. The introduced header is completely optional, and a server that does not support streaming is able to respond with a non-streaming response to the client. Equally, non-streaming responses are the default. Therefore, a client that does not support streaming will not receive a streamed response.
Security
Security considerations are equivalent as the ones in :cite[ipip-0337].
Copyright
Copyright and related rights waived via CC0.
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