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Class diagram ============== Backend_1 ... Backend_N \ | / Daemon / | \ Device_1 ... Device_N / \ |-Plugin_1 |-DeviceLink_1 |-Plugin_2 |-DeviceLink_2 |- ... |-... |-Plugin_N |-DeviceLink_N Daemon instantiates Backends Backends manage to create DeviceLinks with the devices they can reach, and Q_EMIT them to the Daemon. When the Daemon receives a DeviceLink from a backend: - If it already knows the Device, adds the new DeviceLink to the existing Device, as a new way to reach it. - If not, it creates a new untrusted (yet to be paired) Device. Devices contain a list of DeviceLinks, plus a list of Plugins (instantiated automatically) Information for and from Plugins is encapsulated in NetworkPackages. When a DeviceLink receives a NetworkPackage from the device in the other end, Device will notify all the plugins. When a Plugin wants to send a NetworkPackage, it does so using the pointer to Device The NetworkPackage format ========================= NetworkPackages are independent and self-contained pieces of information that are sent from one device to another (via a DeviceLink) serialized in json. The basic structure of a NetworkPackage is the following: { "id": 123456789, "type": "org.kde.whatever", "body": { }, "version": 5 } Each type of package defines what it should contain inside its "body", so only the emisor plugin and receiver plugin of this type of package need agree about its content. Each plugin should provide a README explaining what does it write in the "body" section, to ease porting to other platforms. If the package has a payload attached, it will also contain two more fields: "payloadSize": The size of the file, or -1 if it is a stream without known end "payloadTransferInfo": Another JSON Object containing the information that the backend wants to send to the peer backend, to actually transfer the payload. Encrypted network packages have the following format: "type": is always set to "kdeconnect.encrypted". "id": contains a new valid id (ie: not the same id as the unencrypted package). "version": contains the package version. "body": contains a "data" array that carries the original package encrypted. The "data" array is filled the following way: 1. The original package is serialized. 2. The serialized string is divided in chunks small enough to be encrypted with the other device's public key. 3. Each chunk is encrypted and appended to the array in order.
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