/tera-data

Repository for TERA protocol definitions.

tera-data

This repository is intended to house packet and system message information for TERA. It is intended to be platform agnostic, with details on the file formats explained below.

The currently known open source parsers are:

Mappings

The map directory contains files which map unique identifiers (names) to their numeric values. Currently, this includes:

  • protocol.map, which links opcodes to "packet" names
  • sysmsg.map, which links system message IDs to readable names

These generally come from the client binary and should not be built or modified by hand unless you know what you're doing.

Methods and instructions on dumping opcodes and sysmsgs can be found from:

Protocol

TERA's network data follows a custom protocol. It is convenient to describe the order and meaning of each element in a "packet", which is done through a .def file under the protocol directory, and named after the opcode it belongs to.

Each line in the .def must consist of the following, in order:

  • An optional series of - for array and object definitions. These may be separated by spaces. To nest arrays or objects, just add another - to the front.
  • A field type. Valid types listed below.
  • At least one space.
  • The name of the field.

A # and anything after it on the line are treated as comments and will be ignored when parsing.

The formal grammar for this syntax is in the appendix at the end of this document.

The following simple field types are supported:

  • bool: A single byte that equals true for any non-zero value (and optionally warns for any value above 1).
  • byte
  • float: A four-byte floating-point number.
  • int16
  • int32
  • int64
  • uint16
  • uint32
  • uint64

There is one type that is not directly represented by the raw data and instead serves organizational purposes:

  • object: Any fields under this one should be collected into some sort of encapsulating object. For instance, x/y/z vectors can be under an object called "location".

There are also a few variable-length fields:

  • array: Almost like object, except there can be 0 or more that should be collected into an array.
  • bytes: A series of byte data.
  • string: String data, encoded as null-terminated UTF-16LE (in other words, a series of uint16 where the final value is 0).

Each of the variable-length fields has accompanying metadata. These fields are determined implicitly (see the section below for the generation rules), but in some cases, particularly with legacy definitions, the following metatypes can be used. These types are deprecated, and use of them will disable implicit handling of these types:

  • count: Acts as uint16. Dictates the length of an array or bytes field of the same name.
  • offset: Acts as uint16. Indicates the byte offset from the beginning of the message for an array, bytes, or string field of the same name.

More details on the original message format are below, while details on your language's or library's implementation of these types should be described in your library's documentation.

Message Format

TERA's networking encodes all data in little-endian.

There are a few fields which are implied because they are never omitted. Every packet begins with two fields:

  • uint16 length, which describes the byte length of the message, including this header.
  • uint16 opcode, which describes which kind of message this is. By looking up which name has this number in the mapping, you will know what the message is called.

Following these two fields are the metatypes for all variable length fields. To produce the list, iterate through all variable length fields in order, and depending on the type, add a count and/or offset field for it:

  • array: Add count then offset.
  • bytes: Add offset then count.
  • string: Add offset only.

Additionally, all array elements begin with two fields:

  • offset here, which can be used to verify correctness. If this is the first element, the offset for the array should match this; otherwise, it should match the next for the previous element.
  • offset next, which points to the byte offset of the next element in the array, or zero if this is the final element.

In general, you will find count and offset fields at the beginning of a message or array definition, and their corresponding fields at the end.

Example

Given the definition:

int32 number
array list
- int16 value

A message will be parsed as if it were:

uint16 (length)
uint16 (opcode)
count  list
offset list
int32  number
array  list
- offset (here)
- offset (next)
- int16  value

Versioning

Protocol definitions contain version information in the filename: <NAME>.<VERSION>.def where <NAME> is an opcode name and <VERSION> is an integer starting from 1 and incrementing with each change.

When submitting changes, contributors must leave older versions untouched unless they are trivially backwards compatible. Instead, submit the changed definition as a new file with the version number incremented.

Whenever TERA receives a major patch, a tag will be added to the repository, and then the mappings will be updated and all outdated definition files will be deleted.

Contributing

Feel free to submit pull requests! Please read the above notice in bold.

Appendix

Formal Grammar

# Assume comments are removed (find the first "#" token and remove everything until the end of the line).
# Assume all lines have leading and trailing whitespace removed.

definition = { line };
line = [field] ["\r"] "\n";

whitespace = " " | "\t";
letter = "a".."z" | "A".."Z" | "_";
digit = "0".."9";
identifier = letter { letter | digit };

simple_type = "bool"
            | "byte"
            | "float"
            | ["u"] "int" ("16" | "32" | "64");

complex_type = "array"
             | "bytes"
             | "object"
             | "string";

meta_type = "count"
          | "offset";

type = simple_type | complex_type | meta_type;

depth = { "-" { whitespace } };
field = depth type whitespace { whitespace } identifier;