Files
alknet/docs/architecture/decisions/017-call-protocol-client-and-adapter-contract.md
glm-5.2 cb98f42cd4 docs(architecture): resolve review #002 remaining Tier 4 findings
Add ADR-026 (vault key model — HD derivation) recording the foundational
HD-derivation decision, 74' coin type reservation, SLIP-0010/Ed25519
default, secp256k1 feature-gating, and AES-256-GCM cipher choice. These
were previously inline rationale with no ADR (W9).

Extend ADR-018 with an explicit EncryptedData wire format lock — fields,
encoding, and semantics are frozen; no removal without a format-version
migration (W10).

Resolve the remaining guard clauses and spec decisions:

- W2: Capabilities must be immutable after construction (no interior
  mutability). Makes the Arc vs deep-copy clone semantics genuinely
  two-way.
- W5: Published to_* specs are compatibility contracts — best-effort
  mappings are two-way before first publication, one-way after. Version
  generated specs.
- W6: Salt field clarification — v2 salt is permanently unused; a future
  KDF is a different derivation family, not a version-indexed path; the
  field saves a wire-format change only.
- W7: unlock_new returns Zeroizing<String> — the mnemonic is the root of
  trust and must not linger in freed memory.
- W17: OQ-09 WASM — server-side dispatch door is honestly closed
  (Connection is concrete, tokio-bound), not implicitly preserved.
- W18: OQ-10 git — composability fork (raw smart protocol vs call-protocol
  projection) is a separate decision from ERC721 scope.
- W20: from_openapi must prefix imported error codes (HTTP_404) to avoid
  collision with protocol-level codes (NOT_FOUND). Normative rule, not
  naming convention.
- W21: ScopedOperationEnv field is private — construction via new()/
  empty(), query via allows(). Makes the future subgraph refactor
  non-breaking.
- C13: Connection::set_identity — the endpoint does not read identity()
  after handle() returns (Connection is moved into the spawned task).
  Observability is handler-side logging. Simplest honest answer.
- W1: OperationAdapter trait is async, returns Vec<HandlerRegistration>.
  from_call requires async discovery; ADR-022 changed the return type.
- W11: CompositionAuthority::as_identity() defined — constructs a
  synthetic Identity (label as id, scopes, resources) not resolvable via
  IdentityProvider. Second Identity construction path, acknowledged.
- W14: SecretKey is iroh::SecretKey (Ed25519) — consistent with the
  endpoint's iroh dependency.
- W19: Grandchild abort propagation is inherit-by-default (option a) —
  invoke() with no explicit policy inherits parent's policy. ContinueRunning
  auto-propagates to grandchildren unless explicitly overridden.
2026-06-23 08:20:27 +00:00

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Markdown

# ADR-017: Call Protocol Client and Adapter Contract
## Status
Accepted
## Context
The call protocol spec (ADR-012) defined the stream model as bidirectional —
"both sides can initiate calls." But the spec only described the server side:
`CallAdapter` implements `ProtocolHandler`, accepts incoming QUIC connections,
and dispatches to the operation registry. The client side — who opens the
connection, how calls are sent, how remote operations are discovered and
imported — was left as OQ-15.
The need for the client side is concrete and immediate:
- **Head/worker dispatch**: a head node manages worker nodes (Vast.ai, RunPod,
local Docker). The head needs to call operations on workers (exec, sync,
status) and workers need to call back (report status, request work). The
POC at `/workspace/@alkdev/dispatch` demonstrated this over SSH+axum; under
the call protocol, it's cross-node composition.
- **NAPI/Python adapters**: Node.js and Python clients need to call operations
on an alknet node. They speak the EventEnvelope wire format over a QUIC
connection.
- **Agent tool dispatch**: an agent handler needs to call operations on remote
nodes (tools, services) the same way it calls local operations — through
`OperationEnv::invoke()`. The `from_call` adapter makes remote operations
appear in the local registry.
- **Cross-protocol interop**: external systems (HTTP APIs, MCP servers) are
imported via `from_openapi` and `from_mcp`. The reverse direction —
exposing local operations to external systems — needs `to_openapi` and
`to_mcp`.
The `@alkdev/operations` TypeScript package demonstrated the adapter patterns
(`from_openapi`, `from_mcp`) and the `buildEnv` composition mechanism. The Rust
implementation defines the canonical traits (ADR-013).
OQ-15 was constrained by ADR-014 (adapters take credential sources, not static
tokens) and ADR-015 (adapter-registered operations are `Internal` by default).
This ADR locks the remaining one-way door: the client/adapter contract
architecture.
## Decision
### 1. `CallClient` opens connections and shares the dispatch loop
`CallClient` opens a QUIC connection to a remote node with ALPN `alknet/call`.
Once connected, the connection is symmetric — both sides can send and receive
`call.requested`. The `CallClient` is not just a caller; it is also a callee.
It has its own operation registry to dispatch incoming calls from the remote
side.
```rust
pub struct CallClient {
registry: Arc<OperationRegistry>,
identity_provider: Arc<dyn IdentityProvider>,
}
impl CallClient {
pub async fn connect(&self, addr: SocketAddr, credentials: CallCredentials) -> Result<CallConnection>;
}
```
The dispatch loop is shared between `CallAdapter` and `CallClient`. Once a
connection is established (whether accepted by the adapter or opened by the
client), the same logic applies: read `EventEnvelope` frames, dispatch to the
operation registry, write responses, and send outgoing `call.requested` events
for calls initiated on this side. The only difference is who opened the
connection.
`CallConnection` provides:
- `call(operation_id, input) -> ResponseEnvelope` — send `call.requested`,
await `call.responded` (one result)
- `subscribe(operation_id, input) -> Stream<ResponseEnvelope>` — send
`call.requested`, yield each `call.responded` until `call.completed` or
`call.aborted`
- `abort(request_id)` — send `call.aborted`, cascade to descendants (ADR-016)
- `services_list() -> Vec<OperationSpec>` — call `services/list`
- `services_schema(name) -> OperationSpec` — call `services/schema`
### 2. Connection direction is independent of call direction
Who opens the QUIC connection (who has the public IP, who uses a relay, who
connects out reverse-runner style) is a connection-layer concern, not a
protocol-layer concern. Once connected, both sides can call each other.
| Topology | Who advertises | Who opens connection | Who can call whom |
|----------|---------------|----------------------|-------------------|
| Public service | Server (public IP/domain) | Client | Both directions |
| P2P (iroh relay) | Both (relay-assisted) | Either | Both directions |
| Reverse (runner pattern) | Head (public IP) | Worker connects out | Both directions |
| Reverse (dispatch pattern) | Worker (public SSH port) | Head connects out | Both directions |
The protocol does not distinguish "server" and "client" after connection
establishment. The `CallAdapter` accepts connections; the `CallClient` opens
connections. Both dispatch incoming and outgoing calls through the same
mechanism.
### 3. `from_call` adapter imports remote operations
`from_call` does for call protocol endpoints what `from_openapi` does for HTTP
APIs: discovers operations and registers them in the local registry with
forwarding handlers.
```rust
pub async fn from_call(
connection: &CallConnection,
config: FromCallConfig,
) -> Vec<HandlerRegistration>
```
The adapter:
1. Calls `services/list` on the remote node → gets the list of `External`
operations
2. Calls `services/schema` for each → gets the input/output JSON Schemas and
declared error_schemas (ADR-023)
3. For each discovered operation, constructs a `HandlerRegistration` bundle:
- The spec mirrors the remote operation's name, namespace, type, schemas
(input, output, and error_schemas — ADR-023), and access control
- The handler sends `call.requested` through the `CallConnection` and awaits
`call.responded` (or streams for subscriptions)
- `provenance: FromCall`, `composition_authority: None`, `scoped_env: None`
(leaves — ADR-022)
4. The caller registers these bundles in their local registry (into the
connection's overlay — ADR-024)
`from_call`-registered operations are `Internal` by default (ADR-015) — they
are composition material, not directly callable from the wire. The handler
that composes them is `External`.
The `FromCallConfig` includes:
- The credential source for the outbound connection (ADR-014) — TLS identity,
auth token, or capability-provided credentials
- An optional namespace prefix (to avoid collisions when importing from
multiple remote nodes)
- An optional operation filter (to import only specific operations)
### 4. `to_openapi` and `to_mcp` adapters export local operations
The reverse direction — exposing local operations to external systems:
- **`to_openapi`**: generates an OpenAPI spec from the local registry's
`External` operations. External systems (HTTP clients, API gateways) can
discover and call alknet operations through a standard HTTP interface.
- **`to_mcp`**: exposes local operations as MCP tools. MCP clients (editors,
AI tools) can discover and call alknet operations through the MCP protocol.
These adapters are outbound bridges — they translate the call protocol's
operation model into external protocol formats. They do not modify the local
registry; they project it.
### 5. The adapter contract trait
The adapter patterns share a common shape: they produce
`HandlerRegistration` bundles that register in the local registry. The
trait:
```rust
#[async_trait]
pub trait OperationAdapter: Send + Sync {
async fn import(&self) -> Vec<HandlerRegistration>;
}
```
The return type is `Vec<HandlerRegistration>` (not `(OperationSpec,
Handler)` pairs) — ADR-022 changed the registration API to the bundle
shape, and adapters must produce bundles. Adapter convenience methods
construct bundles with `composition_authority: None` and `scoped_env: None`
for the leaf ops they produce.
The trait is **async** because `from_call` requires async discovery
(`services/list` + `services/schema` over a QUIC connection). A synchronous
trait cannot accommodate `from_call` without a separate async pre-step that
populates a cache. The sync adapters (`from_openapi`, `from_mcp` reading a
static spec) trivially satisfy an async trait — their `import()` bodies
contain no `.await` points. The async/sync question is decided: the trait
is async.
Implementations:
- `FromOpenAPI` — imports from an OpenAPI spec (HTTP-backed handlers)
- `FromMCP` — imports from an MCP server (MCP-backed handlers)
- `FromCall` — imports from a remote call protocol endpoint
(call-protocol-backed handlers)
- `FromJsonSchema` — imports from a JSON Schema definition (schema-only, no
handler — used for validation or client generation)
The `to_*` adapters are outbound projections, not `OperationAdapter`
implementations — they consume the registry, they don't produce entries for it.
The specific trait signatures (error types, configuration parameters) are
two-way doors for implementation. The one-way doors are the architectural
commitments: adapters produce `HandlerRegistration` bundles (ADR-022), the
trait is async (required by `from_call`), and adapters live in alknet-call.
### 6. Cross-node call tree and abort cascade
When a `from_call` handler sends `call.requested` to a remote node, the call
participates in the local call tree via `parent_request_id`. If the parent is
aborted, the cascade (ADR-016) reaches the `from_call` handler, which sends
`call.aborted` to the remote node. The remote node cascades to its own
descendants. The abort crosses the node boundary transparently.
```
Head node Worker node
r1: /dispatch/run_training
r1-a: worker/exec (from_call handler)
→ call.requested { id: r1-a } ────────→ receives, dispatches to exec
r1-a-1: exec spawns child
user aborts r1
cascade to r1-a
from_call handler sends:
call.aborted { id: r1-a } ───────────→ receives, cascades to r1-a-1
aborts exec and children
```
### 7. Credential sources for connections
The `CallClient` needs credentials to authenticate to the remote node. These
come from capabilities (ADR-014), not environment variables. The credential
types:
- **TLS identity**: the local node's Ed25519 key (RFC 7250 raw key) or X.509
cert, derived from the vault at startup
- **Auth token**: an opaque token for call-protocol-level authentication,
decrypted from the vault or derived from a shared secret
- **Remote identity verification**: the expected fingerprint or cert of the
remote node, stored as a capability (not an env var or config file)
The `from_call` adapter receives these credentials at registration time,
same as `from_openapi` receives HTTP credentials.
## Consequences
**Positive:**
- Cross-node composition works the same as local composition. A handler calls
`env.invoke("worker", "exec", ...)` and doesn't know (or care) whether
`worker/exec` is a local operation or a `from_call`-imported remote
operation. The composition is transparent.
- The head/worker pattern (dispatch, runners) is a connection topology, not a
protocol feature. Workers can connect to heads (runner pattern) or heads can
connect to workers (dispatch pattern) — the protocol handles both.
- `from_call` is the same pattern as `from_openapi` and `from_mcp`: discover,
register, forward. The adapter contract is unified.
- `to_openapi` and `to_mcp` enable interop with non-alknet systems without
those systems needing to speak EventEnvelope.
- The abort cascade (ADR-016) crosses node boundaries transparently. No
consumer needs to implement cross-node abort propagation.
- The NAPI and Python adapters can use `CallClient` directly to call remote
operations — they don't need a separate client implementation.
**Negative:**
- `CallClient` has its own operation registry (for dispatching incoming calls
from the remote side). This is a second registry instance, not the global
one — it needs to be populated with the operations this node wants to expose
to that specific remote peer. The specific mechanism (sharing the global
registry, a peer-scoped subset, or a separate registry) is a two-way door.
- `from_call`-registered operations have a latency cost: each invocation sends
a `call.requested` over QUIC and awaits a `call.responded`. This is
inherent to remote calls and not specific to the adapter pattern. Caching
or batching strategies are consumer concerns.
- The `to_*` adapters need to translate the call protocol's operation model
(JSON Schema, EventEnvelope, subscribe/stream) into external formats
(OpenAPI paths, MCP tools). Some semantics don't map cleanly (e.g.,
subscriptions in OpenAPI, bidirectional calls in MCP). The adapters handle
these with best-effort mappings and document the gaps.
- **Published `to_*` specs are compatibility contracts.** The "best-effort"
mapping label is internal framing. Once a generated spec is published and
external clients build against it, the mapping semantics (e.g.,
subscriptions → SSE long-poll) become a de facto contract. Changing the
mapping later breaks every client. `to_*` mapping choices are two-way
*before* first publication but one-way *after*. Version the generated
specs (e.g., OpenAPI spec version tied to the registry's External
operation set version) and emit a spec version marker so consumers can
detect mapping changes. This is the "published artifact is a contract"
blind spot in ADR-009's framework: it classifies doors by reversal cost
in the codebase, not by compatibility cost for external consumers.
- **Sharing the global registry with a `CallClient` exposes local
capabilities to the remote peer.** Each `HandlerRegistration` carries
`Capabilities` with secret material. If the `CallClient` shares the
global registry, a remote peer calling an External operation triggers
dispatch that populates `OperationContext.capabilities` from the local
registration bundle — meaning the local node's API keys and signing keys
are used for the remote peer's call. A peer-scoped subset must filter by
capability remote-safety (is this operation's capability safe to expose
to this peer?), not just operation name. The registry-mechanism choice
(share global vs subset vs separate) is two-way mechanically but has a
security dimension post-ADR-022: the "share global" option is a
capability-exposure decision, not just a dispatch decision.
- The `CallConnection` abstraction adds a layer between the handler and the
raw QUIC stream. This is necessary for the `from_call` handler to be
transparent — it shouldn't know about QUIC streams, only about call/request
semantics.
## Assumptions
1. **The connection is symmetric after establishment.** Both sides can send
and receive `call.requested`. If a future use case requires one-directional
connections (e.g., a fire-and-forget notification where the receiver can't
call back), the model needs extension. The assumption is that bidirectional
is the correct default.
2. **`services/list` and `services/schema` are the discovery mechanism for
`from_call`.** The remote node exposes its `External` operations through
these built-in operations. If a remote node doesn't support service
discovery (e.g., a minimal worker that only accepts specific calls),
`from_call` needs an alternative discovery mechanism (static config, manual
spec). The assumption is that nodes participating in cross-node composition
support service discovery.
3. **The `from_call` handler is transparent to composition.** A handler that
calls `env.invoke("worker", "exec", ...)` doesn't know it's a remote call.
If the remote node is unreachable or the connection drops, the handler gets
a `call.error` (same as a local handler error). The assumption is that
remote call failures are handled the same as local handler failures.
4. **`from_call`-registered operations mirror the remote spec.** The imported
`OperationSpec` has the same name, namespace, type, schemas (input, output,
and error_schemas per ADR-023), and access control as the remote operation. If the remote operation changes (new
schema, renamed), the imported spec is stale until re-import. The
assumption is that re-import happens on reconnection or is triggered
explicitly. Hot-swapping imported specs is a two-way door.
5. **The `to_*` adapters are projections, not live bridges.** `to_openapi`
generates a spec; it doesn't proxy HTTP requests. An external HTTP client
calling the generated OpenAPI endpoints needs an HTTP handler (alknet-http)
that translates HTTP requests into call protocol operations. The assumption
is that `to_*` generates specs/tools, and a separate HTTP/MCP handler
bridges the actual traffic.
## References
- ADR-005: irpc as call protocol foundation
- ADR-012: Call protocol stream model (bidirectional streams)
- ADR-013: Rust as canonical implementation language (adapter traits in Rust)
- ADR-014: Secret material flow (credential sources, not static tokens)
- ADR-015: Privilege model (adapter ops are Internal by default)
- ADR-016: Abort cascade (cross-node abort propagation)
- OQ-15: Call protocol client and adapter contract (resolved by this ADR)
- [call-protocol.md](../crates/call/call-protocol.md)
- [operation-registry.md](../crates/call/operation-registry.md)
- TypeScript `@alkdev/operations``from_openapi`, `from_mcp`, `buildEnv`
prior art
- POC at `/workspace/@alkdev/dispatch` — head/worker dispatch over SSH+axum