Type–length–value
Within communication protocols, TLV (type-length-value or tag-length-value) is an encoding scheme used for informational elements. A TLV-encoded data stream contains code related to the record type, the record value's length, and finally the value itself. DetailsThe type and length are fixed in size (typically 1–4 bytes), and the value field is of variable size. These fields are used as follows:
Some advantages of using a TLV representation data system solution are:
ExamplesReal-world examplesTransport protocols
Data storage formats
OtherOther examplesImagine a message to make a telephone call. In a first version of a system this might use two message elements: a "command" and a "phoneNumberToCall":
Here Later (in version 2) a new field containing the calling number could be added:
A version 1 system which received a message from a version 2 system would first read the
which it understands, and message parsing carries on. Other ways of representing dataCore TCP/IP protocols (particularly IP, TCP, and UDP) use predefined, static fields. Some application layer protocols, including HTTP/1.1 (and its non-standardized predecessors), FTP, SMTP, POP3, and SIP, use text-based "Field: Value" pairs formatted according to RFC 2822. (HTTP represents length of payload with a Content-Length header and separates headers from the payload with an empty line and headers from each other with a new line.) ASN.1 specifies several TLV-based encoding rules (BER, DER), as well as non-TLV based ones (PER, XER). CSN.1 describes encoding rules using non-TLV semantics. More recently,[when?] XML has been used to implement messaging between different nodes in a network. These messages are typically prefixed with line-based text commands, such as with BEEP. See also
References
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