The main goal of this application is to transport data from remote TCP clients to the [Modules](modules.md) defined in the host. How the data is processed and/or returned back to the client depends entirely on the type of data being transported or the module itself. The data format that the host understands for data transport is referred to as MRCI frames described below in section 1.2.
Before any MRCI frames can be transported, both the host and client need basic information about each other. This is done by having the client send a fixed length client header when it successfully connects to the host and the host will reply with it's own fixed length host header. Descriptions of these headers can be found in sections 1.4 and 1.5.
* A full description of the type id's can be found in the [Type_IDs.md](type_ids.md) document.
* Modules call commands via a command name but the host will assign a unique command id to all command names so clients can call them using a simple 2 byte integer instead of full text. The command ids can change as the modules change so it is recommended for clients to not depend on consistant command ids but depend on the [ASYNC_ADD_CMD](async.md) and [ASYNC_RM_CMD](async.md) async commands.
* The branch id is an id that can be assigned by the client itself to run muliple instances of the same command. Commands sent by a certain branch id will result in data sent back to the client from the module with that same branch id.
Any increments to the Major resets the Minor to 0. Any 3rd party client applications connecting to a MRCI host need to be aware of this versioning but does not need to adopt it as it's own version number.
* **appName** is the name of the client application that is connected to the host. It can also contain the client's app version if needed because it doesn't follow any particular standard. This string is accessable to all modules so the commands themselves can be made aware of what app the user is currently using.
* **modInst** is an additional set of command lines that can be passed onto to all module processes when they are intialized. This can be used by certain clients that want to intruct certain modules that might be installed in the host to do certain actions during intialization. This remains constant for as long as the session is active and cannot be changed at any point.
* **sesId** is the session id. It is a unique 224bit sha3 hash generated against the current date and time of session creation (down to the msec) and the machine id of the host. This can be used by the host or client to uniquely identify the current session or past sessions.