API Specification 1.2
Components
Desktop Agent
A Desktop Agent is a desktop component (or aggregate of components) that serves as a launcher and message router (broker) for applications in its domain. A Desktop Agent can be connected to one or more App Directories and will use directories for application identity and discovery. Typically, a Desktop Agent will contain the proprietary logic of a given platform, handling functionality like explicit application interop workflows where security, consistency, and implementation requirements are proprietary.
Examples of Desktop Agents include:
- Autobahn
- Finsemble
- Glue42
- OpenFin
- Refinitiv Eikon
Desktop Agents expose an FDC3 standard API to applications they have launched. When an App is launched by a Desktop Agent and is given access to the Agent's API to interoperate, it is running in that Desktop Agent's context.
Desktop Agent Implementation
The FDC3 API specification consists of interfaces. It is expected that each Desktop Agent will implement these interfaces. A typical implemention would provide instantiable classes for the following interfaces:
DesktopAgent
Channel
Listener
Other interfaces defined in the spec are not critical to define as concrete types. Rather, the Desktop Agent should expect to have objects of the interface shape passed into or out of their library. These interfaces include:
Context
AppIntent
IntentResolution
AppMetadata
IntentMetadata
DisplayMetadata
API Access
The FDC3 API can be made available to an application through a number of different methods. In the case of web applications, a Desktop Agent SHOULD provide the FDC3 API via a global accessible as window.fdc3. Implementors MAY additionally make the API available through modules, imports, or other means.
The global window.fdc3
must only be available after the API is ready to use. To prevent the API from being used before it is ready, implementors SHOULD provide a global fdc3Ready
event. Here is code demonstrating the use of the FDC3 API and the ready event:
function fdc3Stuff() {
// Make some fdc3 API calls here
}
if (window.fdc3) {
fdc3Stuff();
} else {
window.addEventListener('fdc3Ready', fdc3Stuff);
}
Standards vs. Implementation
The surface area of FDC3 standardization (shown in white above) itself is quite small in comparison to the extent of a typical desktop agent implementation (in grey).
For example:
- workspace management
- user identity and SSO
- entitlements
- UX of application resolution
Are all areas of functionality that any feature complete desktop agent would implement, but are not currently areas considered for standardization under FDC3.
Inter-Agent Communication
A goal of FDC3 standards is that applications running in different Desktop Agent contexts on the same desktop would be able to interoperate. And that one Desktop Agent context would be able to discover and launch an application in another Desktop Application context.
Desktop Agent interop is supported by common standards for APIs for App discovery and launching. So, an App in one Desktop Agent context would not need to know a different syntax to call an App in another Desktop Agent context.
The actual connection protocol between Desktop Agents is not currently in scope for FDC3 standards. Given that there are a relatively small number of Desktop Agents, and that any given desktop will have a finite and relatively static number of Desktop Agents installed at any given time, the connectivity between different Agents can be adequetly handled for the time being on a case-by-case basis.
Application
An application is any endpoint on the desktop that is:
- Registered with/known by a Desktop Agent
- Launchable by a Desktop Agent
- Addressable by a Desktop Agent
Examples of End Points include:
- Native Applications
- PWA/Web Applications
- Headless “services” running on the desktop
Functional Use Cases
Open an Application by Name
Linking from one application to another is a critical basic workflow that the web revolutionized via the hyperlink. Supporting semantic addressing of applications across different technologies and platform domains greatly reduces friction in linking different applications into a single workflow.
Raising Intents
Often, we want to link from one app to another to dynamically create a workflow. Enabling this without requiring prior knowledge between apps is a key goal of FDC3.
Intents provide a way for an app to request functionality from another app and defer the discovery and launching of the destination app to the Desktop Agent. There are multiple models for interop that Intents can support.
- Chain: In this case the workflow is completely handed off from one app to another (similar to linking). Currently, this is the primary focus in FDC3.
- Client-Service: A Client invokes a Service via the Intent, the Service performs some function, then passes the workflow back to the Client. Typically, there is a data payload type associated with this intent that is published as the standard contract for the intent.
- Remote API: An app wants to remote an entire API that it owns to another App. In this case, the API for the App cannot be standardized. However, the FDC3 API can address how an App connects to another App in order to get access to a proprietary API.
Intents and Context
When raising an Intent a specific context may be provided. The type of the provided context may determine which applications can resolve the Intent.
A Context type may also be associated with multiple Intents. For example, an fdc3.instrument
could be associated with ViewChart
, ViewNews
, ViewAnalysis
or other Intents. In addition to raising a specific intent, you can raise an Intent for a specific Context allowing the Desktop Agent or the user (if the Intent is ambiguous) to select the appropriate Intent for the selected Context and then to raise that Intent for resolution.
Intent Resolution
Raising an Intent will return a Promise-type object that will resolve/reject based on a number of factors.
Resolve
- Intent was resolved unambiguously and the receiving app was launched successfully.
- Intent was ambiguous, a resolution was chosen by the end user, and the chosen application was launched successfully.
Reject
- No app matching the intent and context (if specified) was found.
- A match was found, but the receiving app failed to launch.
- The intent was ambiguous and the resolver experienced an error.
Resolution Object
Deprecation notice
It is not currently possible to provide a value for the
data
property described below, as intent listeners don't currently offer a way to return values.Future versions of FDC3 plan to remove the optional
data
property from the intent resolution object, and include a more robust mechanism for intents that need to return data back to the caller.
If the raising of the intent resolves (or rejects), a standard object will be passed into the resolver function with the following format:
{
source: String;
data?: Object;
version: String;
}
- source = identifier for the Application resolving the intent (null if the intent could not be resolved)
- data = return data structure - if one is provided for the given intent
- version = the version number of the Intents schema being used
For example, to raise a specific Intent:
try {
const result = await fdc3.raiseIntent('StageOrder');
}
catch (er){
console.log(er.message);
}
or to raise an Intent for a specific context:
try {
const result = await fdc3.raiseIntentForContext(context);
if (result.data) {
const orderId = result.data.id;
}
}
catch (er){
console.log(er.message);
}
Upgrading to a Remote API Connection
There are a wide range of workflows where decoupled intents and/or context passing do not provide rich enough interactivity and applications are better off exposing proprietary APIs. In these cases, an App can use the source property on the resolution of an intent to connect directly to another App and from there, call remote APIs using the methods available in the Desktop Agent context for the App. For example:
const chart = await fdc3.raiseIntent('ViewChart');
// construct a vendor wrapper for the App
const chartApp = fin.Application.wrap(chart.source);
// do some vendor-specific stuff
Register an Intent
Applications need to let the system know the Intents they can support. Typically, this is done via registration with the App Directory. It is also possible for Intents to be registered at the application level as well to support ad-hoc registration which may be helpful at development time. While, dynamic registration is not part of this specification, a Desktop Agent agent may choose to support any number of registration paths.
Compliance with Intent Standards
Intents represent a contract with expected behavior if an app asserts that it supports the intent. Where this contract is enforceable by schema (for example, return object types), the FDC3 API implementation should enforce compliance and return an error if the interface is not met.
It is expected that App Directories will also curate listed apps and ensure that they are complying with declared intents.
Like FDC3 Context Data, the Intent schemas need to be versioned. Desktop Agents will be responsible to declare which version of the Intent schema they are using. Applications may also assert a specific version requirement when raising an Intent. Version negotation may be supported by a given Desktop Agent.
Send/broadcast Context
On the financial desktop, applications often want to broadcast context to any number of applications. Context sharing needs to support concepts of different groupings of applications as well as data privacy concerns. Each Desktop Agent will have its own rules for supporting these features. However, a Desktop Agent should ensure that context messages broadcast to a channel by an application joined to it should not be delivered back to that same application.
Retrieve Metadata about the Desktop Agent implementation
From version 1.2 of the FDC3 specification, it is possible to retrieve information about the version of the FDC3 specification supported by a Desktop Agent implementation and the name of the implementation provider. This metadata can be used to vary the behavior of an application based on the version supported by the Desktop Agent, e.g.:
import {compareVersionNumbers, versionIsAtLeast} from '@finos/fdc3';
if (fdc3.getInfo && versionIsAtLeast(fdc3.getInfo(), '1.2')) {
await fdc3.raiseIntentForContext(context);
} else {
await fdc3.raiseIntent('ViewChart', context);
}
Resolvers
Intents functionality is dependent on resolver functionality to map the intent to a specific App. This will often require end-user input. Resolution can either be performed by the Desktop Agent (raising UI to pick the desired App for the intent) or by the app launching the intent - in which case the calling App will handle the resolution itself (using the findIntents API below) and then invoke an explicit Intent object.
Context Channels
Context channels allows a set of apps to share a stateful piece of data between them, and be alerted when it changes. Use cases for channels include color linking between applications to automate the sharing of context and topic based pub/sub such as theme.
There are two types of channels, which are functionally identical, but have different visibility and discoverability semantics.
The 'system' channels, which have a well understood identity.
Deprecation notice: Earlier versions of FDC3 include the concept of a 'global' system channel for backwards compatibility with FDC3 1.0. In future, there won't be a 'global' channel (see below for more detail).
The 'app' channels, which have a transient identity and need to be revealed
Joining Channels
Apps can join channels. An app can only be joined to one channel at a time. When an app joins a channel it will automatically recieve the current context for that channel.
When an app is joined to a channel, calls to fdc3.broadcast
and listeners added through fdc3.addContextListener
will be routed to that channel. If an app is not joined to a channel fdc3.broadcast
will be a no-op and handler functions added with fdc3.addContextListener
will not receive any broadcasts. However, apps can still choose to listen and broadcast to specific channels via the methods on the Channel
class.
It is possible that a call to join a channel could be rejected. If for example, the desktop agent wanted to implement controls around what data apps can access.
Joining channels in FDC3 is intended to be a behavior initiated by the end user. For example: by color linking or apps being grouped in the same workspace. Most of the time, it is expected that apps will be joined to a channel by mechanisms outside of the app. Always, there SHOULD be a clear UX indicator of what channel an app is joined to.
The 'global' Channel
Deprecation notice
The global channel, which exists only for backward compatibility with FDC3 1.0, will be removed in a future version of the FDC3 API Specification.
Instead of relying on being joined to a 'default' channel by the desktop agent on startup, an app or system channel should be joined explicitly through the relevant APIs, or through a channel selection UI.
The 'system' channels include a 'global' channel which serves as the backwards compatible layer with the 'send/broadcast context' behavior in FDC3 1.0. A desktop agent MAY choose to make membership in the 'global' channel the default state for apps on start up.
The 'global' channel should be returned as part of the response from the fdc3.getSystemChannels
call. Desktop Agents may want to filter out the 'global' option in their UI for system channel pickers.
Examples
An app queries the current context of the red
channel.
const redChannel = await fdc3.getOrCreateChannel('red');
const context = await redChannel.getCurrentContext('fdc3.instrument');
An app can still explicitly receive context events on any channel, regardless of the channel it is currently joined to.
// check for current fdc3 channel
let joinedChannel = await fdc3.getCurrentChannel()
//current channel is null, as the app is not currently joined to a channel
const redChannel = await fdc3.getSystemChannels.filter(c => c.id === 'red')
const context = await redChannel.getCurrentContext('fdc3.instrument')
// context is instrument AAPL on the global channel
fdc3.joinChannel('blue')
joinedChannel = await fdc3.getCurrentChannel()
//current channel is now the 'blue' channel
Direct Listening and Broadcast on Channels
While joining channels automates a lot of the channel behavior for an app, it has the limitation in that an app can belong to only one channel at a time. Listening and Broadcasting to channels using the Channel.addBroadcastListener and the Channel.broadcast APIs provides an app with fine-grained controls for specific channels. This is especially useful for working with dynamic App Channels.
Examples
To find a system channel, one calls
// returns an array of channels
const allChannels = await fdc3.getSystemChannels();
const redChannel = allChannels.find(c => c.id === 'red');
Joining channels
To join a channel. one calls
fdc3.joinChannel(redChannel.id);
Calling fdc3.broadcast will now route context to the joined channel.
Channel implementations should ensure that context messages broadcast by an application on a channel should not be delivered back to that same application if they are joined to the channel.
App Channels
App channels are topics dynamically created by applications connected via FDC3. For example, an app may create a channel to broadcast to others data or status specific to that app.
To get (or create) a channel reference, then interact with it
const appChannel = await fdc3.getOrCreateChannel('my_custom_channel');
// get the current context of the channel
const current = await appChannel.getCurrentContext();
// add a listener
appChannel.addContextListener(null, context => {...});
// broadcast to the channel
appChannel.broadcast(context);
APIs
The APIs are defined in TypeScript in src, with documentation generated in the docs folder.