Within data communication protocols, TLV is an encoding scheme used for optional information element in a certain protocol. The type and length are fixed in size, and the value field is of variable size. These fields are used as follows: ;Type: A binary code, often simply alphanumeric, which indicates the kind of field that this part of the message represents; ;Length: The size of the value field ; ;Value: Variable-sized series of bytes which contains data for this part of the message. Some advantages of using a TLV representationdata system solution are:
TLV sequences are easily searched using generalized parsing functions;
New message elements which are received at an older node can be safely skipped and the rest of the message can be parsed. This is similar to the way that unknown XML tags can be safely skipped;
TLV elements can be placed in any order inside the message body;
Imagine 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": ;command_c/4/makeCall_c/phoneNumberToCall_c/8/"722-4246" Here command_c, makeCall_c and phoneNumberToCall_c are integer constants and 4 and 8 are the lengths of the "value" fields, respectively. Later a new field containing the calling number could be added: ;command_c/4/makeCall_c/callingNumber_c/14/"1-613-715-9719"/phoneNumberToCall_c/8/"722-4246" A version 1 system which received a message from a version 2 system would first read the command_c element and then read an element of type callingNumber_c. The version 1 system does not understand ;callingNumber_c so the length field is read and the system skips forward 14 bytes to read ;phoneNumberToCall_c which it understands, and message parsing carries on. An example of usage is the Link Layer Discovery Protocol which allows for the sending of organizational-specific information as a TLV element within LLDP packets. Another example is the RR protocol used in GSM cell phones, defined in 3GPP 04.18. In the RR protocol, each message is defined as a sequence of information elements. TLVs are used in many protocols, such as COPS, IS-IS, and RADIUS, as well as data storage formats such as IFF and QTFF.
Other ways of representing data
Core TCP/IP protocols use predefined, static fields. Common TCP/IP-based protocols such as HTTP, FTP, SMTP, POP3, and SIP use text-based "Field: Value" pairs formatted according to . ASN.1 specifies several TLV-based encoding rules, as well as non-TLV based ones. CSN.1 describes encoding rules using non-TLV semantics. More recently, 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.