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Added skeleton specification for a general feel of the layout.
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Matrix Specification
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====================
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TODO(Introduction) : Matthew
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- Similar to intro paragraph from README.
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- Explaining the overall mission, what this spec describes...
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- "What is Matrix?"
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Architecture
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============
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- Basic structure: What are clients/home servers and what are their
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responsibilities? What are events.
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::
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{ Matrix clients } { Matrix clients }
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^ | ^ |
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| events | | events |
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| V | V
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+------------------+ +------------------+
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| |---------( HTTP )---------->| |
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| Home Server | | Home Server |
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| |<--------( HTTP )-----------| |
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+------------------+ +------------------+
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- How do identity servers fit in? 3PIDs? Users? Aliases
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- Pattern of the APIs (HTTP/JSON, REST + txns)
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- Standard error response format.
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- C-S Event stream
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Rooms
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=====
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A room is a conceptual place where users can send and receive messages. Rooms
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can be created, joined and left. Messages are sent to a room, and all
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participants in that room will receive the message. Rooms are uniquely
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identified via a room ID. There is exactly one room ID for each room.
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- Aliases
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- Invite/join dance
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- State and non-state data (+extensibility)
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TODO : Room permissions / config / power levels.
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Messages
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========
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This specification outlines several standard message types, all of which are
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prefixed with "m.".
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- Namespacing?
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State messages
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--------------
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- m.room.name
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- m.room.topic
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- m.room.member
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- m.room.config
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- m.room.invite_join
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What are they, when are they used, what do they contain, how should they be used
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Non-state messages
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------------------
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- m.room.message
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- m.room.message.feedback (and compressed format)
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What are they, when are they used, what do they contain, how should they be used
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m.room.message types
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--------------------
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- m.text
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- m.emote
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- m.audio
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- m.image
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- m.video
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- m.location
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Presence
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========
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Each user has the concept of Presence information. This encodes a sense of the
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"availability" of that user, suitable for display on other user's clients.
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The basic piece of presence information is an enumeration of a small set of
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state; such as "free to chat", "online", "busy", or "offline". The default state
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unless the user changes it is "online". Lower states suggest some amount of
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decreased availability from normal, which might have some client-side effect
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like muting notification sounds and suggests to other users not to bother them
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unless it is urgent. Equally, the "free to chat" state exists to let the user
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announce their general willingness to receive messages moreso than default.
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Home servers should also allow a user to set their state as "hidden" - a state
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which behaves as offline, but allows the user to see the client state anyway and
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generally interact with client features such as reading message history or
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accessing contacts in the address book.
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This basic state field applies to the user as a whole, regardless of how many
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client devices they have connected. The home server should synchronise this
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status choice among multiple devices to ensure the user gets a consistent
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experience.
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Idle Time
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---------
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As well as the basic state field, the presence information can also show a sense
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of an "idle timer". This should be maintained individually by the user's
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clients, and the homeserver can take the highest reported time as that to
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report. Likely this should be presented in fairly coarse granularity; possibly
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being limited to letting the home server automatically switch from a "free to
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chat" or "online" mode into "idle".
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When a user is offline, the Home Server can still report when the user was last
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seen online, again perhaps in a somewhat coarse manner.
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Device Type
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-----------
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Client devices that may limit the user experience somewhat (such as "mobile"
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devices with limited ability to type on a real keyboard or read large amounts of
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text) should report this to the home server, as this is also useful information
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to report as "presence" if the user cannot be expected to provide a good typed
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response to messages.
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- m.presence and enums (when should they be used)
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Presence List
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-------------
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Each user's home server stores a "presence list" for that user. This stores a
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list of other user IDs the user has chosen to add to it (remembering any ACL
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Pointer if appropriate).
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To be added to a contact list, the user being added must grant permission. Once
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granted, both user's HS(es) store this information, as it allows the user who
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has added the contact some more abilities; see below. Since such subscriptions
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are likely to be bidirectional, HSes may wish to automatically accept requests
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when a reverse subscription already exists.
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As a convenience, presence lists should support the ability to collect users
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into groups, which could allow things like inviting the entire group to a new
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("ad-hoc") chat room, or easy interaction with the profile information ACL
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implementation of the HS.
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Presence and Permissions
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------------------------
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For a viewing user to be allowed to see the presence information of a target
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user, either
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* The target user has allowed the viewing user to add them to their presence
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list, or
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* The two users share at least one room in common
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In the latter case, this allows for clients to display some minimal sense of
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presence information in a user list for a room.
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Home servers can also use the user's choice of presence state as a signal for
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how to handle new private one-to-one chat message requests. For example, it
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might decide:
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- "free to chat": accept anything
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- "online": accept from anyone in my address book list
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- "busy": accept from anyone in this "important people" group in my address
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book list
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Typing notifications
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====================
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TODO : Leo
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Voice over IP
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=============
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TODO : Dave
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Profiles
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========
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Internally within Matrix users are referred to by their user ID, which is not a
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human-friendly string. Profiles grant users the ability to see human-readable
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names for other users that are in some way meaningful to them. Additionally,
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profiles can publish additional information, such as the user's age or location.
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It is also conceivable that since we are attempting to provide a
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worldwide-applicable messaging system, that users may wish to present different
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subsets of information in their profile to different other people, from a
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privacy and permissions perspective.
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A Profile consists of a display name, an avatar picture, and a set of other
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metadata fields that the user may wish to publish (email address, phone
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numbers, website URLs, etc...). This specification puts no requirements on the
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display name other than it being a valid Unicode string.
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- Metadata extensibility
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- Bundled with which events? e.g. m.room.member
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Registration and login
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======================
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Clients must register with a home server in order to use Matrix. After
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registering, the client will be given an access token which must be used in ALL
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requests to that home server as a query parameter 'access_token'.
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- TODO Kegan : Make registration like login
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- TODO Kegan : Allow alternative forms of login (>1 route)
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If the client has already registered, they need to be able to login to their
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account. The home server may provide many different ways of logging in, such
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as user/password auth, login via a social network (OAuth), login by confirming
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a token sent to their email address, etc. This specification does not define how
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home servers should authorise their users who want to login to their existing
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accounts, but instead defines the standard interface which implementations
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should follow so that ANY client can login to ANY home server.
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The login process breaks down into the following:
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1. Get login process info.
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2. Submit the login stage credentials.
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3. Get access token or be told the next stage in the login process and repeat
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step 2.
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- What are types?
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Matrix-defined login types
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--------------------------
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- m.login.password
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- m.login.oauth2
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- m.login.email.code
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- m.login.email.url
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Password-based
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--------------
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Type: "m.login.password"
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LoginSubmission::
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{
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"type": "m.login.password",
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"user": <user_id>,
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"password": <password>
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}
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Example:
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Assume you are @bob:matrix.org and you wish to login on another mobile device.
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First, you GET /login which returns::
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{
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"type": "m.login.password"
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}
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Your client knows how to handle this, so your client prompts the user to enter
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their username and password. This is then submitted::
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{
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"type": "m.login.password",
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"user": "@bob:matrix.org",
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"password": "monkey"
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}
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The server checks this, finds it is valid, and returns::
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{
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"access_token": "abcdef0123456789"
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}
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The server may optionally return "user_id" to confirm or change the user's ID.
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This is particularly useful if the home server wishes to support localpart entry
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of usernames (e.g. "bob" rather than "@bob:matrix.org").
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OAuth2-based
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------------
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Type: "m.login.oauth2"
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This is a multi-stage login.
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LoginSubmission::
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{
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"type": "m.login.oauth2",
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"user": <user_id>
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}
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Returns::
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{
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"uri": <Authorization Request uri OR service selection uri>
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}
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The home server acts as a 'confidential' Client for the purposes of OAuth2.
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If the uri is a "sevice selection uri", it is a simple page which prompts the
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user to choose which service to authorize with. On selection of a service, they
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link through to Authorization Request URIs. If there is only 1 service which the
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home server accepts when logging in, this indirection can be skipped and the
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"uri" key can be the Authorization Request URI.
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The client visits the Authorization Request URI, which then shows the OAuth2
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Allow/Deny prompt. Hitting 'Allow' returns the redirect URI with the auth code.
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Home servers can choose any path for the redirect URI. The client should visit
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the redirect URI, which will then finish the OAuth2 login process, granting the
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home server an access token for the chosen service. When the home server gets
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this access token, it knows that the cilent has authed with the 3rd party, and
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so can return a LoginResult.
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The OAuth redirect URI (with auth code) MUST return a LoginResult.
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Example:
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Assume you are @bob:matrix.org and you wish to login on another mobile device.
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First, you GET /login which returns::
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{
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"type": "m.login.oauth2"
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}
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Your client knows how to handle this, so your client prompts the user to enter
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their username. This is then submitted::
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{
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"type": "m.login.oauth2",
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"user": "@bob:matrix.org"
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}
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The server only accepts auth from Google, so returns the Authorization Request
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URI for Google::
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{
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"uri": "https://accounts.google.com/o/oauth2/auth?response_type=code&
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client_id=CLIENT_ID&redirect_uri=REDIRECT_URI&scope=photos"
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}
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The client then visits this URI and authorizes the home server. The client then
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visits the REDIRECT_URI with the auth code= query parameter which returns::
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{
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"access_token": "0123456789abcdef"
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}
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Email-based (code)
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------------------
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Type: "m.login.email.code"
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This is a multi-stage login.
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First LoginSubmission::
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{
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"type": "m.login.email.code",
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"user": <user_id>
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"email": <email address>
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}
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Returns::
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{
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"type": m.login.email.code
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"session": <session id>
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}
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The email contains a code which must be sent in the next LoginSubmission::
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{
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"type": "m.login.email.code",
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"session": <session id>,
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"code": <code in email sent>
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}
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Returns::
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{
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"access_token": <access token>
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}
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Email-based (url)
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-----------------
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Type: "m.login.email.url"
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This is a multi-stage login.
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First LoginSubmission::
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{
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"type": "m.login.email.url",
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"user": <user_id>
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"email": <email address>
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}
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Returns::
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{
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"session": <session id>
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}
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The email contains a URL which must be clicked. After it has been clicked, the
|
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client should perform a request::
|
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|
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{
|
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"type": "m.login.email.code",
|
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"session": <session id>
|
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}
|
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|
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Returns::
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{
|
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"access_token": <access token>
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}
|
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|
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Example:
|
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Assume you are @bob:matrix.org and you wish to login on another mobile device.
|
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First, you GET /login which returns::
|
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|
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{
|
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"type": "m.login.email.url"
|
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}
|
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|
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Your client knows how to handle this, so your client prompts the user to enter
|
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their email address. This is then submitted::
|
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|
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{
|
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"type": "m.login.email.url",
|
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"user": "@bob:matrix.org",
|
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"email": "bob@mydomain.com"
|
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}
|
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|
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The server confirms that bob@mydomain.com is linked to @bob:matrix.org, then
|
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sends an email to this address and returns::
|
||||
|
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{
|
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"session": "ewuigf7462"
|
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}
|
||||
|
||||
The client then starts polling the server with the following::
|
||||
|
||||
{
|
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"type": "m.login.email.url",
|
||||
"session": "ewuigf7462"
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
(Alternatively, the server could send the device a push notification when the
|
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email has been validated). The email arrives and it contains a URL to click on.
|
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The user clicks on the which completes the login process with the server. The
|
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next time the client polls, it returns::
|
||||
|
||||
{
|
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"access_token": "abcdef0123456789"
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
N-Factor auth
|
||||
-------------
|
||||
Multiple login stages can be combined with the "next" key in the LoginResult.
|
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|
||||
Example:
|
||||
A server demands an email.code then password auth before logging in. First, the
|
||||
client performs a GET /login which returns::
|
||||
|
||||
{
|
||||
"type": "m.login.email.code",
|
||||
"stages": ["m.login.email.code", "m.login.password"]
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
The client performs the email login (See "Email-based (code)"), but instead of
|
||||
returning an access_token, it returns::
|
||||
|
||||
{
|
||||
"next": "m.login.password"
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
The client then presents a user/password screen and the login continues until
|
||||
this is complete (See "Password-based"), which then returns the "access_token".
|
||||
|
||||
Fallback
|
||||
--------
|
||||
|
||||
If the client does NOT know how to handle the given type, they should::
|
||||
|
||||
GET /login/fallback
|
||||
|
||||
This MUST return an HTML page which can perform the entire login process.
|
||||
|
||||
Identity
|
||||
========
|
||||
|
||||
TODO : Dave
|
||||
- 3PIDs and identity server, functions
|
||||
|
||||
Federation
|
||||
==========
|
||||
|
||||
Federation is the term used to describe how to communicate between Matrix home
|
||||
servers. Federation is a mechanism by which two home servers can exchange
|
||||
Matrix event messages, both as a real-time push of current events, and as a
|
||||
historic fetching mechanism to synchronise past history for clients to view. It
|
||||
uses HTTP connections between each pair of servers involved as the underlying
|
||||
transport. Messages are exchanged between servers in real-time by active pushing
|
||||
from each server's HTTP client into the server of the other. Queries to fetch
|
||||
historic data for the purpose of back-filling scrollback buffers and the like
|
||||
can also be performed.
|
||||
|
||||
There are three main kinds of communication that occur between home servers:
|
||||
|
||||
* Queries
|
||||
These are single request/response interactions between a given pair of
|
||||
servers, initiated by one side sending an HTTP request to obtain some
|
||||
information, and responded by the other. They are not persisted and contain
|
||||
no long-term significant history. They simply request a snapshot state at the
|
||||
instant the query is made.
|
||||
|
||||
* EDUs - Ephemeral Data Units
|
||||
These are notifications of events that are pushed from one home server to
|
||||
another. They are not persisted and contain no long-term significant history,
|
||||
nor does the receiving home server have to reply to them.
|
||||
|
||||
* PDUs - Persisted Data Units
|
||||
These are notifications of events that are broadcast from one home server to
|
||||
any others that are interested in the same "context" (namely, a Room ID).
|
||||
They are persisted to long-term storage and form the record of history for
|
||||
that context.
|
||||
|
||||
Where Queries are presented directly across the HTTP connection as GET requests
|
||||
to specific URLs, EDUs and PDUs are further wrapped in an envelope called a
|
||||
Transaction, which is transferred from the origin to the destination home server
|
||||
using a PUT request.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Transactions and EDUs/PDUs
|
||||
--------------------------
|
||||
The transfer of EDUs and PDUs between home servers is performed by an exchange
|
||||
of Transaction messages, which are encoded as JSON objects with a dict as the
|
||||
top-level element, passed over an HTTP PUT request. A Transaction is meaningful
|
||||
only to the pair of home servers that exchanged it; they are not globally-
|
||||
meaningful.
|
||||
|
||||
Each transaction has an opaque ID and timestamp (UNIX epoch time in
|
||||
milliseconds) generated by its origin server, an origin and destination server
|
||||
name, a list of "previous IDs", and a list of PDUs - the actual message payload
|
||||
that the Transaction carries.
|
||||
|
||||
{"transaction_id":"916d630ea616342b42e98a3be0b74113",
|
||||
"ts":1404835423000,
|
||||
"origin":"red",
|
||||
"destination":"blue",
|
||||
"prev_ids":["e1da392e61898be4d2009b9fecce5325"],
|
||||
"pdus":[...],
|
||||
"edus":[...]}
|
||||
|
||||
The "previous IDs" field will contain a list of previous transaction IDs that
|
||||
the origin server has sent to this destination. Its purpose is to act as a
|
||||
sequence checking mechanism - the destination server can check whether it has
|
||||
successfully received that Transaction, or ask for a retransmission if not.
|
||||
|
||||
The "pdus" field of a transaction is a list, containing zero or more PDUs.[*]
|
||||
Each PDU is itself a dict containing a number of keys, the exact details of
|
||||
which will vary depending on the type of PDU. Similarly, the "edus" field is
|
||||
another list containing the EDUs. This key may be entirely absent if there are
|
||||
no EDUs to transfer.
|
||||
|
||||
(* Normally the PDU list will be non-empty, but the server should cope with
|
||||
receiving an "empty" transaction, as this is useful for informing peers of other
|
||||
transaction IDs they should be aware of. This effectively acts as a push
|
||||
mechanism to encourage peers to continue to replicate content.)
|
||||
|
||||
All PDUs have an ID, a context, a declaration of their type, a list of other PDU
|
||||
IDs that have been seen recently on that context (regardless of which origin
|
||||
sent them), and a nested content field containing the actual event content.
|
||||
|
||||
[[TODO(paul): Update this structure so that 'pdu_id' is a two-element
|
||||
[origin,ref] pair like the prev_pdus are]]
|
||||
|
||||
{"pdu_id":"a4ecee13e2accdadf56c1025af232176",
|
||||
"context":"#example.green",
|
||||
"origin":"green",
|
||||
"ts":1404838188000,
|
||||
"pdu_type":"m.text",
|
||||
"prev_pdus":[["blue","99d16afbc857975916f1d73e49e52b65"]],
|
||||
"content":...
|
||||
"is_state":false}
|
||||
|
||||
In contrast to the transaction layer, it is important to note that the prev_pdus
|
||||
field of a PDU refers to PDUs that any origin server has sent, rather than
|
||||
previous IDs that this origin has sent. This list may refer to other PDUs sent
|
||||
by the same origin as the current one, or other origins.
|
||||
|
||||
Because of the distributed nature of participants in a Matrix conversation, it
|
||||
is impossible to establish a globally-consistent total ordering on the events.
|
||||
However, by annotating each outbound PDU at its origin with IDs of other PDUs it
|
||||
has received, a partial ordering can be constructed allowing causallity
|
||||
relationships to be preserved. A client can then display these messages to the
|
||||
end-user in some order consistent with their content and ensure that no message
|
||||
that is semantically in reply of an earlier one is ever displayed before it.
|
||||
|
||||
PDUs fall into two main categories: those that deliver Events, and those that
|
||||
synchronise State. For PDUs that relate to State synchronisation, additional
|
||||
keys exist to support this:
|
||||
|
||||
{...,
|
||||
"is_state":true,
|
||||
"state_key":TODO
|
||||
"power_level":TODO
|
||||
"prev_state_id":TODO
|
||||
"prev_state_origin":TODO}
|
||||
|
||||
[[TODO(paul): At this point we should probably have a long description of how
|
||||
State management works, with descriptions of clobbering rules, power levels, etc
|
||||
etc... But some of that detail is rather up-in-the-air, on the whiteboard, and
|
||||
so on. This part needs refining. And writing in its own document as the details
|
||||
relate to the server/system as a whole, not specifically to server-server
|
||||
federation.]]
|
||||
|
||||
EDUs, by comparison to PDUs, do not have an ID, a context, or a list of
|
||||
"previous" IDs. The only mandatory fields for these are the type, origin and
|
||||
destination home server names, and the actual nested content.
|
||||
|
||||
{"edu_type":"m.presence",
|
||||
"origin":"blue",
|
||||
"destination":"orange",
|
||||
"content":...}
|
||||
|
||||
Backfilling
|
||||
-----------
|
||||
- What it is, when is it used, how is it done
|
||||
|
||||
SRV Records
|
||||
-----------
|
||||
- Why it is needed
|
||||
|
||||
Security
|
||||
========
|
||||
- rate limiting
|
||||
- crypto (s-s auth)
|
||||
- E2E
|
||||
- Lawful intercept + Key Escrow
|
||||
|
||||
TODO Mark
|
||||
|
||||
Policy Servers
|
||||
==============
|
||||
TODO
|
||||
|
||||
Content repository
|
||||
==================
|
||||
- thumbnail paths
|
||||
|
||||
Address book repository
|
||||
=======================
|
||||
- format
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Glossary
|
||||
========
|
||||
- domain specific words/acronyms with definitions
|
||||
|
||||
User ID:
|
||||
An opaque ID which identifies an end-user, which consists of some opaque
|
||||
localpart combined with the domain name of their home server.
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue
Block a user