Specify how to handle rejected events in new state res

It's possible for events in an an event's auth chain to be rejected due
to not having passed auth (based on the state at the time), so we need
to be explicit about how to handle that case.
erikj/state_res_rejections
Erik Johnston 6 years ago
parent db4de5022b
commit 3d3b77ea7e

@ -244,7 +244,8 @@ First we define:
with an absent event to be unconflicted rather than conflicted)
* The "**auth difference"** is calculated by first calculating the full auth
chain for each state set and taking every event that doesn't appear in every
auth chain.
auth chain. (This includes any events in the auth chain that have been
rejected.)
* The **"full conflicted set"** is the union of the conflicted state map and
auth difference.
* The **"reverse topological power ordering"**[^4] of a set of events is an
@ -269,18 +270,21 @@ First we define:
ordered such that P is last.
1. We say the "closest mainline event" of an event is the first power level
event encountered in mainline when iteratively descending through the
power level events in the auth events.
power level events in the auth events (including any power level events
that were rejected).
1. Order the set of events such that x < y if:
1. The closest mainline event of x appears strictly before the closest
of y in the mainline list, or if
1. x's origin_server_ts is less than y's, or if
1. x's event_id lexicographically sorts before y's
* The **"iterative auth checks"** algorithm is where given a sorted list of
events, the auth check algorithm is applied to each event in turn. The state
events used to auth are built up from previous events that passed the auth
checks, starting from a base set of state. If a required auth key doesn't
exist in the state, then the one in the event's auth_events is used. (See
_Variations_ and _Attack Vectors_ below).
events, the auth check algorithm is applied to each event in turn (ignoring
any events have been rejected). The state events used to auth are built up
from previous events that passed the auth checks, starting from a base set
of state. If a required auth key doesn't exist in the state, then the one in
the event's auth_events is used (unless the auth event has been rejected).
(See _Variations_ and _Attack Vectors_ below).
The algorithm proceeds as follows:
@ -436,6 +440,16 @@ a separate auth chain, and the difficulties that entails (like having to
reapply the unconflicted state at the end).
### Rejected Events
We include rejected events in the "auth chain difference" as they can still be
used to effect the ordering of events. This in turn means care must be taken to
filter rejected events out when applying the iterative auth checks.
Note that no events rejected due to failure to auth against their auth chain
should appear in the process, as they should not appear in state.
### Attack Vectors
The main potential attack vector that needs to be considered is in the

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