add base64 option

pull/1544/head
Hubert Chathi 4 years ago
parent 405ac1e2b5
commit c77d04c709

@ -170,7 +170,7 @@ This proposal defines three verification methods that can be used in
### QR code format ### QR code format
Note: only one of the following will be supported. They are both being Note: only one of the following will be supported. They are all being
documented here while we determine how well different formats are supported. documented here while we determine how well different formats are supported.
#### Binary format #### Binary format
@ -259,6 +259,74 @@ strings generated as follows:
The QR code is then generated using alphanumeric encoding mode. The QR code is then generated using alphanumeric encoding mode.
#### Base64 format
The QR codes to be displayed and scanned using this format will be a string of
the following form:
- the string "MATRIX"
- one character indicating the version (must by "2")
- one character indicating the QR code verification mode. May be one of the
following values:
- "0" verifying another user with cross-signing
- "1" self-verifying in which the current device does trust the master key
- "2" self-verifying in which the current device does not yet trust the
master key
- the event ID or `transaction_id` of the associated verification
request event, encoded as:
- two bytes in network byte order (big-endian), encoded in unpadded base64 (3
characters), indicating the length in bytes of the ID as a UTF-8 string
- the ID as a UTF-8 string
- the first key as unpadded base64 (43 characters). The key to use depends on
the mode field:
- if "0" or "1", then the user's own master cross-signing public key
- if "2", then the current device's device key
- the second key as unpadded base64 (43 characters). The key to use depends on
the mode field:
- if "0", then what the device thinks the other user's master
cross-signing key is
- if "1", then what the device thinks the other device's device key is
- if "2", then what the device thinks the user's master cross-signing key
is
- a random shared secret, as an ASCII string. It is suggested to use a secret
that is about 11 bytes long. (This is approximately the length of 8 bytes as
a base64 string.) Note: as we do not share the length of the secret, and it
is not a fixed size, clients will just use the remainder of binary string as
the shared secret.
1. generate a binary string by concatenating:
- the event ID or `transaction_id` of the associated verification
request event, encoded as:
- two bytes in network byte order (big-endian) indicating the length in
bytes of the ID as a UTF-8 string
- the ID as a UTF-8 string
- the first key, as 32 bytes. The key to use depends on the mode field as
described in step 3:
- if "0" or "1", then the user's own master cross-signing public key
- if "2", then the current device's device key
- the second key, as 32 bytes. The key to use depends on the mode field:
- if "0", then what the device thinks the other user's master
cross-signing key is
- if "1", then what the device thinks the other device's device key is
- if "2", then what the device thinks the user's master cross-signing key
is
- a random shared secret, as a byte string. It is suggested to use a secret
that is about 8 bytes long. Note: as we do not share the length of the
secret, and it is not a fixed size, clients will just use the remainder of
binary string as the shared secret.
2. encode the above string using unpadded base64
3. prepend the resulting string with
- the string "MATRIX"
- one character indicating the version (must by "2")
- one character indicating the QR code verification mode. May be one of the
following values:
- "0" verifying another user with cross-signing
- "1" self-verifying in which the current device does trust the master key
- "2" self-verifying in which the current device does not yet trust the
master key
The QR code is then generated using byte encoding mode.
### Message types ### Message types
#### `m.key.verification.start` #### `m.key.verification.start`

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