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@ -138,9 +138,6 @@ Some requests have unique error codes:
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:``M_INVALID_ROOM_STATE``:
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:``M_INVALID_ROOM_STATE``:
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Sent when the intial state given to the ``createRoom`` API is invalid.
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Sent when the intial state given to the ``createRoom`` API is invalid.
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:``M_BAD_PAGINATION``:
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Encountered when specifying bad pagination query parameters.
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:``M_THREEPID_IN_USE``:
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:``M_THREEPID_IN_USE``:
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Sent when a threepid given to an API cannot be used because the same threepid is already in use.
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Sent when a threepid given to an API cannot be used because the same threepid is already in use.
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@ -1018,39 +1015,21 @@ Pagination is the process of dividing a dataset into multiple discrete pages.
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Matrix makes use of pagination to allow clients to view extremely large datasets.
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Matrix makes use of pagination to allow clients to view extremely large datasets.
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These datasets are not limited to events in a room (for example clients may want
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These datasets are not limited to events in a room (for example clients may want
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to paginate a list of rooms in addition to events within those rooms). Regardless
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to paginate a list of rooms in addition to events within those rooms). Regardless
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of *what* is being paginated, there is a common underlying API which is used to
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of what is being paginated, there is a common approach which is used to give
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to give clients a consistent way of selecting subsets of a potentially changing
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clients an easy way of selecting subsets of a potentially changing dataset. Each
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dataset. Requests pass in ``from``, ``to``, ``dir`` and ``limit`` parameters
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endpoint that uses pagination may use different parameters. However the theme
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which describe where to read from the stream. ``from`` and ``to`` are opaque
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among them is that they take a ``from`` and ``to`` token, and occasionally
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textual 'stream tokens' which describe the current position in the dataset.
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a ``limit`` and ``dir``. Together, these parameters describe the position in a
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The ``dir`` parameter is an enum representing the direction of events to return:
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data set, where ``from`` and ``to`` are known as "stream tokens" matching the
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either ``f`` orwards or ``b`` ackwards. The response returns new ``start`` and
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regular expression ``[a-zA-Z0-9.=_-]+``. If supported, the ``dir`` defines the
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``end`` stream token values which can then be passed to subsequent requests to
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direction of events to return: either forwards (``f``) or backwards (``b``).
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continue pagination. Not all endpoints will make use of all the parameters
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The response may contain tokens that can be used for retrieving results before
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outlined here: see the specific endpoint in question for more information.
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or after the returned set. These tokens may be called `start` or `prev_batch`
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for retrieving the previous result set, or `end`, `next_batch` or `next_token`
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Pagination Request Query Parameters
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for retrieving the next result set.
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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In the following examples, 'START' and 'END' are placeholders to signify the
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Query parameters:
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start and end of the data sets respectively.
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from:
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$streamtoken - The opaque token to start streaming from.
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to:
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$streamtoken - The opaque token to end streaming at. Typically,
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clients will not know the item of data to end at, so this will usually be
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omitted.
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limit:
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integer - An integer representing the maximum number of items to
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return.
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dir:
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f|b - The direction to return events in. Typically this is ``b`` to paginate
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backwards in time.
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'START' and 'END' are placeholder values used in these examples to describe the
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start and end of the dataset respectively.
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Unless specified, the default pagination parameters are ``from=START``,
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``to=END``, without a limit set.
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For example, if an endpoint had events E1 -> E15. The client wants the last 5
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For example, if an endpoint had events E1 -> E15. The client wants the last 5
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events and doesn't know any previous events::
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events and doesn't know any previous events::
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@ -1067,8 +1046,8 @@ events and doesn't know any previous events::
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Another example: a public room list has rooms R1 -> R17. The client is showing 5
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Another example: a public room list has rooms R1 -> R17. The client is showing 5
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rooms at a time on screen, and is on page 2. They want to
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rooms at a time on screen, and is on page 2. They want to now show page 3 (rooms
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now show page 3 (rooms R11 -> 15)::
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R11 -> 15)::
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S E
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S E
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| 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 | stream token
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| 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 | stream token
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@ -1086,20 +1065,17 @@ token from the initial request was '9' which corresponded to R10. When the 2nd
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request was made, R10 did not appear again, even though from=9 was specified. If
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request was made, R10 did not appear again, even though from=9 was specified. If
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you know the token, you already have the data.
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you know the token, you already have the data.
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Pagination Response
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Responses for pagination-capable endpoints SHOULD have a ``chunk`` array alongside
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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the applicable stream tokens to represent the result set.
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Responses to pagination requests MUST follow the format::
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In general, when the end of a result set is reached the applicable stream token
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will be excluded from the response. For example, if a user was backwards-paginating
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{
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events in a room they'd eventually reach the first event in the room. In this scenario,
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"chunk": [ ... , Responses , ... ],
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the ``prev_batch`` token would be excluded from the response. Some paginated
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"start" : $streamtoken,
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endpoints are open-ended in one direction, such as endpoints which expose an event
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"end" : $streamtoken
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stream for an active room. In this case, it is not possible for the client to reach
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}
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the true "end" of the data set and therefore should always be presented with a token
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to keep moving forwards.
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Where $streamtoken is an opaque token which can be used in another query to
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get the next set of results. The "start" and "end" keys can only be omitted if
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the complete dataset is provided in "chunk".
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.. _`filter`:
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.. _`filter`:
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