Push Notifications ================== .. _module:push: Overview -------- :: +--------------------+ +-------------------+ Matrix HTTP | | | | Notification Protocol | App Developer | | Device Vendor | | | | | +-------------------+ | +----------------+ | | +---------------+ | | | | | | | | | | | | Matrix Home Server+-----> Push Gateway | +---> Push Provider | | | | | | | | | | | | +-^-----------------+ | +----------------+ | | +----+----------+ | | | | | | | Matrix | | | | | | Client/Server API + | | | | | | | +--------------------+ +-------------------+ | +--+-+ | | | <------------------------------------------+ +---+ | | | Provider Push Protocol +----+ Mobile Device or Client Matrix supports push notifications as a first class citizen. Home Servers send notifications of user events to user-configured HTTP endpoints. User may also configure a number of rules that determine what events generate notifications. These are all stored and managed by the users home server such that settings can be reused between client apps as appropriate. The above diagram shows the flow of push notifications being sent to a handset where push notifications are submitted via the handset vendor, such as Apple's APNS or Google's GCM. This happens as follows: 1. The client app signs in to a Matrix Home Server 2. The client app registers with its vendor's Push Notification provider and obtains a routing token of some kind. 3. The mobile app, uses the Matrix client/server API to add a 'pusher', providing the URL of a specific Push Gateway which is configured for that application. It also provides the routing token it has acquired from the Push Notification Provider. 4. The Home Server starts sending notification HTTP requests to the Push Gateway using the supplied URL. The Push Gateway relays this notification to the Push Notification Provider, passing the routing token along with any necessary private credentials the provider requires to send push notifications. 5. The Push Notification provider sends the notification to the device. Nomenclature ~~~~~~~~~~~~ Pusher A 'pusher' is an activity in the Home Server that manages the sending of HTTP notifications for a single device of a single user. Push Rules A push rule is a single rule, configured by a matrix user, that gives instructions to the Home Server about whether an event should be notified about and how given a set of conditions. Matrix clients allow the user to configure these. They create and view them via the Client to Server REST API. Push Gateway A push gateway is a server that receives HTTP event notifications from Home Servers and passes them on to a different protocol such as APNS for iOS devices or GCM for Android devices. Matrix.org provides a reference push gateway, 'sygnal'. A client app tells a Home Server what push gateway to send notifications to when it sets up a pusher. For information on the client-server API for setting pushers and push rules, see the Client Server API section. For more information on the format of HTTP notifications, see the HTTP Notification Protocol section. HTTP Notification Protocol -------------------------- This describes the format used by "HTTP" pushers to send notifications of events. Notifications are sent as HTTP POST requests to the URL configured when the pusher is created, but Matrix strongly recommends that the path should be:: /_matrix/push/v1/notify The body of the POST request is a JSON dictionary. The format is as follows:: { "notification": { "id": "$3957tyerfgewrf384", "room_id": "!slw48wfj34rtnrf:example.com", "type": "m.room.message", "sender": "@exampleuser:matrix.org", "sender_display_name": "Major Tom", "room_name": "Mission Control", "room_alias": "#exampleroom:matrix.org", "prio": "high", "content": { "msgtype": "m.text", "body": "I'm floating in a most peculiar way." } }, "counts": { "unread" : 2, "missed_calls": 1 } "devices": [ { "app_id": "org.matrix.matrixConsole.ios", "pushkey": "V2h5IG9uIGVhcnRoIGRpZCB5b3UgZGVjb2RlIHRoaXM/", "pushkey_ts": 12345678, "data" : { }, "tweaks": { "sound": "bing" } } ] } } The contents of this dictionary are defined as follows: id An identifier for this notification that may be used to detect duplicate notification requests. This is not necessarily the ID of the event that triggered the notification. room_id The ID of the room in which this event occurred. type The type of the event as in the event's 'type' field. sender The sender of the event as in the corresponding event field. sender_display_name The current display name of the sender in the room in which the event occurred. room_name The name of the room in which the event occurred. room_alias An alias to display for the room in which the event occurred. prio The priority of the notification. Acceptable values are 'high' or 'low. If omitted, 'high' is assumed. This may be used by push gateways to deliver less time-sensitive notifications in a way that will preserve battery power on mobile devices. content The 'content' field from the event, if present. If the event had no content field, this field is omitted. counts This is a dictionary of the current number of unacknowledged communications for the recipient user. Counts whose value is zero are omitted. unread The number of unread messages a user has across all of the rooms they are a member of. missed_calls The number of unacknowledged missed calls a user has across all rooms of which they are a member. device This is an array of devices that the notification should be sent to. app_id The app_id given when the pusher was created. pushkey The pushkey given when the pusher was created. pushkey_ts The unix timestamp (in seconds) when the pushkey was last updated. data A dictionary of additional pusher-specific data. For 'http' pushers, this is the data dictionary passed in at pusher creation minus the 'url' key. tweaks A dictionary of customisations made to the way this notification is to be presented. These are added by push rules. sound Sets the sound file that should be played. 'default' means that a default sound should be played. And additional key is defined but only present on member events: user_is_target This is true if the user receiving the notification is the subject of a member event (i.e. the state_key of the member event is equal to the user's Matrix ID). The recipient of an HTTP notification should respond with an HTTP 2xx response when the notification has been processed. If the endpoint returns an HTTP error code, the Home Server should retry for a reasonable amount of time with a reasonable back-off scheme. The endpoint should return a JSON dictionary as follows:: { "rejected": [ "V2h5IG9uIGVhcnRoIGRpZCB5b3UgZGVjb2RlIHRoaXM/" ] } Whose keys are: rejected A list of all pushkeys given in the notification request that are not valid. These could have been rejected by an upstream gateway because they have expired or have never been valid. Home Servers must cease sending notification requests for these pushkeys and remove the associated pushers. It may not necessarily be the notification in the request that failed: it could be that a previous notification to the same pushkey failed. Push: Recommendations for APNS ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ For sending APNS notifications, the exact format is flexible and up to the client app and its push gateway to agree on (since APNS requires that the sender have a private key owned by the app developer, each app must have its own push gateway). However, Matrix strongly recommends: * That the APNS token be base64 encoded and used as the pushkey. * That a different app_id be used for apps on the production and sandbox APS environments. * That APNS push gateways do not attempt to wait for errors from the APNS gateway before returning and instead to store failures and return 'rejected' responses next time that pushkey is used. Pushers HTTP API ---------------- To receive any notification pokes at all, it is necessary to configure a 'pusher' on the Home Server that you wish to receive notifications from. There is a single API endpoint for this:: POST $PREFIX/pushers/set This takes a JSON object with the following keys: pushkey This is a unique identifier for this pusher. The value you should use for this is the routing or destination address information for the notification, for example, the APNS token for APNS or the Registration ID for GCM. If your notification client has no such concept, use any unique identifier. Max length, 512 bytes. kind The kind of pusher to configure. 'http' makes a pusher that sends HTTP pokes. null deletes the pusher. profile_tag This is a string that determines what set of device rules will be matched when evaluating push rules for this pusher. It is an arbitrary string. Multiple devices maybe use the same profile_tag. It is advised that when an app's data is copied or restored to a different device, this value remain the same. Client apps should offer ways to change the profile_tag, optionally copying rules from the old profile tag. Max length, 32 bytes. app_id appId is a reverse-DNS style identifier for the application. It is recommended that this end with the platform, such that different platform versions get different app identifiers. Max length, 64 chars. app_display_name A string that will allow the user to identify what application owns this pusher. device_display_name A string that will allow the user to identify what device owns this pusher. lang The preferred language for receiving notifications (eg, 'en' or 'en-US') data A dictionary of information for the pusher implementation itself. For HTTP pushers, this must contain a 'url' key which is a string of the URL that should be used to send notifications. append If this is set to boolean true, the Home Server should add another pusher with the given pushkey and App ID in addition to any others with different user IDs. Otherwise, the Home Server must remove any other pushers with the same App ID and pushkey for different users. The default is false. If the pusher was created successfully, a JSON dictionary is returned (which may be empty). Push Rules ~~~~~~~~~~ Home Servers have an interface to configure what events trigger notifications. This behaviour is configured through 'Push Rules'. Push Rules come in a variety of different kinds and each kind of rule has an associated priority. The different kinds of rule, in descending order of priority, are: Override Rules The highest priority rules are user-configured overrides. Content Rules These configure behaviour for (unencrypted) messages that match certain patterns. Content rules take one parameter, 'pattern', that gives the pattern to match against. This is treated in the same way as pattern for event_match conditions, below. Room Rules These change the behaviour of all messages to a given room. The rule_id of a room rule is always the ID of the room that it affects. Sender These rules configure notification behaviour for messages from a specific, named Matrix user ID. The rule_id of Sender rules is always the Matrix user ID of the user whose messages they'd apply to. Underride These are identical to override rules, but have a lower priority than content, room and sender rules. In addition, each kind of rule may be either global or device-specific. Device specific rules only affect delivery of notifications via pushers with a matching profile_tag. All device-specific rules are higher priority than all global rules. Thusly, the full list of rule kinds, in descending priority order, is as follows: * Device-specific Override * Device-specific Content * Device-specific Room * Device-specific Sender * Device-specific Underride * Global Override * Global Content * Global Room * Global Sender * Global Underride For some kinds of rule, rules of the same kind also have an ordering with respect to one another. The kinds that do not are room and sender rules where the rules are mutually exclusive by definition and therefore an ordering would be redundant. Actions for the highest priority rule and only that rule apply (for example, a set_tweak action in a lower priority rule will not apply if a higher priority rule matches, even if that rule does not specify any tweaks). Rules also have an identifier, ``rule_id``, which is a string. The ``rule_id`` is unique within the kind of rule and scope: ``rule_ids`` need not be unique between rules of the same kind on different devices. A home server may also have server default rules of each kind and in each scope. Server default rules are lower priority than user-defined rules in each scope. Server default rules (and only server default rules) begin with a dot ('.') character. In addition, all rules may be enabled or disabled. Disabled rules never match. If no rules match an event, the Home Server should not notify for the message (that is to say, the default action is "dont-notify"). Events that the user sent themselves are never alerted for. Predefined Rules ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Matrix specifies the following rule IDs for server default rules. Home Servers may define rules as follows with the given IDs. If Home Servers provide rules with these IDs, their semantics should match those given below: .m.rule.contains_user_name Matches any message whose content is unencrypted and contains the local part of the user's Matrix ID, separated by word boundaries. Definition (as a content rule):: { "rule_id": ".m.rule.contains_user_name" "pattern": "[the local part of the user's Matrix ID]", "actions": [ "notify", { "set_tweak": "sound", "value": "default" } ], } .m.rule.contains_display_name Matches any message whose content is unencrypted and contains the user's current display name in the room in which it was sent. Definition (this rule can only be an override or underride rule):: { "rule_id": ".m.rule.contains_display_name" "conditions": [ { "kind": "contains_display_name" } ], "actions": [ "notify", { "set_tweak": "sound", "value": "default" } ], } .m.rule.room_one_to_one Matches any message sent in a room with exactly two members. Definition (this rule can only be an override or underride rule):: { "rule_id": ".m.rule.room_two_members" "conditions": [ { "is": "2", "kind": "room_member_count" } ], "actions": [ "notify", { "set_tweak": "sound", "value": "default" } ], } .m.rule.suppress_notices Matches messages with 'msgtype' of 'notice'. This should be an override rule such that, when enabled, it takes priority over content / sender / room rules. Definition:: { 'rule_id': '.m.rule.suppress_notices', 'conditions': [ { 'kind': 'event_match', 'key': 'content.msgtype', 'pattern': 'm.notice', } ], 'actions': [ 'dont-notify', ] } .m.rule.fallback Matches any message. Used to define the behaviour of messages that match no other rules. Therefore, if Home Servers define this, it should be the lowest priority underride rule. Definition:: { "rule_id": ".m.rule.fallback" "conditions": [], "actions": [ "notify" ], } Push Rules: Actions: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ All rules have an associated list of 'actions'. An action affects if and how a notification is delivered for a matching event. This standard defines the following actions, although if Home servers wish to support more, they are free to do so: notify This causes each matching event to generate a notification. dont_notify Prevents this event from generating a notification coalesce This enables notifications for matching events but activates Home Server specific behaviour to intelligently coalesce multiple events into a single notification. Not all Home Servers may support this. Those that do not should treat it as the 'notify' action. set_tweak Sets an entry in the 'tweaks' dictionary key that is sent in the notification poke. This takes the form of a dictionary with a 'set_tweak' key whose value is the name of the tweak to set. It may also have a 'value' key which is the value to which it should be set. Actions that have no parameters are represented as a string. Otherwise, they are represented as a dictionary with a key equal to their name and other keys as their parameters, e.g. ``{ "set_tweak": "sound", "value": "default" }`` Push Rules: Actions: Tweaks ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The ``set_tweak`` key action is used to add an entry to the 'tweaks' dictionary that is sent in the notification poke. The following tweaks are defined: sound A sound to be played when this notification arrives. 'default' means to play a default sound. highlight Whether or not this message should be highlighted in the UI. This will normally take the form of presenting the message in a different colour and/or weight. The UI might also be adjusted to draw particular attention to the room in which the event occurred. The value may be omitted from the highlight tweak, in which case it should be read as if it had a value of true. Tweaks are passed transparently through the Home Server so client applications and push gateways may agree on additional tweaks, for example, how to flash the notification light on a mobile device. If a kind of tweak that a client understands is not specified in an action, the client may choose a sensible behaviour for the tweak. Push Rules: Conditions ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Override, Underride and Default rules have a list of 'conditions'. All conditions must hold true for an event in order for a rule to be applied to an event. A rule with no conditions always matches. Matrix specifies the following conditions, although if Home Servers wish to support others, they are free to do so: event_match This is a glob pattern match on a field of the event. Parameters: * 'key': The dot-separated field of the event to match, e.g. content.body * 'pattern': The glob-style pattern to match against. Patterns with no special glob characters should be treated as having asterisks prepended and appended when testing the condition. profile_tag Matches the profile_tag of the device that the notification would be delivered to. Parameters: * 'profile_tag': The profile_tag to match with. contains_display_name This matches unencrypted messages where content.body contains the owner's display name in that room. This is a separate rule because display names may change and as such it would be hard to maintain a rule that matched the user's display name. This condition has no parameters. room_member_count This matches the current number of members in the room. * 'is': A decimal integer optionally prefixed by one of, '==', '<', '>', '>=' or '<='. A prefix of '<' matches rooms where the member count is strictly less than the given number and so forth. If no prefix is present, this matches rooms where the member count is exactly equal to the given number (i.e. the same as '=='). Room, Sender, User and Content rules do not have conditions in the same way, but instead have predefined conditions, the behaviour of which can be configured using parameters named as described above. In the cases of room and sender rules, the rule_id of the rule determines its behaviour. Push Rules: API ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Rules live under a hierarchy in the REST API that resembles:: $PREFIX/pushrules/// The component parts are as follows: scope Either 'global' or 'device/' to specify global rules or device rules for the given profile_tag. kind The kind of rule, i.e. 'override', 'underride', 'sender', 'room', 'content'. rule_id The identifier for the rule. To add or change a rule, a client performs a PUT request to the appropriate URL. When adding rules of a type that has an ordering, the client can add parameters that define the priority of the rule: before Use 'before' with a rule_id as its value to make the new rule the next-more important rule with respect to the given rule. after This makes the new rule the next-less important rule relative to the given rule. All requests to the push rules API also require an access_token as a query parameter. The content of the PUT request is a JSON object with a list of actions under the 'actions' key and either conditions (under the 'conditions' key) or the appropriate parameters for the rule (under the appropriate key name). Examples: To create a rule that suppresses notifications for the room with ID '!dj234r78wl45Gh4D:matrix.org':: curl -X PUT -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d '{ "actions" : ["dont_notify"] }' "http://localhost:8008/_matrix/client/api/v1/pushrules/global/room/%21dj234r78wl45Gh4D%3Amatrix.org?access_token=123456" To suppress notifications for the user '@spambot:matrix.org':: curl -X PUT -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d '{ "actions" : ["dont_notify"] }' "http://localhost:8008/_matrix/client/api/v1/pushrules/global/sender/%40spambot%3Amatrix.org?access_token=123456" To always notify for messages that contain the work 'cake' and set a specific sound (with a rule_id of 'SSByZWFsbHkgbGlrZSBjYWtl'):: curl -X PUT -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d '{ "pattern": "cake", "actions" : ["notify", {"set_sound":"cakealarm.wav"}] }' "http://localhost:8008/_matrix/client/api/v1/pushrules/global/content/SSByZWFsbHkgbGlrZSBjYWtl?access_token=123456" To add a rule suppressing notifications for messages starting with 'cake' but ending with 'lie', superseeding the previous rule:: curl -X PUT -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d '{ "pattern": "cake*lie", "actions" : ["notify"] }' "http://localhost:8008/_matrix/client/api/v1/pushrules/global/content/U3BvbmdlIGNha2UgaXMgYmVzdA?access_token=123456&before=SSByZWFsbHkgbGlrZSBjYWtl" To add a custom sound for notifications messages containing the word 'beer' in any rooms with 10 members or fewer (with greater importance than the room, sender and content rules):: curl -X PUT -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d '{ "conditions": [{"kind": "event_match", "key": "content.body", "pattern": "beer" }, {"kind": "room_member_count", "is": "<=10"}], "actions" : ["notify", {"set_sound":"beeroclock.wav"}] }' "http://localhost:8008/_matrix/client/api/v1/pushrules/global/override/U2VlIHlvdSBpbiBUaGUgRHVrZQ?access_token=123456 To delete rules, a client would just make a DELETE request to the same URL:: curl -X DELETE "http://localhost:8008/_matrix/client/api/v1/pushrules/global/room/%23spam%3Amatrix.org?access_token=123456" Retrieving the current ruleset can be done either by fetching individual rules using the scheme as specified above. This returns the rule in the same format as would be given in the PUT API with the addition of a rule_id:: curl "http://localhost:8008/_matrix/client/api/v1/pushrules/global/room/%23spam%3Amatrix.org?access_token=123456" Returns:: { "actions": [ "dont_notify" ], "rule_id": "#spam:matrix.org", "enabled": true } Clients can also fetch broader sets of rules by removing path components. Requesting the root level returns a structure as follows:: { "device": { "exampledevice": { "content": [], "override": [], "room": [ { "actions": [ "dont_notify" ], "rule_id": "#spam:matrix.org", "enabled", true } ], "sender": [], "underride": [] } }, "global": { "content": [], "override": [], "room": [], "sender": [], "underride": [] } } Adding patch components to the request drills down into this structure to filter to only the requested set of rules. Enabling and Disabling Rules ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Rules can be enabled or disabled with a PUT operation to the 'enabled' component beneath the rule's URI with a content of 'true' or 'false':: curl -X PUT -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d 'false' "http://localhost:8008/_matrix/client/api/v1/pushrules/global/sender/%40spambot%3Amatrix.org/enabled?access_token=123456"