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.. Copyright 2016 OpenMarket Ltd
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.. Copyright 2017 Kamax.io
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.. Copyright 2017 New Vector Ltd
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.. Copyright 2018 New Vector Ltd
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..
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.. Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
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.. you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
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.. You may obtain a copy of the License at
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..
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.. http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
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..
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.. Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
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.. distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
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.. WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
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.. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
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.. limitations under the License.
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Identity Service API
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====================
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{{unstable_warning_block_IDENTITY_RELEASE_LABEL}}
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The Matrix client-server and server-server APIs are largely expressed in Matrix
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user identifiers. From time to time, it is useful to refer to users by other
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("third-party") identifiers, or "3pid"s, e.g. their email address or phone
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number. This Identity Service Specification describes how mappings between
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third-party identifiers and Matrix user identifiers can be established,
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validated, and used. This description technically may apply to any 3pid, but in
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practice has only been applied specifically to email addresses and phone numbers.
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.. contents:: Table of Contents
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.. sectnum::
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Changelog
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---------
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.. topic:: Version: %IDENTITY_RELEASE_LABEL%
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{{identity_service_changelog}}
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This version of the specification is generated from
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`matrix-doc <https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc>`_ as of Git commit
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`{{git_version}} <https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/tree/{{git_rev}}>`_.
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For the full historical changelog, see
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https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/blob/master/changelogs/identity_service.rst
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Other versions of this specification
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The following other versions are also available, in reverse chronological order:
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- `HEAD <https://matrix.org/docs/spec/identity_service/unstable.html>`_: Includes all changes since the latest versioned release.
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- `r0.1.0 <https://matrix.org/docs/spec/identity_service/r0.1.0.html>`_
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General principles
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------------------
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The purpose of an identity server is to validate, store, and answer questions
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about the identities of users. In particular, it stores associations of the form
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"identifier X represents the same user as identifier Y", where identities may
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exist on different systems (such as email addresses, phone numbers,
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Matrix user IDs, etc).
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The identity server has some private-public keypairs. When asked about an
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association, it will sign details of the association with its private key.
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Clients may validate the assertions about associations by verifying the signature
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with the public key of the identity server.
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In general, identity servers are treated as reliable oracles. They do not
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necessarily provide evidence that they have validated associations, but claim to
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have done so. Establishing the trustworthiness of an individual identity server
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is left as an exercise for the client.
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3PID types are described in `3PID Types`_ Appendix.
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API standards
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-------------
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The mandatory baseline for identity server communication in Matrix is exchanging
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JSON objects over HTTP APIs. HTTPS is required for communication, and all API calls
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use a Content-Type of ``application/json``. In addition, strings MUST be encoded as
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UTF-8.
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Any errors which occur at the Matrix API level MUST return a "standard error response".
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This is a JSON object which looks like:
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.. code:: json
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{
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"errcode": "<error code>",
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"error": "<error message>"
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}
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The ``error`` string will be a human-readable error message, usually a sentence
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explaining what went wrong. The ``errcode`` string will be a unique string
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which can be used to handle an error message e.g. ``M_FORBIDDEN``. There may be
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additional keys depending on the error, but the keys ``error`` and ``errcode``
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MUST always be present.
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Some standard error codes are below:
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:``M_NOT_FOUND``:
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The resource requested could not be located.
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:``M_MISSING_PARAMS``:
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The request was missing one or more parameters.
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:``M_INVALID_PARAM``:
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The request contained one or more invalid parameters.
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:``M_SESSION_NOT_VALIDATED``:
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The session has not been validated.
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:``M_NO_VALID_SESSION``:
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A session could not be located for the given parameters.
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:``M_SESSION_EXPIRED``:
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The session has expired and must be renewed.
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:``M_INVALID_EMAIL``:
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The email address provided was not valid.
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:``M_EMAIL_SEND_ERROR``:
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There was an error sending an email. Typically seen when attempting to verify
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ownership of a given email address.
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:``M_INVALID_ADDRESS``:
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The provided third party address was not valid.
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:``M_SEND_ERROR``:
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There was an error sending a notification. Typically seen when attempting to
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verify ownership of a given third party address.
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:``M_UNRECOGNIZED``:
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The request contained an unrecognised value, such as an unknown token or medium.
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:``M_THREEPID_IN_USE``:
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The third party identifier is already in use by another user. Typically this
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error will have an additional ``mxid`` property to indicate who owns the
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third party identifier.
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:``M_UNKNOWN``:
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An unknown error has occurred.
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Privacy
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-------
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Identity is a privacy-sensitive issue. While the identity server exists to
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provide identity information, access should be restricted to avoid leaking
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potentially sensitive data. In particular, being able to construct large-scale
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connections between identities should be avoided. To this end, in general APIs
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should allow a 3pid to be mapped to a Matrix user identity, but not in the other
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direction (i.e. one should not be able to get all 3pids associated with a Matrix
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user ID, or get all 3pids associated with a 3pid).
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Web browser clients
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-------------------
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It is realistic to expect that some clients will be written to be run within a web
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browser or similar environment. In these cases, the identity server should respond to
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pre-flight requests and supply Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) headers on all
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requests.
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When a client approaches the server with a pre-flight (OPTIONS) request, the server
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should respond with the CORS headers for that route. The recommended CORS headers
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to be returned by servers on all requests are::
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Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *
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Access-Control-Allow-Methods: GET, POST, PUT, DELETE, OPTIONS
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Access-Control-Allow-Headers: Origin, X-Requested-With, Content-Type, Accept, Authorization
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Status check
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------------
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{{ping_is_http_api}}
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Key management
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--------------
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An identity server has some long-term public-private keypairs. These are named
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in a scheme ``algorithm:identifier``, e.g. ``ed25519:0``. When signing an
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association, the standard `Signing JSON`_ algorithm applies.
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.. TODO: Actually allow identity servers to revoke all keys
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See: https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/issues/1633
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.. In the event of key compromise, the identity server may revoke any of its keys.
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An HTTP API is offered to get public keys, and check whether a particular key is
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valid.
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The identity server may also keep track of some short-term public-private
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keypairs, which may have different usage and lifetime characteristics than the
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service's long-term keys.
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{{pubkey_is_http_api}}
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Association lookup
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------------------
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{{lookup_is_http_api}}
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Establishing associations
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-------------------------
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The flow for creating an association is session-based.
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Within a session, one may prove that one has ownership of a 3pid.
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Once this has been established, the user can form an association between that
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3pid and a Matrix user ID. Note that this association is only proved one way;
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a user can associate *any* Matrix user ID with a validated 3pid,
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i.e. I can claim that any email address I own is associated with
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@billg:microsoft.com.
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Sessions are time-limited; a session is considered to have been modified when
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it was created, and then when a validation is performed within it. A session can
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only be checked for validation, and validation can only be performed within a
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session, within a 24 hour period since its most recent modification. Any
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attempts to perform these actions after the expiry will be rejected, and a new
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session should be created and used instead.
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To start a session, the client makes a request to the appropriate
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``/requestToken`` endpoint. The identity server then sends a validation token
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to the user, and the user provides the token to the client. The client then
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provides the token to the appropriate ``/submitToken`` endpoint, completing the
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session. At this point, the client should ``/bind`` the third party identifier
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or leave it for another entity to bind.
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Format of a validation token
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The format of the validation token is left up to the identity server: it
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should choose one appropriate to the 3PID type. (For example, it would be
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inappropriate to expect a user to copy a long passphrase including punctuation
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from an SMS message into a client.)
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Whatever format the identity server uses, the validation token must consist of
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at most 255 Unicode codepoints. Clients must pass the token through without
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modification.
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Email associations
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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{{email_associations_is_http_api}}
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Phone number associations
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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{{phone_associations_is_http_api}}
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General
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~~~~~~~
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{{associations_is_http_api}}
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Invitation storage
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------------------
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An identity server can store pending invitations to a user's 3pid, which will
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be retrieved and can be either notified on or look up when the 3pid is
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associated with a Matrix user ID.
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At a later point, if the owner of that particular 3pid binds it with a Matrix user
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ID, the identity server will attempt to make an HTTP POST to the Matrix user's
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homeserver via the `/3pid/onbind`_ endpoint. The request MUST be signed with a
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long-term private key for the identity server.
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{{store_invite_is_http_api}}
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Ephemeral invitation signing
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----------------------------
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To aid clients who may not be able to perform crypto themselves, the identity
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server offers some crypto functionality to help in accepting invitations.
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This is less secure than the client doing it itself, but may be useful where
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this isn't possible.
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{{invitation_signing_is_http_api}}
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.. _`Unpadded Base64`: ../appendices.html#unpadded-base64
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.. _`3PID Types`: ../appendices.html#pid-types
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.. _`Signing JSON`: ../appendices.html#signing-json
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.. _`/3pid/onbind`: ../server_server/r0.1.1.html#put-matrix-federation-v1-3pid-onbind
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