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%proposalscssinjection%
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.. title:: Proposals for Spec Changes to Matrix
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.. contents:: Table of Contents
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.. sectnum::
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Proposals for Spec Changes to Matrix
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------------------------------------
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If you are interested in submitting a change to the Matrix Specification,
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please take note of the following guidelines.
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Most changes to the Specification require a formal proposal. Bug fixes, typos,
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and clarifications to existing behaviour do not need proposals - see the
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`contributing guide <https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.rst>`_
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for more information on what does and does not need a proposal.
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The proposal process involves some technical writing, having it reviewed by
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everyone, having the proposal being accepted, then actually having your ideas
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implemented as committed changes to the `Specification repository
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<https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc>`_.
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Meet the `members of the Core Team
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<https://matrix.org/foundation>`_, a group of
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individuals tasked with ensuring the spec process is as smooth and painless as
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possible. Members of the Spec Core Team will do their best to participate in
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discussion, summarise when things become long-winded, and generally try to act
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towards the benefit of everyone. As a majority, team members have the ability
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to change the state of a proposal, and individually have the final say in
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proposal discussion.
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Guiding Principles
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------------------
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Proposals **must** act to the greater benefit of the entire Matrix ecosystem,
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rather than benefiting or privileging any single player or subset of players -
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and must not contain any patent encumbered intellectual property. Members of
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the Core Team pledge to act as a neutral custodian for Matrix on behalf of the
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whole ecosystem.
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For clarity: the Matrix ecosystem is anyone who uses the Matrix protocol. That
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includes client users, server admins, client developers, bot developers,
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bridge and application service developers, users and admins who are indirectly
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using Matrix via 3rd party networks which happen to be bridged, server developers,
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room moderators and admins, companies/projects building products or services on
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Matrix, spec contributors, translators, and those who created it in
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the first place.
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"Greater benefit" could include maximising:
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* the number of end-users reachable on the open Matrix network
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* the number of regular users on the Matrix network (e.g. 30-day retained
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federated users)
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* the number of online servers in the open federation
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* the number of developers building on Matrix
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* the number of independent implementations which use Matrix
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* the number of bridged end-users reachable on the open Matrix network
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* the signal-to-noise ratio of the content on the open Matrix network (i.e. minimising spam)
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* the ability for users to discover content on their terms (empowering them to select what to see and what not to see)
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* the quality and utility of the Matrix spec (as defined by ease and ability
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with which a developer can implement spec-compliant clients, servers, bots,
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bridges, and other integrations without needing to refer to any other
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external material)
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In addition, proposal authors are expected to uphold the following values in
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their proposed changes to the Matrix protocol:
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* Supporting the whole long-term ecosystem rather than individual stakeholder gain
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* Openness rather than proprietary lock-in
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* Interoperability rather than fragmentation
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* Cross-platform rather than platform-specific
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* Collaboration rather than competition
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* Accessibility rather than elitism
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* Transparency rather than stealth
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* Empathy rather than contrariness
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* Pragmatism rather than perfection
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* Proof rather than conjecture
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Please `see MSC1779 <https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/blob/master/proposals/1779-open-governance.md>`_
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for full details of the project's Guiding Principles.
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Technical notes
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---------------
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Proposals **must** develop Matrix as a layered protocol: with new features
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building on layers of shared abstractions rather than introducing tight vertical
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coupling within the stack. This ensures that new features can evolve rapidly by
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building on existing layers and swapping out old features without impacting the
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rest of the stack or requiring substantial upgrades to the whole ecosystem.
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This is critical for Matrix to rapidly evolve and compete effectively with
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centralised systems, despite being a federated protocol.
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For instance, new features should be implemented using the highest layer
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abstractions possible (e.g. new event types, which layer on top of the existing
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room semantics, and so don't even require any API changes). Failing that, the
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next recourse would be backwards-compatible changes to the next layer down (e.g.
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room APIs); failing that, considering changes to the format of events or the
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DAG; etc. It would be a very unusual feature which doesn't build on the
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existing infrastructure provided by the spec and instead created new primitives
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or low level APIs.
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Backwards compatibility is very important for Matrix, but not at the expense of
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hindering the protocol's evolution. Backwards incompatible changes to endpoints
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are allowed when no other alternative exists, and must be versioned under a new
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major release of the API. Backwards incompatible changes to the room algorithm
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are also allowed when no other alternative exists, and must be versioned under a
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new version of the room algorithm.
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There is sometimes a dilemma over where to include higher level features: for
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instance, should video conferencing be formalised in the spec, or should it be
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implemented via widgets? Should reputation systems be specified? Should search
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engine behaviour be specified?
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There is no universal answer to this, but the following guidelines should be
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applied:
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1. If the feature would benefit the whole Matrix ecosystem and is aligned with
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the guiding principles above, then it should be supported by the spec.
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2. If the spec already makes the feature possible without changing any of the
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implementations and spec, then it may not need to be added to the spec.
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3. However, if the best user experience for a feature does require custom
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implementation behaviour then the behaviour should be defined in the spec
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such that all implementations may implement it.
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4. However, the spec must never add dependencies on unspecified/nonstandardised
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3rd party behaviour.
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As a worked example:
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1. Video conferencing is clearly a feature which would benefit
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the whole ecosystem, and so the spec should find a way to make it happen.
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2. Video conferencing can be achieved by widgets without requiring any
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compulsory changes to changes to clients nor servers to work, and so could be
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omitted from the spec.
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3. A better experience could be achieved by embedding Jitsi natively into clients
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rather than using a widget...
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4. ...except that would add a dependency on unspecified/nonstandardised 3rd party
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behaviour, so must not be added to the spec.
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Therefore, our two options in the specific case of video conferencing are
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either to spec SFU conferencing semantics for WebRTC (or refer to an existing spec
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for doing so), or to keep it as a widget-based approach (optionally with widget
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extensions specific for more deeply integrating video conferencing use cases).
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As an alternative example: it's very unlikely that "how to visualise Magnetic
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Resonsance Imaging data over Matrix" would ever be added to the Matrix spec
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(other than perhaps a custom event type in a wider standardised Matrix event
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registry) given that the spec's existing primitives of file transfer and
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extensible events (MSC1767) give excellent tools for transfering and
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visualising arbitrary rich data.
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Supporting public search engines are likely to not require custom spec features
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(other than possibly better bulk access APIs), given they can be implemented as
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clients using the existing CS API. An exception could be API features required
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by decentralised search infrastructure (avoiding centralisation of power by
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a centralised search engine).
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Features such as reactions, threaded messages, editable messages,
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spam/abuse/content filtering (and reputation systems), are all features which
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would clearly benefit the whole Matrix ecosystem, and cannot be implemented in an
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interoperable way using the current spec; so they necessitate a spec change.
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Process
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-------
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The process for submitting a Matrix Spec Change (MSC) Proposal in detail is as
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follows:
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- Create a first draft of your proposal using `GitHub-flavored markdown
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<https://help.github.com/articles/basic-writing-and-formatting-syntax/>`_
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- In the document, clearly state the problem being solved, and the possible
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solutions being proposed for solving it and their respective trade-offs.
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- Proposal documents are intended to be as lightweight and flexible as the
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author desires; there is no formal template; the intention is to iterate
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as quickly as possible to get to a good design.
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- However, a `template with suggested headers
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<https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/blob/master/proposals/0000-proposal-template.md>`_
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is available to get you started if necessary.
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- Take care in creating your proposal. Specify your intended changes, and
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give reasoning to back them up. Changes without justification will likely
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be poorly received by the community.
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- Fork and make a PR to the `matrix-doc
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<https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc>`_ repository. The ID of your PR
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will become the MSC ID for the lifetime of your proposal.
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- The proposal must live in the ``proposals/`` directory with a filename that
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follows the format ``1234-my-new-proposal.md`` where ``1234`` is the MSC
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ID.
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- Your PR description must include a link to the rendered markdown document
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and a summary of the proposal.
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- It is often very helpful to link any related MSCs or `matrix-doc issues
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<https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/issues>`_ to give context
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for the proposal.
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- Additionally, please be sure to sign off your proposal PR as per the
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guidelines listed on `CONTRIBUTING.rst
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<https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.rst>`_.
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- Gather feedback as widely as possible.
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- The aim is to get maximum consensus towards an optimal solution. Sometimes
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trade-offs are required to meet this goal. Decisions should be made to the
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benefit of all major use cases.
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- A good place to ask for feedback on a specific proposal is
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`#matrix-spec:matrix.org <https://matrix.to/#/#matrix-spec:matrix.org>`_.
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If preferred, an alternative room can be created and advertised in
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#matrix-spec:matrix.org. Please also link to the room in your PR
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description.
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- For additional discussion areas, know that that #matrix-dev:matrix.org is
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for developers using existing Matrix APIs, #matrix:matrix.org is for users
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trying to run Matrix apps (clients & servers) and
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#matrix-architecture:matrix.org is for cross-cutting discussion of matrix's
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architectural design.
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- The point of the spec proposal process is to be collaborative rather than
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competitive, and to try to solve the problem in question with the optimal
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set of trade-offs. The author should neutrally gather the various
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viewpoints and get consensus, but this can sometimes be time-consuming (or
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the author may be biased), in which case an impartial 'shepherd' can be
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assigned to help guide the proposal through this process instead. A shepherd is
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typically a neutral party from the Spec Core Team or an experienced member of
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the community. There is no formal process for assignment. Simply ask for a
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shepherd to help get your proposal through and one will be assigned based
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on availability. Having a shepherd is not a requirement for proposal
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acceptance.
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- Members of the Spec Core Team and community will review and discuss the PR in the
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comments and in relevant rooms on Matrix. Discussion outside of GitHub should
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be summarised in a comment on the PR.
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- When a member of the Spec Core Team believes that no new discussion points are
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being made, and the proposal has suitable evidence of working (see `implementing a
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proposal`_ below), they will propose a motion for a final comment period (FCP),
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along with a *disposition* of either merge, close or postpone. This FCP is
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provided to allow a short period of time for any invested party to provide a
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final objection before a major decision is made. If sufficient reasoning is
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given, an FCP can be cancelled. It is often preceded by a comment summarising
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the current state of the discussion, along with reasoning for its occurrence.
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- A concern can be raised by a Spec Core Team member at any time, which will block
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an FCP from beginning. An FCP will only begin when 75% of the members of the
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Spec Core Team team agree on its outcome, and all existing concerns have been
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resolved.
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- The FCP will then begin and last for 5 days, giving anyone else some time to
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speak up before it concludes. On its conclusion, the disposition of the FCP
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will be carried out. If sufficient reasoning against the disposition is
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raised, the FCP can be cancelled and the MSC will continue to evolve
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accordingly.
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- Once the proposal has been accepted and merged, it is time to submit the
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actual change to the Specification that your proposal reasoned about. This is
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known as a spec PR. However in order for the spec PR to be accepted, an
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implementation **must** be shown to prove that it works well in practice. A
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link to the implementation should be included in the PR description. In
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addition, any significant unforeseen changes to the original idea found
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during this process will warrant another MSC. Any minor, non-fundamental
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changes are allowed but **must** be documented in the original proposal
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document. This ensures that someone reading a proposal in the future doesn't
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assume old information wasn't merged into the spec.
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- Similar to the proposal PR, please sign off the spec PR as per the
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guidelines on `CONTRIBUTING.rst
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<https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.rst>`_.
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- Your PR will then be reviewed and hopefully merged on the grounds it is
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implemented sufficiently. If so, then give yourself a pat on the back knowing
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you've contributed to the Matrix protocol for the benefit of users and
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developers alike :)
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The process for handling proposals is shown visually in the following diagram.
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Note that the lifetime of a proposal is tracked through the corresponding
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labels for each stage on the `matrix-doc
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<https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc>`_ issue and pull request trackers.
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::
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+ +
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Proposals | Spec PRs | Additional States
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+-------+ | +------+ | +---------------+
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| |
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+----------------------+ | +---------+ | +-----------+
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| | | | | | | |
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| Proposal | | +------= Spec PR | | | Postponed |
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| Drafting and Initial | | | | Missing | | | |
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| Feedback Gathering | | | | | | +-----------+
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| | | | +----+----+ |
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+----------+-----------+ | | | | +----------+
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| | | v | | |
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v | | +-----------------+ | | Closed |
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+-------------------+ | | | | | | |
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| | | | | Spec PR Created | | +----------+
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| Proposal PR | | | | and In Review | |
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| In Review | | | | | |
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| | | | +--------+--------+ |
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+---------+---------+ | | | |
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| | | v |
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v | | +-----------+ |
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+----------------------+ | | | | |
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| | | | | Spec PR | |
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| Proposed Final | | | | Merged! | |
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| Comment Period | | | | | |
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| | | | +-----------+ |
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+----------+-----------+ | | |
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| | | |
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v | | |
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+----------------------+ | | |
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| | | | |
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| Final Comment Period | | | |
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+----------+-----------+ | | |
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| | | |
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v | | |
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+----------------------+ | | |
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| Final Comment Period | | | |
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| Complete | | | |
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+----------+-----------+ | | |
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+-----------------+ |
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+ +
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Lifetime States
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---------------
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**Note:** All labels are to be placed on the proposal PR.
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=============================== ============================= ====================================
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Name GitHub Label Description
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=============================== ============================= ====================================
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Proposal Drafting and Feedback N/A A proposal document which is still work-in-progress but is being shared to incorporate feedback. Please prefix your proposal's title with ``[WIP]`` to make it easier for reviewers to skim their notifications list.
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Proposal In Review proposal-in-review A proposal document which is now ready and waiting for review by the Spec Core Team and community
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Proposed Final Comment Period proposed-final-comment-period Currently awaiting signoff of a 75% majority of team members in order to enter the final comment period
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Final Comment Period final-comment-period A proposal document which has reached final comment period either for merge, closure or postponement
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Final Commment Period Complete finished-final-comment-period The final comment period has been completed. Waiting for a demonstration implementation
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Spec PR Missing spec-pr-missing The proposal has been agreed, and proven with a demonstration implementation. Waiting for a PR against the Spec
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Spec PR In Review spec-pr-in-review The spec PR has been written, and is currently under review
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Spec PR Merged merged A proposal with a sufficient working implementation and whose Spec PR has been merged!
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Postponed proposal-postponed A proposal that is temporarily blocked or a feature that may not be useful currently but perhaps
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sometime in the future
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Closed proposal-closed A proposal which has been reviewed and deemed unsuitable for acceptance
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Obsolete obsolete A proposal which has been made obsolete by another proposal or decision elsewhere.
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=============================== ============================= ====================================
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Implementing a proposal
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-----------------------
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As part of the proposal process the spec core team will require evidence of the MSC
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working in order for it to move into FCP. This can usually be a branch/pull request
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to whichever implementation of choice that proves the MSC works in practice, though
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in some cases the MSC itself will be small enough to be considered proven. Where it's
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unclear if a MSC will require an implementation proof, ask in `#matrix-spec:matrix.org
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<https://matrix.to/#/#matrix-spec:matrix.org>`_.
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Early adoption of a MSC/idea
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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To help facilitate early releases of software dependent on a spec release, implementations
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are required to use the following process to ensure that the official Matrix namespace
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is not cluttered with development or testing data.
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.. Note::
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Proof of concept implementations that are solely left on a branch/unreleased and for
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demonstrating that a particular MSC works do not have to follow this. Note that the
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``develop`` branch adopted by some projects is still subject to this process.
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The process for an implementation willing to be ahead of a spec release is:
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1. Have an idea for a feature.
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2. Implement the feature using unstable endpoints, vendor prefixes, and unstable
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feature flags as appropriate.
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* When using unstable endpoints, they MUST include a vendor prefix. For example:
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`/_matrix/client/unstable/com.example/login`. Vendor prefixes throughout Matrix
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always use the Java package naming convention. The MSC for the feature should
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identify which preferred vendor prefix is to be used by early adopters.
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* Unstable endpoints **do not** inherit from stable (e.g. `/r0`) APIs. Implementations
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cannot assume that a particular endpoint will exist in the unstable namespace
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even if the server advertises support for the feature.
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* If the client needs to be sure the server supports the feature, an unstable
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feature flag that MUST be vendor prefixed is to be used. This kind of flag shows
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up in the ``unstable_features`` section of ``/versions`` as, for example,
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``com.example.new_login``. The MSC for the feature should identify which preferred
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feature flag is to be used by early adopters.
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* When using this approach correctly, the implementation can ship/release the
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feature at any time, so long as the implementation is able to accept the technical
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debt that results from needing to provide adequate backwards and forwards
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compatibility. The implementation MUST support the flag disappearing and be
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generally safe for users. Note that implementations early in the MSC review
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process may also be required to provide backwards compatibility with earlier
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editions of the proposal.
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* If the implementation cannot support the technical debt (or if it's impossible
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to provide forwards/backwards compatibility - e.g. a user authentication change
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which can't be safely rolled back), the implementation should not attempt to
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implement the feature and instead wait for a spec release.
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* If at any point the idea changes, the feature flag should also change so that
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implementations can adapt as needed.
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3. In parallel, or ahead of implementation, open an MSC and solicit review per above.
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4. Before FCP can be called, the Spec Core Team will require evidence of the MSC
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working as proposed. A typical example of this is an implementation of the MSC,
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though the implementation does not need to be shipped anywhere and can therefore
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avoid the forwards/backwards compatibility concerns mentioned here.
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5. FCP is gone through, and assuming nothing is flagged the MSC lands.
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6. A spec PR is written to incorporate the changes into Matrix.
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7. A spec release happens.
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8. Implementations switch to using stable prefixes (e.g.: ``/r0``) if the server
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supports the specification version released. If the server doesn't advertise the
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specification version, but does have the feature flag, unstable prefixes should
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still be used.
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9. A transition period of about 2 months starts immediately after the spec release,
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before implementations start to loudly encourage other implementations to switch
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to stable endpoints. For example, a server implementation should start asking
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client implementations to support the stable endpoints 2 months after the spec
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release, if they haven't already. The same applies in the reverse: if clients
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cannot switch to stable prefixes because server implementations haven't started
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supporting the new spec release, some noise should be raised in the general direction
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of the implementation.
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* Please be considerate when being noisy to implementations. A gentle reminder
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in their issue tracker is generally good enough.
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.. Note::
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MSCs MUST still describe what the stable endpoints/feature looks like with a note
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towards the bottom for what the unstable feature flag/prefixes are. For example,
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a MSC would propose `/_matrix/client/r0/new/endpoint`, not `/_matrix/client/unstable/
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com.example/new/endpoint`.
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In summary:
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* Implementations MUST NOT use stable endpoints before the MSC is in the spec. This
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includes NOT using stable endpoints before a spec release happens, but after FCP has
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passed.
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* Implementations are able to ship features that are exposed to users by default before
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an MSC has been merged to the spec, provided they follow the process above.
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* Implementations SHOULD be wary of the technical debt they are incurring by moving faster
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|
than the spec.
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|
* The vendor prefix is chosen by the developer of the feature, using the Java package
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|
naming convention. The foundation's preferred vendor prefix is `org.matrix`.
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* The vendor prefixes, unstable feature flags, and unstable endpoints should be included
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in the MSC, though the MSC MUST be written in a way that proposes new stable endpoints.
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Typically this is solved by a small table at the bottom mapping the various values
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|
from stable to unstable.
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|
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|
Proposal Tracking
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|
-----------------
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|
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|
This is a living document generated from the list of proposals on the issue and
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|
pull request trackers of the `matrix-doc
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|
<https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc>`_ repo.
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|
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|
We use labels and some metadata in MSC PR descriptions to generate this page.
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|
Labels are assigned by the Spec Core Team whilst triaging the proposals based on those
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|
which exist in the `matrix-doc <https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc>`_
|
|
repo already.
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|
|
|
It is worth mentioning that a previous version of the MSC process used a
|
|
mixture of GitHub issues and PRs, leading to some MSC numbers deriving from
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|
GitHub issue IDs instead. A useful feature of GitHub is that it does
|
|
automatically resolve to an issue, if an issue ID is placed in a pull URL. This
|
|
means that https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/pull/$MSCID will correctly
|
|
resolve to the desired MSC, whether it started as an issue or a PR.
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|
|
|
Other metadata:
|
|
|
|
- The MSC number is taken from the GitHub Pull Request ID. This is carried for
|
|
the lifetime of the proposal. These IDs do not necessary represent a
|
|
chronological order.
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|
- The GitHub PR title will act as the MSC's title.
|
|
- Please link to the spec PR (if any) by adding a "PRs: #1234" line in the
|
|
issue description.
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|
- The creation date is taken from the GitHub PR, but can be overridden by
|
|
adding a "Date: yyyy-mm-dd" line in the PR description.
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|
- Updated Date is taken from GitHub.
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|
- Author is the creator of the MSC PR, but can be overridden by adding a
|
|
"Author: @username" line in the body of the issue description. Please make
|
|
sure @username is a GitHub user (include the @!)
|
|
- A shepherd can be assigned by adding a "Shepherd: @username" line in the
|
|
issue description. Again, make sure this is a real GitHub user.
|