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170 lines
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170 lines
8.2 KiB
Markdown
# Restricting room membership based on space membership
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Draft join rule changes for [MSC1772: spaces](https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/pull/1772),
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this is meant to replaces the second half of [MSC2962](https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/pull/2962/).
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A desirable feature is to give room admins the power to restrict membership of
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their room based on the membership of one or more spaces, for example:
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> members of the #doglovers space can join this room without an invitation<sup id="a1">[1](#f1)</sup>
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We could represent the allowed spaces with a new `join_rule` - `restricted` - to
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reflect the fact that what we have is a cross between `invite` and `public`. This
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would have additional content of the rooms to trust for membership. For example:
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```json
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{
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"type": "m.room.join_rules",
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"state_key": "",
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"content": {
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"join_rule": "restricted",
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"allow": [
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{
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"space": "!mods:example.org",
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"via": ["example.org"]
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},
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{
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"space": "!users:example.org",
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"via": ["example.org"]
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}
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]
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}
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}
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```
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This means that a user must be a member of the `!mods:example.org` space or
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`!users:example.org` space in order to join without an invite<sup id="a2">[2](#f2)</sup>. Membership in
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a single space is enough.
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If the `allow` key is an empty list (or not a list at all), then no users are allowed to join without an invite. Each entry is expected to be an object with the
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following keys, or a string representing the MXID of the user exempted:
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* `space`: The room ID of the space to check the membership of.
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* `via`: A list of servers which may be used to peek for membership of the space.
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Any entries in the list which do not match the expected format are ignored.
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When a homeserver receives a `/join` request from a client or a `/make_join` / `/send_join`
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request from a server, the request should only be permitted if the user has a valid
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invite or is in one of the listed spaces. Note that the server may not know if the user
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is in a particular space, this is left to a future MSC to solve.
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If the user is not part of the proper space, the homeserver should return an error response
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with HTTP status code of 403 and an `errcode` of `M_FORBIDDEN`.
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Unlike the `invite` join rule, confirmation that the `allow` rules were properly
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checked cannot be enforced over federation by event authorization, so servers in
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the room are trusted not to allow invalid users to join.<sup id="a3">[3](#f3)</sup>
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However, user IDs listed as strings can be properly checked over federation.
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## Summary of the behaviour of join rules
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See the [join rules](https://matrix.org/docs/spec/client_server/r0.6.1#m-room-join-rules)
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specification for full details, but the summary below should highlight the differences
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between `public`, `invite`, and `restricted`.
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* `public`: anyone can join, subject to `ban` and `server_acls`, as today.
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* `invite`: only people with membership `invite` can join, as today.
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* `knock`: the same as `invite`, except anyone can knock, subject to `ban` and
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`server_acls`. See [MSC2403](https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/pull/2403).
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* `private`: This is reserved and not implemented.
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* `restricted`: the same as `public` from the perspective of the auth rules, but
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with the additional caveat that servers are expected to check the `allow` rules
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before generating a `join` event (whether for a local or a remote user).
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## Security considerations
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The `allow` feature for `join_rules` places increased trust in the servers in the
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room. We consider this acceptable: if you don't want evil servers randomly
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joining spurious users into your rooms, then:
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1. Don't let evil servers in your room in the first place
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2. Don't use `allow` lists, given the expansion increases the attack surface anyway by letting members in other rooms dictate who's allowed into your room.
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## Unstable prefix
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The `restricted` join rule will be included in a future room version to ensure
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that servers and clients opt-into the new functionality.
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During development it is expected that an unstable room version of
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`org.matrix.msc3083` is used. Since the room version namespaces the behaviour,
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the `allow` key and the `restricted` value do not need unstable prefixes.
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## History / Rationale
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It may seem that just having the `allow` key with `public` join rules is enough,
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as suggested in [MSC2962](https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/pull/2962/),
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but there are concerns that having a `public` join rule that is restricted may
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cause issues if an implementation does not understand the semantics of the `allow`
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keyword. Using an `allow` key with `invite` join rules also does not make sense as
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from the perspective of the auth rules, this is akin to `public` (since the checking
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of whether a member is in the space is done during the call to `/join`
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or `/make_join` / `/send_join`).
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The above concerns about an implementation not understanding the semantics of `allow`
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could be solved by introducing a new room version, but if this is done it seems clearer
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to just introduce a a new join rule - `restricted` - as described above.
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## Future extensions
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Potential future extensions which should not be designed out
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include, but are not included in this MSC.
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### Checking space membership over federation
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If a server is not in a space (and thus doesn't know the membership of a space) it
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cannot enforce membership of a space during a join. Peeking over federation,
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as described in [MSC2444](https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/pull/2444),
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could be used to establish if the user is in any of the proper spaces.
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Note that there are additional security considerations with this, namely that
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the peek server has significant power. For example, a poorly chosen peek
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server could lie about the space membership and add an `@evil_user:example.org`
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to a space to gain membership to a room.
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### Kicking users out when they leave the allowed space
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In the above example, suppose `@bob:server.example` leaves `!users:example.org`:
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they should be removed from the room. One option is to leave the departure up
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to Bob's server `server.example`, but this places a relatively high level of trust
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in that server. Additionally, if `server.example` were offline, other users in
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the room would still see Bob in the room (and their servers would attempt to
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send message traffic to it).
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Another consideration is that users may have joined via a direct invite, not via access through a space.
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Fixing this is thorny. Some sort of annotation on the membership events might
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help. but it's unclear what the desired semantics are:
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* Assuming that users in a given space are *not* kicked when that space is
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removed from `allow`, are those users then given a pass to remain
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in the room indefinitely? What happens if the space is added back to
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`allow` and *then* the user leaves it?
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* Suppose a user joins a room via a space (SpaceA). Later, SpaceB is added to
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the `allow` list and SpaceA is removed. What should happen when the
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user leaves SpaceB? Are they exempt from the kick?
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### Inheriting join rules
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If you make a parent space invite-only, should that (optionally?) cascade into
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child rooms? Seems to have some of the same problems as inheriting power levels, as discussed in [MSC2962](https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/pull/2962).
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## Footnotes
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<a id="f1"/>[1]: The converse restriction, "anybody can join, provided they are not members
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of the '#catlovers' space" is less useful since:
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1. Users in the banned space could simply leave it at any time
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2. This functionality is already somewhat provided by [Moderation policy lists](https://matrix.org/docs/spec/client_server/r0.6.1#moderation-policy-lists). [↩](#a1)
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<a id="f2"/>[2]: Note that there is nothing stopping users sending and
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receiving invites in `public` rooms today, and they work as you might expect.
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The only difference is that you are not *required* to hold an invite when
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joining the room. [↩](#a2)
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<a id="f3"/>[3]: This is a marginal decrease in security from the current
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situation. Currently, a misbehaving server can allow unauthorized users to join
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any room by first issuing an invite to that user. In theory that can be
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prevented by raising the PL required to send an invite, but in practice that is
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rarely done. [↩](#a2)
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