You cannot select more than 25 topics
Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
49 lines
2.9 KiB
Plaintext
49 lines
2.9 KiB
Plaintext
10 years ago
|
Gatewaying to the PSTN via Matrix Application Services
|
||
|
======================================================
|
||
|
|
||
|
Matrix Application Services (AS) provides a way for PSTN users to interact
|
||
|
with Matrix via an AS acting as a gateway. Each PSTN user is represented as a
|
||
|
virtual user on a specific homeserver maintained by the AS. Typically the AS
|
||
|
is provisioned on a well-known AS-supplier HS (e.g. matrix.openmarket.com) or
|
||
|
is a service provisioned on the user's local HS.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In either scenario, the AS maintains virtual users of form
|
||
|
@.tel.e164:homeserver. These are lazily created (as per the AS spec) when
|
||
|
matrix users try to contact a user id of form @.tel.*:homeserver, or when the
|
||
|
AS needs to inject traffic into the HS on behalf of the PSTN user. The reason
|
||
|
for these being a visible virtual user rather than an invisible user or an
|
||
|
invisible sniffing AS is because they do represent real physical 3rd party
|
||
|
endpoints in the PSTN, and need to be able to send return messages.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Communication with an actual PSTN user happens in a normal Matrix room, which
|
||
|
for 1:1 matrix<->pstn contact will typically store all conversation history
|
||
|
with that user. On first contact, the matrix user invites the virtual user
|
||
|
into the room (or vice versa). In the event of switching to another AS-enabled
|
||
|
HS, the matrix user would kick the old AS and invite the new one. In the event
|
||
|
of needing loadbalancing between two SMS gateways (for instance), the user
|
||
|
would set visibility flags (TODO: specify per-message ACLs, or use crypto to
|
||
|
only sign messages so they're visible to certain other users?) to adjust which
|
||
|
virtual AS users could see which messages in the room.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For group chat, one or more AS virtual users may be invited to a group chat,
|
||
|
where-upon they will relay all the traffic in that group chat through to their
|
||
|
PSTN counterpart (and vice versa). This behaviour requires no additional
|
||
|
functionality beyond that required to support 1:1 chat.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When contacting a user, Matrix clients should check whether a given E.164
|
||
|
number is already mapped to a real Matrix user by querying the identity
|
||
|
servers (or subscribing to identity updates for a given E.164 number. TODO: ID
|
||
|
server subscriptions). If the E.164 number has a validated mapping in the ID
|
||
|
server to a Matrix ID, then this target ID should be used instead of
|
||
|
contacting the virtual user.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It's likely that PSTN gateway ASes will need to charge the end-user for use of
|
||
|
the gateway. The AS must therefore track credit per matrix ID it interacts
|
||
|
with, and stop gatewaying as desired once credit is exhausted. The task of
|
||
|
extracting credit from the end-user and adding it to the AS is not covered by
|
||
|
the Matrix specification.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For SMS routing, options are:
|
||
|
* Terminate traffic only (from a shared shortcode originator)
|
||
6 years ago
|
* Two-way traffic via a VMN. To save allocating huge numbers of VMNs to Matrix users, the VMN can be allocated from a pool such that each {caller,callee} tuple is unique (but the caller number will only work from that specific callee).
|