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Matrix Specification
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====================
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Version: {{spec_version}}
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-----------------------------
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This specification has been generated from
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https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc using
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https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/blob/master/scripts/gendoc.py as of
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revision ``{{git_version}}`` - https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/tree/{{git_rev}}
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Changelog
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~~~~~~~~~
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{{spec_changelog}}
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For a full changelog, see
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https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/blob/master/CHANGELOG.rst
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.. contents:: Table of Contents
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.. sectnum::
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Introduction
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============
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.. WARNING::
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The Matrix specification is still evolving: the APIs are not yet frozen
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and this document is in places a work in progress or stale. We have made every
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effort to clearly flag areas which are still being finalised.
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We're publishing it at this point because it's complete enough to be more than
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useful and provide a canonical reference to how Matrix is evolving. Our end
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goal is to mirror WHATWG's `Living Standard
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<http://wiki.whatwg.org/wiki/FAQ#What_does_.22Living_Standard.22_mean.3F>`_.
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Matrix is a set of open APIs for open-federated Instant Messaging (IM), Voice
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over IP (VoIP) and Internet of Things (IoT) communication, designed to create
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and support a new global real-time communication ecosystem. The intention is to
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provide an open decentralised pubsub layer for the internet for securely
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persisting and publishing/subscribing JSON objects.
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This specification is the ongoing result of standardising the APIs used by the
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various components of the Matrix ecosystem to communicate with one another.
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The principles that Matrix attempts to follow are:
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- Pragmatic Web-friendly APIs (i.e. JSON over REST)
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- Keep It Simple & Stupid
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+ provide a simple architecture with minimal third-party dependencies.
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- Fully open:
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+ Fully open federation - anyone should be able to participate in the global
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Matrix network
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+ Fully open standard - publicly documented standard with no IP or patent
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licensing encumbrances
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+ Fully open source reference implementation - liberally-licensed example
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implementations with no IP or patent licensing encumbrances
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- Empowering the end-user
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+ The user should be able to choose the server and clients they use
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+ The user should be control how private their communication is
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+ The user should know precisely where their data is stored
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- Fully decentralised - no single points of control over conversations or the
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network as a whole
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- Learning from history to avoid repeating it
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+ Trying to take the best aspects of XMPP, SIP, IRC, SMTP, IMAP and NNTP
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whilst trying to avoid their failings
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The functionality that Matrix provides includes:
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- Creation and management of fully distributed chat rooms with no
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single points of control or failure
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- Eventually-consistent cryptographically secure synchronisation of room
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state across a global open network of federated servers and services
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- Sending and receiving extensible messages in a room with (optional)
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end-to-end encryption
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- Extensible user management (inviting, joining, leaving, kicking, banning)
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mediated by a power-level based user privilege system.
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- Extensible room state management (room naming, aliasing, topics, bans)
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- Extensible user profile management (avatars, displaynames, etc)
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- Managing user accounts (registration, login, logout)
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- Use of 3rd Party IDs (3PIDs) such as email addresses, phone numbers,
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Facebook accounts to authenticate, identify and discover users on Matrix.
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- Trusted federation of Identity servers for:
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+ Publishing user public keys for PKI
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+ Mapping of 3PIDs to Matrix IDs
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The end goal of Matrix is to be a ubiquitous messaging layer for synchronising
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arbitrary data between sets of people, devices and services - be that for
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instant messages, VoIP call setups, or any other objects that need to be
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reliably and persistently pushed from A to B in an interoperable and federated
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manner.
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Overview
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========
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Architecture
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------------
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Matrix defines APIs for synchronising extensible JSON objects known as
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``events`` between compatible clients, servers and services. Clients are
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typically messaging/VoIP applications or IoT devices/hubs and communicate by
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synchronising communication history with their ``homeserver`` using the
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``Client-Server API``. Each homeserver stores the communication history and
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account information for all of its clients, and shares data with the wider
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Matrix ecosystem by synchronising communication history with other homeservers
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and their clients.
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Clients typically communicate with each other by emitting events in the
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context of a virtual ``room``. Room data is replicated across *all of the
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homeservers* whose users are participating in a given room. As such, *no
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single homeserver has control or ownership over a given room*. Homeservers
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model communication history as a partially ordered graph of events known as
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the room's ``event graph``, which is synchronised with eventual consistency
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between the participating servers using the ``Server-Server API``. This process
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of synchronising shared conversation history between homeservers run by
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different parties is called ``Federation``. Matrix optimises for the the
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Availability and Partitioned properties of CAP theorem at
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the expense of Consistency.
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For example, for client A to send a message to client B, client A performs an
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HTTP PUT of the required JSON event on its homeserver (HS) using the
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client-server API. A's HS appends this event to its copy of the room's event
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graph, signing the message in the context of the graph for integrity. A's HS
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then replicates the message to B's HS by performing an HTTP PUT using the
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server-server API. B's HS authenticates the request, validates the event's
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signature, authorises the event's contents and then adds it to its copy of the
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room's event graph. Client B then receives the message from his homeserver via
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a long-lived GET request.
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::
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How data flows between clients
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==============================
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{ Matrix client A } { Matrix client B }
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^ | ^ |
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| events | Client-Server API | events |
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| V | V
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+------------------+ +------------------+
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| |---------( HTTPS )--------->| |
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| Home Server | | Home Server |
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| |<--------( HTTPS )----------| |
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+------------------+ Server-Server API +------------------+
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History Synchronisation
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(Federation)
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Users
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~~~~~
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Each client is associated with a user account, which is identified in Matrix
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using a unique "User ID". This ID is namespaced to the home server which
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allocated the account and has the form::
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@localpart:domain
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The ``localpart`` of a user ID may be a user name, or an opaque ID identifying
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this user. They are case-insensitive.
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.. TODO-spec
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- Need to specify precise grammar for Matrix IDs
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Events
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~~~~~~
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All data exchanged over Matrix is expressed as an "event". Typically each client
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action (e.g. sending a message) correlates with exactly one event. Each event
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has a ``type`` which is used to differentiate different kinds of data. ``type``
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values MUST be uniquely globally namespaced following Java's `package naming
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conventions
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<http://docs.oracle.com/javase/specs/jls/se5.0/html/packages.html#7.7>`, e.g.
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``com.example.myapp.event``. The special top-level namespace ``m.`` is reserved
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for events defined in the Matrix specification - for instance ``m.room.message``
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is the event type for instant messages. Events are usually sent in the context
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of a "Room".
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Event Graphs
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~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Events exchanged in the context of a room are stored in a directed acyclic graph
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(DAG) called an ``event graph``. The partial ordering of this graph gives the
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chronological ordering of events within the room. Each event in the graph has a
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list of zero or more ``parent`` events, which refer to any preceeding events
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which have no chronological successor from the perspective of the homeserver
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which created the event.
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Typically an event has a single parent: the most recent message in the room at
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the point it was sent. However, homeservers may legitimately race with each
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other when sending messages, resulting in a single event having multiple
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successors. The next event added to the graph thus will have multiple parents.
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Every event graph has a single root event with no parent.
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To order and ease chronological comparison between the events within the graph,
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homeservers maintain a ``depth`` metadata field on each event. An event's
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``depth`` is a positive integer that is strictly greater than the depths of any
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of its parents. The root event should have a depth of 1. Thus if one event is
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before another, then it must have a strictly smaller depth.
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Room structure
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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A room is a conceptual place where users can send and receive events. Events are
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sent to a room, and all participants in that room with sufficient access will
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receive the event. Rooms are uniquely identified internally via "Room IDs",
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which have the form::
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!opaque_id:domain
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There is exactly one room ID for each room. Whilst the room ID does contain a
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domain, it is simply for globally namespacing room IDs. The room does NOT
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reside on the domain specified. Room IDs are not meant to be human readable.
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They are case-sensitive.
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The following conceptual diagram shows an ``m.room.message`` event being sent to
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the room ``!qporfwt:matrix.org``::
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{ @alice:matrix.org } { @bob:domain.com }
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[HTTP POST] [HTTP GET]
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Room ID: !qporfwt:matrix.org Room ID: !qporfwt:matrix.org
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Event type: m.room.message Event type: m.room.message
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Content: { JSON object } Content: { JSON object }
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V |
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+------------------+ +------------------+
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| Home Server | | Home Server |
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| matrix.org | | domain.com |
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+------------------+ +------------------+
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| ^
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| [HTTP PUT] |
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| Room ID: !qporfwt:matrix.org |
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| Event type: m.room.message |
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| Content: { JSON object } |
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`-------> Pointer to the preceding message ------`
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PKI signature from matrix.org
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Transaction-layer metadata
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PKI Authorization header
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...................................
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| Shared Data |
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| State: |
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| Room ID: !qporfwt:matrix.org |
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| Servers: matrix.org, domain.com |
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| Members: |
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| - @alice:matrix.org |
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| - @bob:domain.com |
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| Messages: |
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| - @alice:matrix.org |
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| Content: { JSON object } |
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|...................................|
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Federation maintains *shared data structures* per-room between multiple home
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servers. The data is split into ``message events`` and ``state events``.
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``Message events`` describe transient 'once-off' activity in a room such as an
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instant messages, VoIP call setups, file transfers, etc. They generally describe
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communication activity.
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``State events`` describe updates to a given piece of persistent information
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('state') related to a room, such as the room's name, topic, membership,
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participating servers, etc. State is modelled as a lookup table of key/value
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pairs per room, with each key being a tuple of ``state_key`` and ``event type``.
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Each state event updates the value of a given key.
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The state of the room at a given point is calculated by considering all events
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preceding and including a given event in the graph. Where events describe the
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same state, a merge conflict algorithm is applied. The state resolution
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algorithm is transitive and does not depend on server state, as it must
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consistently select the same event irrespective of the server or the order the
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events were received in.
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Events are signed by the originating server (the signature includes the parent
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relations, type, depth and payload hash) and are pushed over federation to the
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participating servers in a room, currently using full mesh topology. Servers may
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also request backfill of events over federation from the other servers
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participating in a room.
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Room Aliases
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++++++++++++
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Each room can also have multiple "Room Aliases", which look like::
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#room_alias:domain
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.. TODO
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- Need to specify precise grammar for Room Aliases
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A room alias "points" to a room ID and is the human-readable label by which
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rooms are publicised and discovered. The room ID the alias is pointing to can
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be obtained by visiting the domain specified. They are case-insensitive. Note
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that the mapping from a room alias to a room ID is not fixed, and may change
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over time to point to a different room ID. For this reason, Clients SHOULD
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resolve the room alias to a room ID once and then use that ID on subsequent
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requests.
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When resolving a room alias the server will also respond with a list of servers
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that are in the room that can be used to join via.
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::
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HTTP GET
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#matrix:domain.com !aaabaa:matrix.org
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| ^
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_______V____________________|____
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| domain.com |
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| Mappings: |
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| #matrix >> !aaabaa:matrix.org |
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| #golf >> !wfeiofh:sport.com |
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| #bike >> !4rguxf:matrix.org |
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|________________________________|
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Identity
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~~~~~~~~
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Users in Matrix are identified via their matrix user ID (MXID). However,
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existing 3rd party ID namespaces can also be used in order to identify Matrix
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users. A Matrix "Identity" describes both the user ID and any other existing IDs
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from third party namespaces *linked* to their account.
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Matrix users can *link* third-party IDs (3PIDs) such as email addresses, social
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network accounts and phone numbers to their user ID. Linking 3PIDs creates a
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mapping from a 3PID to a user ID. This mapping can then be used by Matrix
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users in order to discover the MXIDs of their contacts.
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In order to ensure that the mapping from 3PID to user ID is genuine, a globally
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federated cluster of trusted "Identity Servers" (IS) are used to verify the 3PID
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and persist and replicate the mappings.
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Usage of an IS is not required in order for a client application to be part of
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the Matrix ecosystem. However, without one clients will not be able to look up
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user IDs using 3PIDs.
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Presence
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~~~~~~~~
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Each user has the concept of presence information. This encodes:
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* Whether the user is currently online
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* How recently the user was last active (as seen by the server)
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* Whether a given client considers the user to be currently idle
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* Arbitrary information about the user's current status (e.g. "in a meeting").
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This information is collated from both per-device (online; idle; last_active) and
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per-user (status) data, aggregated by the user's homeserver and transmitted as
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an ``m.presence`` event. This is one of the few events which are sent *outside
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the context of a room*. Presence events are sent to all users who subscribe to
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this user's presence through a presence list or by sharing membership of a room.
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.. TODO
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How do we let users hide their presence information?
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.. TODO
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The last_active specifics should be moved to the detailed presence event section
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Last activity is tracked by the server maintaining a timestamp of the last time
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it saw a pro-active event from the user. Any event which could be triggered by a
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human using the application is considered pro-active (e.g. sending an event to a
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room). An example of a non-proactive client activity would be a client setting
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'idle' presence status, or polling for events. This timestamp is presented via a
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key called ``last_active_ago``, which gives the relative number of milliseconds
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since the message is generated/emitted that the user was last seen active.
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N.B. in v1 API, status/online/idle state are muxed into a single 'presence' field on the m.presence event.
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Presence Lists
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Each user's home server stores a "presence list". This stores a list of user IDs
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whose presence the user wants to follow.
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To be added to this list, the user being added must be invited by the list owner
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and accept the invitation. Once accepted, both user's HSes track the
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subscription.
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Profiles
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~~~~~~~~
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Users may publish arbitrary key/value data associated with their account - such
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as a human readable ``display name``, a profile photo URL, contact information
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(email address, phone nubers, website URLs etc).
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In Client-Server API v2, profile data is typed using namespaced keys for
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interoperability, much like events - e.g. ``m.profile.display_name``.
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.. TODO
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Actually specify the different types of data - e.g. what format are display
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names allowed to be?
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Private User Data
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|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Users may also store arbitrary private key/value data in their account - such as
|
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client preferences, or server configuration settings which lack any other
|
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|
dedicated API. The API is symmetrical to managing Profile data.
|
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|
.. TODO
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|
Would it really be overengineered to use the same API for both profile &
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private user data, but with different ACLs?
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|
API Standards
|
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|
|
-------------
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|
|
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|
The mandatory baseline for communication in Matrix is exchanging JSON objects
|
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|
over HTTP APIs. HTTPS is mandated as the baseline for server-server
|
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|
|
(federation) communication. HTTPS is recommended for client-server
|
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|
|
communication, although HTTP may be supported as a fallback to support basic
|
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|
|
HTTP clients. More efficient optional transports for client-server
|
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|
|
communication will in future be supported as optional extensions - e.g. a
|
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|
|
packed binary encoding over stream-cipher encrypted TCP socket for
|
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|
|
low-bandwidth/low-roundtrip mobile usage.
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
.. TODO
|
|
|
|
We need to specify capability negotiation for extensible transports
|
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|
For the default HTTP transport, all API calls use a Content-Type of
|
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|
``application/json``. In addition, all strings MUST be encoded as UTF-8.
|
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|
|
Clients are authenticated using opaque ``access_token`` strings (see
|
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|
`Client Authentication`_ for details), passed as a query string parameter on
|
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|
|
all requests.
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
.. TODO
|
|
|
|
Need to specify any HMAC or access_token lifetime/ratcheting tricks
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Any errors which occur at the Matrix API level MUST return a "standard error
|
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|
|
response". This is a JSON object which looks like::
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
{
|
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|
|
"errcode": "<error code>",
|
|
|
|
"error": "<error message>"
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The ``error`` string will be a human-readable error message, usually a sentence
|
|
|
|
explaining what went wrong. The ``errcode`` string will be a unique string
|
|
|
|
which can be used to handle an error message e.g. ``M_FORBIDDEN``. These error
|
|
|
|
codes should have their namespace first in ALL CAPS, followed by a single _ to
|
|
|
|
ease seperating the namespace from the error code.. For example, if there was a
|
|
|
|
custom namespace ``com.mydomain.here``, and a
|
|
|
|
``FORBIDDEN`` code, the error code should look like
|
|
|
|
``COM.MYDOMAIN.HERE_FORBIDDEN``. There may be additional keys depending on the
|
|
|
|
error, but the keys ``error`` and ``errcode`` MUST always be present.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Some standard error codes are below:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
:``M_FORBIDDEN``:
|
|
|
|
Forbidden access, e.g. joining a room without permission, failed login.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
:``M_UNKNOWN_TOKEN``:
|
|
|
|
The access token specified was not recognised.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
:``M_BAD_JSON``:
|
|
|
|
Request contained valid JSON, but it was malformed in some way, e.g. missing
|
|
|
|
required keys, invalid values for keys.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
:``M_NOT_JSON``:
|
|
|
|
Request did not contain valid JSON.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
:``M_NOT_FOUND``:
|
|
|
|
No resource was found for this request.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
:``M_LIMIT_EXCEEDED``:
|
|
|
|
Too many requests have been sent in a short period of time. Wait a while then
|
|
|
|
try again.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Some requests have unique error codes:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
:``M_USER_IN_USE``:
|
|
|
|
Encountered when trying to register a user ID which has been taken.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
:``M_ROOM_IN_USE``:
|
|
|
|
Encountered when trying to create a room which has been taken.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
:``M_BAD_PAGINATION``:
|
|
|
|
Encountered when specifying bad pagination query parameters.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
:``M_LOGIN_EMAIL_URL_NOT_YET``:
|
|
|
|
Encountered when polling for an email link which has not been clicked yet.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The C-S API typically uses ``HTTP POST`` to submit requests. This means these
|
|
|
|
requests are not idempotent. The C-S API also allows ``HTTP PUT`` to make
|
|
|
|
requests idempotent. In order to use a ``PUT``, paths should be suffixed with
|
|
|
|
``/{txnId}``. ``{txnId}`` is a unique client-generated transaction ID which
|
|
|
|
identifies the request, and is scoped to a given Client (identified by that
|
|
|
|
client's ``access_token``). Crucially, it **only** serves to identify new
|
|
|
|
requests from retransmits. After the request has finished, the ``{txnId}``
|
|
|
|
value should be changed (how is not specified; a monotonically increasing
|
|
|
|
integer is recommended). It is preferable to use ``HTTP PUT`` to make sure
|
|
|
|
requests to send messages do not get sent more than once should clients need to
|
|
|
|
retransmit requests.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Valid requests look like::
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
POST /some/path/here?access_token=secret
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
"key": "This is a post."
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
PUT /some/path/here/11?access_token=secret
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
"key": "This is a put with a txnId of 11."
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
In contrast, these are invalid requests::
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
POST /some/path/here/11?access_token=secret
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
"key": "This is a post, but it has a txnId."
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
PUT /some/path/here?access_token=secret
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
"key": "This is a put but it is missing a txnId."
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|