--- title: "Appendices" weight: 70 type: docs --- ## Unpadded Base64 *Unpadded* Base64 refers to 'standard' Base64 encoding as defined in [RFC 4648](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4648), without "=" padding. Specifically, where RFC 4648 requires that encoded data be padded to a multiple of four characters using `=` characters, unpadded Base64 omits this padding. For reference, RFC 4648 uses the following alphabet for Base 64: Value Encoding Value Encoding Value Encoding Value Encoding 0 A 17 R 34 i 51 z 1 B 18 S 35 j 52 0 2 C 19 T 36 k 53 1 3 D 20 U 37 l 54 2 4 E 21 V 38 m 55 3 5 F 22 W 39 n 56 4 6 G 23 X 40 o 57 5 7 H 24 Y 41 p 58 6 8 I 25 Z 42 q 59 7 9 J 26 a 43 r 60 8 10 K 27 b 44 s 61 9 11 L 28 c 45 t 62 + 12 M 29 d 46 u 63 / 13 N 30 e 47 v 14 O 31 f 48 w 15 P 32 g 49 x 16 Q 33 h 50 y Examples of strings encoded using unpadded Base64: UNPADDED_BASE64("") = "" UNPADDED_BASE64("f") = "Zg" UNPADDED_BASE64("fo") = "Zm8" UNPADDED_BASE64("foo") = "Zm9v" UNPADDED_BASE64("foob") = "Zm9vYg" UNPADDED_BASE64("fooba") = "Zm9vYmE" UNPADDED_BASE64("foobar") = "Zm9vYmFy" When decoding Base64, implementations SHOULD accept input with or without padding characters wherever possible, to ensure maximum interoperability. ## Binary data In some cases it is necessary to encapsulate binary data, for example, public keys or signatures. Given that JSON cannot safely represent raw binary data, all binary values should be encoded and represented in JSON as unpadded Base64 strings as described above. In cases where the Matrix specification refers to either opaque byte or opaque Base64 values, the value is considered to be opaque AFTER Base64 decoding, rather than the encoded representation itself. It is safe for a client or homeserver implementation to check for correctness of a Base64-encoded value at any point, and to altogether reject a value which is not encoded properly. However, this is optional and is considered to be an implementation detail. Special consideration is given for future protocol transformations, such as those which do not use JSON, where Base64 encoding may not be necessary in order to represent a binary value safely. In these cases, Base64 encoding of binary values may be skipped altogether. ## Signing JSON Various points in the Matrix specification require JSON objects to be cryptographically signed. This requires us to encode the JSON as a binary string. Unfortunately the same JSON can be encoded in different ways by changing how much white space is used or by changing the order of keys within objects. Signing an object therefore requires it to be encoded as a sequence of bytes using [Canonical JSON](#canonical-json), computing the signature for that sequence and then adding the signature to the original JSON object. ### Canonical JSON To ensure that all implementations use the same JSON encoding we define "Canonical JSON". This should not be confused with other uses of "Canonical JSON" outside of the specification. We define this encoding for a value to be the shortest UTF-8 JSON encoding with dictionary keys lexicographically sorted by Unicode codepoint. Numbers in the JSON must be integers in the range `[-(2**53)+1, (2**53)-1]`, represented without exponents or decimal places, and negative zero `-0` MUST NOT appear. We pick UTF-8 as the encoding as it should be available to all platforms and JSON received from the network is likely to be already encoded using UTF-8. We sort the keys to give a consistent ordering. We force integers to be in the range where they can be accurately represented using IEEE double precision floating point numbers since a number of JSON libraries represent all numbers using this representation. {{% boxes/warning %}} Events in room versions 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 might not be fully compliant with these restrictions. Servers SHOULD be capable of handling JSON which is considered invalid by these restrictions where possible. The most notable consideration is that integers might not be in the range specified above. {{% /boxes/warning %}} {{% boxes/note %}} Float values are not permitted by this encoding. {{% /boxes/note %}} ```py import json def canonical_json(value): return json.dumps( value, # Encode code-points outside of ASCII as UTF-8 rather than \u escapes ensure_ascii=False, # Remove unnecessary white space. separators=(',',':'), # Sort the keys of dictionaries. sort_keys=True, # Encode the resulting Unicode as UTF-8 bytes. ).encode("UTF-8") ``` #### Grammar Adapted from the grammar in removing insignificant whitespace, fractions, exponents and redundant character escapes. value = false / null / true / object / array / number / string false = %x66.61.6C.73.65 null = %x6E.75.6C.6C true = %x74.72.75.65 object = %x7B [ member *( %x2C member ) ] %x7D member = string %x3A value array = %x5B [ value *( %x2C value ) ] %x5D number = [ %x2D ] int int = %x30 / ( %x31-39 *digit ) digit = %x30-39 string = %x22 *char %x22 char = unescaped / %x5C escaped unescaped = %x20-21 / %x23-5B / %x5D-10FFFF escaped = %x22 ; " quotation mark U+0022 / %x5C ; \ reverse solidus U+005C / %x62 ; b backspace U+0008 / %x66 ; f form feed U+000C / %x6E ; n line feed U+000A / %x72 ; r carriage return U+000D / %x74 ; t tab U+0009 / %x75.30.30.30 (%x30-37 / %x62 / %x65-66) ; u000X / %x75.30.30.31 (%x30-39 / %x61-66) ; u001X #### Examples To assist in the development of compatible implementations, the following test values may be useful for verifying the canonical transformation code. Given the following JSON object: ```json {} ``` The following canonical JSON should be produced: ```json {} ``` Given the following JSON object: ```json { "one": 1, "two": "Two" } ``` The following canonical JSON should be produced: ```json {"one":1,"two":"Two"} ``` Given the following JSON object: ```json { "b": "2", "a": "1" } ``` The following canonical JSON should be produced: ```json {"a":"1","b":"2"} ``` Given the following JSON object: ```json {"b":"2","a":"1"} ``` The following canonical JSON should be produced: ```json {"a":"1","b":"2"} ``` Given the following JSON object: ```json { "auth": { "success": true, "mxid": "@john.doe:example.com", "profile": { "display_name": "John Doe", "three_pids": [ { "medium": "email", "address": "john.doe@example.org" }, { "medium": "msisdn", "address": "123456789" } ] } } } ``` The following canonical JSON should be produced: ```json {"auth":{"mxid":"@john.doe:example.com","profile":{"display_name":"John Doe","three_pids":[{"address":"john.doe@example.org","medium":"email"},{"address":"123456789","medium":"msisdn"}]},"success":true}} ``` Given the following JSON object: ```json { "a": "日本語" } ``` The following canonical JSON should be produced: ```json {"a":"日本語"} ``` Given the following JSON object: ```json { "本": 2, "日": 1 } ``` The following canonical JSON should be produced: ```json {"日":1,"本":2} ``` Given the following JSON object: ```json { "a": "\u65E5" } ``` The following canonical JSON should be produced: ```json {"a":"日"} ``` Given the following JSON object: ```json { "a": null } ``` The following canonical JSON should be produced: ```json {"a":null} ``` Given the following JSON object: ```json { "a": -0, "b": 1e10 } ``` The following canonical JSON should be produced: ```json {"a":0,"b":10000000000} ``` ### Signing Details JSON is signed by encoding the JSON object without `signatures` or keys grouped as `unsigned`, using the canonical encoding described above. The JSON bytes are then signed using the signature algorithm and the signature is encoded using [unpadded Base64](#unpadded-base64). The resulting base64 signature is added to an object under the *signing key identifier* which is added to the `signatures` object under the name of the entity signing it which is added back to the original JSON object along with the `unsigned` object. The *signing key identifier* is the concatenation of the *signing algorithm* and a *key identifier*. The *signing algorithm* identifies the algorithm used to sign the JSON. The currently supported value for *signing algorithm* is `ed25519` as implemented by NACL (). The *key identifier* is used to distinguish between different signing keys used by the same entity. The `unsigned` object and the `signatures` object are not covered by the signature. Therefore intermediate entities can add unsigned data such as timestamps and additional signatures. ```json { "name": "example.org", "signing_keys": { "ed25519:1": "XSl0kuyvrXNj6A+7/tkrB9sxSbRi08Of5uRhxOqZtEQ" }, "unsigned": { "age_ts": 922834800000 }, "signatures": { "example.org": { "ed25519:1": "s76RUgajp8w172am0zQb/iPTHsRnb4SkrzGoeCOSFfcBY2V/1c8QfrmdXHpvnc2jK5BD1WiJIxiMW95fMjK7Bw" } } } ``` ```py def sign_json(json_object, signing_key, signing_name): signatures = json_object.pop("signatures", {}) unsigned = json_object.pop("unsigned", None) signed = signing_key.sign(encode_canonical_json(json_object)) signature_base64 = encode_base64(signed.signature) key_id = "%s:%s" % (signing_key.alg, signing_key.version) signatures.setdefault(signing_name, {})[key_id] = signature_base64 json_object["signatures"] = signatures if unsigned is not None: json_object["unsigned"] = unsigned return json_object ``` ### Checking for a Signature To check if an entity has signed a JSON object an implementation does the following: 1. Checks if the `signatures` member of the object contains an entry with the name of the entity. If the entry is missing then the check fails. 2. Removes any *signing key identifiers* from the entry with algorithms it doesn't understand. If there are no *signing key identifiers* left then the check fails. 3. Looks up *verification keys* for the remaining *signing key identifiers* either from a local cache or by consulting a trusted key server. If it cannot find a *verification key* then the check fails. 4. Decodes the base64 encoded signature bytes. If base64 decoding fails then the check fails. 5. Removes the `signatures` and `unsigned` members of the object. 6. Encodes the remainder of the JSON object using the [Canonical JSON](#canonical-json) encoding. 7. Checks the signature bytes against the encoded object using the *verification key*. If this fails then the check fails. Otherwise the check succeeds. ## Identifier Grammar Some identifiers are specific to given room versions, please refer to the [room versions specification](/rooms) for more information. ### Common Namespaced Identifier Grammar {{% added-in v="1.2" %}} The specification defines some identifiers to use the *Common Namespaced Identifier Grammar*. This is a common grammar intended for non-user-visible identifiers, with a defined mechanism for implementations to create new identifiers. The grammar is defined as follows: * An identifier must be at least one character and at most 255 characters in length. * Identifiers must start with one of the characters `[a-z]`, and be entirely composed of the characters `[a-z]`, `[0-9]`, `-`, `_` and `.`. * Identifiers starting with the characters `m.` are reserved for use by the official Matrix specification. * Identifiers which are not described in the specification should follow the Java Package Naming Convention to namespace their identifier. This is typically a reverse DNS format, such as `com.example.identifier`. {{% boxes/note %}} Identifiers can and do inherit grammar from this specification. For example, "this identifier uses the Common Namespaced Identifier Grammar, though without the namespacing requirements" - this means that `m.` is still reserved, but that implementations do not have to use the reverse DNS scheme to namespace their custom identifier. {{% /boxes/note %}} {{% boxes/rationale %}} ASCII characters do not have issues with homoglyphs or alternative encodings which might interfere with the identifier's purpose. Additionally, using lowercase characters prevents concerns about case sensitivity. {{% /boxes/rationale %}} ### Server Name A homeserver is uniquely identified by its server name. This value is used in a number of identifiers, as described below. The server name represents the address at which the homeserver in question can be reached by other homeservers. All valid server names are included by the following grammar: server_name = hostname [ ":" port ] port = 1*5DIGIT hostname = IPv4address / "[" IPv6address "]" / dns-name IPv4address = 1*3DIGIT "." 1*3DIGIT "." 1*3DIGIT "." 1*3DIGIT IPv6address = 2*45IPv6char IPv6char = DIGIT / %x41-46 / %x61-66 / ":" / "." ; 0-9, A-F, a-f, :, . dns-name = 1*255dns-char dns-char = DIGIT / ALPHA / "-" / "." — in other words, the server name is the hostname, followed by an optional numeric port specifier. The hostname may be a dotted-quad IPv4 address literal, an IPv6 address literal surrounded with square brackets, or a DNS name. IPv4 literals must be a sequence of four decimal numbers in the range 0 to 255, separated by `.`. IPv6 literals must be as specified by [RFC3513, section 2.2](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3513#section-2.2). DNS names for use with Matrix should follow the conventional restrictions for internet hostnames: they should consist of a series of labels separated by `.`, where each label consists of the alphanumeric characters or hyphens. Examples of valid server names are: - `matrix.org` - `matrix.org:8888` - `1.2.3.4` (IPv4 literal) - `1.2.3.4:1234` (IPv4 literal with explicit port) - `[1234:5678::abcd]` (IPv6 literal) - `[1234:5678::abcd]:5678` (IPv6 literal with explicit port) {{% boxes/note %}} This grammar is based on the standard for internet host names, as specified by [RFC1123, section 2.1](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1123#page-13), with an extension for IPv6 literals. {{% /boxes/note %}} Server names must be treated case-sensitively: in other words, `@user:matrix.org` is a different person from `@user:MATRIX.ORG`. Some recommendations for a choice of server name follow: - The length of the complete server name should not exceed 230 characters. - Server names should not use upper-case characters. ### Common Identifier Format The Matrix protocol uses a common format to assign unique identifiers to a number of entities, including users, events and rooms. Each identifier takes the form: &string where `&` represents a 'sigil' character; `string` is the string which makes up the identifier. The sigil characters are as follows: - `@`: User ID - `!`: Room ID - `$`: Event ID - `#`: Room alias User IDs, room IDs, room aliases, and sometimes event IDs take the form: &localpart:domain where `domain` is the [server name](#server-name) of the homeserver which allocated the identifier, and `localpart` is an identifier allocated by that homeserver. The precise grammar defining the allowable format of an identifier depends on the type of identifier. For example, event IDs can sometimes be represented with a `domain` component under some conditions - see the [Event IDs](#event-ids) section below for more information. #### User Identifiers {{% changed-in v="1.8" %}} Users within Matrix are uniquely identified by their Matrix user ID. The user ID is namespaced to the homeserver which allocated the account and has the form: @localpart:domain The `localpart` of a user ID is an opaque identifier for that user. It MUST NOT be empty, and MUST contain only the characters `a-z`, `0-9`, `.`, `_`, `=`, `-`, `/`, and `+`. The `domain` of a user ID is the [server name](#server-name) of the homeserver which allocated the account. The length of a user ID, including the `@` sigil and the domain, MUST NOT exceed 255 characters. The complete grammar for a legal user ID is: user_id = "@" user_id_localpart ":" server_name user_id_localpart = 1*user_id_char user_id_char = DIGIT / %x61-7A ; a-z / "-" / "." / "=" / "_" / "/" / "+" {{% boxes/rationale %}} A number of factors were considered when defining the allowable characters for a user ID. Firstly, we chose to exclude characters outside the basic US-ASCII character set. User IDs are primarily intended for use as an identifier at the protocol level, and their use as a human-readable handle is of secondary benefit. Furthermore, they are useful as a last-resort differentiator between users with similar display names. Allowing the full Unicode character set would make very difficult for a human to distinguish two similar user IDs. The limited character set used has the advantage that even a user unfamiliar with the Latin alphabet should be able to distinguish similar user IDs manually, if somewhat laboriously. We chose to disallow upper-case characters because we do not consider it valid to have two user IDs which differ only in case: indeed it should be possible to reach `@user:matrix.org` as `@USER:matrix.org`. However, user IDs are necessarily used in a number of situations which are inherently case-sensitive (notably in the `state_key` of `m.room.member` events). Forbidding upper-case characters (and requiring homeservers to downcase usernames when creating user IDs for new users) is a relatively simple way to ensure that `@USER:matrix.org` cannot refer to a different user to `@user:matrix.org`. Finally, we decided to restrict the allowable punctuation to a very basic set to reduce the possibility of conflicts with special characters in various situations. For example, "\*" is used as a wildcard in some APIs (notably the filter API), so it cannot be a legal user ID character. The length restriction is derived from the limit on the length of the `sender` key on events; since the user ID appears in every event sent by the user, it is limited to ensure that the user ID does not dominate over the actual content of the events. {{% /boxes/rationale %}} Matrix user IDs are sometimes informally referred to as MXIDs. ##### Historical User IDs Older versions of this specification were more tolerant of the characters permitted in user ID localparts. There are currently active users whose user IDs do not conform to the permitted character set, and a number of rooms whose history includes events with a `sender` which does not conform. In order to handle these rooms successfully, clients and servers MUST accept user IDs with localparts from the expanded character set: extended_user_id_char = %x21-39 / %x3B-7E ; all ASCII printing chars except : ##### Mapping from other character sets In certain circumstances it will be desirable to map from a wider character set onto the limited character set allowed in a user ID localpart. Examples include a homeserver creating a user ID for a new user based on the username passed to `/register`, or a bridge mapping user ids from another protocol. Implementations are free to do this mapping however they choose. Since the user ID is opaque except to the implementation which created it, the only requirement is that the implementation can perform the mapping consistently. However, we suggest the following algorithm: 1. Encode character strings as UTF-8. 2. Convert the bytes `A-Z` to lower-case. - In the case where a bridge must be able to distinguish two different users with ids which differ only by case, escape upper-case characters by prefixing with `_` before downcasing. For example, `A` becomes `_a`. Escape a real `_` with a second `_`. 3. Encode any remaining bytes outside the allowed character set, as well as `=`, as their hexadecimal value, prefixed with `=`. For example, `#` becomes `=23`; `á` becomes `=c3=a1`. {{% boxes/rationale %}} The suggested mapping is an attempt to preserve human-readability of simple ASCII identifiers (unlike, for example, base-32), whilst still allowing representation of *any* character (unlike punycode, which provides no way to encode ASCII punctuation). {{% /boxes/rationale %}} #### Room IDs A room has exactly one room ID. A room ID has the format: !opaque_id:domain The `domain` of a room ID is the [server name](#server-name) of the homeserver which created the room. The domain is used only for namespacing to avoid the risk of clashes of identifiers between different homeservers. There is no implication that the room in question is still available at the corresponding homeserver. Room IDs are case-sensitive. They are not meant to be human-readable. They are intended to be treated as fully opaque strings by clients. #### Room Aliases A room may have zero or more aliases. A room alias has the format: #room_alias:domain The `domain` of a room alias is the [server name](#server-name) of the homeserver which created the alias. Other servers may contact this homeserver to look up the alias. Room aliases MUST NOT exceed 255 bytes (including the `#` sigil and the domain). #### Event IDs An event has exactly one event ID. Event IDs take the form: $opaque_id However, the precise format depends upon the [room version specification](/rooms): early room versions included a `domain` component, whereas more recent versions omit the domain and use a base64-encoded hash instead. Event IDs are case-sensitive. They are not meant to be human-readable. They are intended to be treated as fully opaque strings by clients. ### URIs There are two major kinds of referring to a resource in Matrix: matrix.to and `matrix:` URI. The specification currently defines both as active/valid ways to refer to entities/resources. Rooms, users, and aliases may be represented as a URI. This URI can be used to reference particular objects in a given context, such as mentioning a user in a message or linking someone to a particular point in the room's history (a permalink). #### Matrix URI scheme {{% added-in v="1.2" %}} The Matrix URI scheme is defined as follows (`[]` enclose optional parts, `{}` enclose variables): ``` matrix:[//{authority}/]{type}/{id without sigil}[/{type}/{id without sigil}...][?{query}][#{fragment}] ``` As a schema, this can be represented as: ``` MatrixURI = "matrix:" hier-part [ "?" query ] [ "#" fragment ] hier-part = [ "//" authority "/" ] path path = entity-descriptor ["/" entity-descriptor] entity-descriptor = nonid-segment / type-qualifier id-without-sigil nonid-segment = segment-nz ; as defined in RFC 3986 type-qualifier = segment-nz "/" ; as defined in RFC 3986 id-without-sigil = string ; as defined in Matrix identifier spec above query = query-element *( "&" query-item ) query-item = action / routing / custom-query-item action = "action=" ( "join" / "chat" ) routing = "via=” authority custom-query-item = custom-item-name "=" custom-item-value custom-item-name = 1*unreserved ; reverse-DNS name custom-item-value = ``` Note that this format is deliberately following [RFC 3986](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3986) to ensure maximum compatibility with existing tooling. The scheme name (`matrix`) is registered alongside other schemes by the IANA [here](https://www.iana.org/assignments/uri-schemes/uri-schemes.xhtml). Currently, the `authority` and `fragment` are unused by this specification, though are reserved for future use. Matrix does not have a central authority which could reasonably fill the `authority` role. `nonid-segment` in the schema is additionally reserved for future use. The `type` denotes the kind of entity which is described by `id without sigil`. Specifically, the following mappings are used: * `r` for room aliases. * `u` for users. * `roomid` for room IDs (note the distinction from room aliases). * `e` for events, when after a room reference (`r` or `roomid`). {{% boxes/note %}} During development of this URI format, types of `user`, `room`, and `event` were used: these MUST NOT be produced any further, though implementations might wish to consider handling them as `u`, `r`, and `e` respectively. `roomid` was otherwise unchanged. {{% /boxes/note %}} The `id without sigil` is simply the identifier for the entity without the defined sigil. For example, `!room:example.org` becomes `room:example.org` (`!` is the sigil for room IDs). The sigils are described under the [Common Identifier Format](#common-identifier-format). The `query` is optional and helps clients with processing the URI's intent. In this specification are the following: * `action` - Helps provide intent for what the client should do specifically with the URI. Lack of an `action` simply indicates that the URI is identifying a resource and has no suggested action associated with it - clients could treat this as navigating the user to an informational page, for example. * `action=join` - Describes an intent for the client to join the room described by the URI and thus is only valid on URIs which are referring to a room (it has no meaning and is ignored otherwise). The client should prompt for confirmation prior to joining the room, if the user isn't already part of the room. * `action=chat` - Describes an intent for the client to start/open a DM with the user described by the URI and thus is only valid on URIs which are referring to a user (it has no meaning and is ignored otherwise). Clients supporting a form of Canonical DMs should reuse existing DMs instead of creating new ones if available. The client should prompt for confirmation prior to creating the DM, if the user isn't being redirected to an existing canonical DM. * `via` - Can be used to denote which servers (`authority` grammar) to attempt to resolve the resource through, or take `action` through. An example of using `via` for routing Room IDs is described [below](#routing), and is encouraged for use in Matrix URIs referring to a room ID. Matrix URIs can additionally use this `via` parameter for non-public federation resolution of identifiers (i.e.: listing a server which might have information about the given user) while a more comprehensive way is being worked out, such as one proposed by [MSC3020](https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-spec-proposals/pull/3020). Custom query parameters can be specified using the [Common Namespaced Identifier format](#common-namespaced-identifier-grammar) and appropriately encoding their values. Specifically, "percent encoding" and encoding of the `&` are required. Where custom parameters conflict with specified ones, clients should prefer the specified parameters. Clients should strive to maintain consistency across custom parameters as users might be using multiple different clients across multiple different authors. Useful and mission-aligned custom parameters should be proposed to be included in this specification. Examples of common URIs are: * Link to `#somewhere:example.org`: `matrix:r/somewhere:example.org` * Link to `!somewhere:example.org`: `matrix:roomid/somewhere:example.org?via=elsewhere.ca` * Link to `$event` in `#somewhere:example.org`: `matrix:r/somewhere:example.org/e/event` * Link to `$event` in `!somewhere:example.org`: `matrix:roomid/somewhere:example.org/e/event?via=elsewhere.ca` * Link to chat with `@alice:example.org`: `matrix:u/alice:example.org?action=chat` A suggested client implementation algorithm is available in the [original MSC](https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-spec-proposals/blob/main/proposals/2312-matrix-uri.md#recommended-implementation). #### matrix.to navigation {{% boxes/note %}} This namespacing existed prior to a `matrix:` scheme. This is **not** meant to be interpreted as an available web service - see below for more details. {{% /boxes/note %}} A matrix.to URI has the following format, based upon the specification defined in [RFC 3986](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3986): ``` https://matrix.to/#//? ``` The identifier may be a room ID, room alias, or user ID. The extra parameter is only used in the case of permalinks where an event ID is referenced. The matrix.to URI, when referenced, must always start with `https://matrix.to/#/` followed by the identifier. The `` and the preceding question mark are optional and only apply in certain circumstances, documented below. Clients should not rely on matrix.to URIs falling back to a web server if accessed and instead should perform some sort of action within the client. For example, if the user were to click on a matrix.to URI for a room alias, the client may open a view for the user to participate in the room. The components of the matrix.to URI (`` and ``) are to be percent-encoded as per RFC 3986. Examples of matrix.to URIs are: * Link to `#somewhere:example.org`: `https://matrix.to/#/%23somewhere%3Aexample.org` * Link to `!somewhere:example.org`: `https://matrix.to/#/!somewhere%3Aexample.org?via=elsewhere.ca` * Link to `$event` in `#somewhere:example.org`: `https://matrix.to/#/%23somewhere:example.org/%24event%3Aexample.org` * Link to `$event` in `!somewhere:example.org`: `https://matrix.to/#/!somewhere%3Aexample.org/%24event%3Aexample.org?via=elsewhere.ca` * Link to `@alice:example.org`: `https://matrix.to/#/%40alice%3Aexample.org` {{% boxes/note %}} Historically, clients have not produced URIs which are fully encoded. Clients should try to interpret these cases to the best of their ability. For example, an unencoded room alias should still work within the client if possible. {{% /boxes/note %}} {{% boxes/note %}} Clients should be aware that decoding a matrix.to URI may result in extra slashes appearing due to some [room versions](/rooms). These slashes should normally be encoded when producing matrix.to URIs, however. {{% /boxes/note %}} {{% boxes/note %}} In prior versions of this specification, a concept of "groups" were mentioned to organize rooms. This functionality did not properly get introduced into the specification and is subsequently replaced with [Spaces](/client-server-api/#spaces). Historical matrix.to URIs pointing to groups might still exist: they take the form `https://matrix.to/#/%2Bexample%3Aexample.org` (where the `+` sigil may or may not be encoded). {{% /boxes/note %}} #### Routing Room IDs are not routable on their own as there is no reliable domain to send requests to. This is partially mitigated with the addition of a `via` argument on a URI, however the problem of routability is still present. Clients should do their best to route Room IDs to where they need to go, however they should also be aware of [issue \#1579](https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-spec/issues/355). A room (or room permalink) which isn't using a room alias should supply at least one server using `via` in the URI's query string. Multiple servers can be specified by including multuple `via` parameters. The values of `via` are intended to be passed along as the `server_name` parameters on the [Client Server `/join/{roomIdOrAlias}` API](/client-server-api/#post_matrixclientv3joinroomidoralias). When generating room links and permalinks, the application should pick servers which have a high probability of being in the room in the distant future. How these servers are picked is left as an implementation detail, however the current recommendation is to pick 3 unique servers based on the following criteria: - The first server should be the server of the highest power level user in the room, provided they are at least power level 50. If no user meets this criterion, pick the most popular server in the room (most joined users). The rationale for not picking users with power levels under 50 is that they are unlikely to be around into the distant future while higher ranking users (and therefore servers) are less likely to give up their power and move somewhere else. Most rooms in the public federation have a power level 100 user and have not deviated from the default structure where power level 50 users have moderator-style privileges. - The second server should be the next highest server by population, or the first highest by population if the first server was based on a user's power level. The rationale for picking popular servers is that the server is unlikely to be removed as the room naturally grows in membership due to that server joining users. The server could be refused participation in the future due to server ACLs or similar, however the chance of that happening to a server which is organically joining the room is unlikely. - The third server should be the next highest server by population. - Servers which are blocked due to server ACLs should never be chosen. - Servers which are IP addresses should never be chosen. Servers which use a domain name are less likely to be unroutable in the future whereas IP addresses cannot be pointed to a different location and therefore higher risk options. - All 3 servers should be unique from each other. If the room does not have enough users to supply 3 servers, the application should only specify the servers it can. For example, a room with only 2 users in it would result in maximum 2 `via` parameters. ### Opaque Identifiers The specification defines some identifiers to use the *Opaque Identifier Grammar*. This is a common grammar intended for non-user-visible identifiers which do not require parsing or interpretation (other than as a unique identifier). The grammar is defined as: * Identifiers must be entirely composed of the characters `[0-9]`, `[A-Z]`, `[a-z]`, `-`, `.`, `_`, and `~`. * Unless otherwise specified, identifiers must be at least one character and at most 255 characters in length. {{% boxes/note %}} The acceptable character set matches the unreserved character set in [RFC 3986](https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc3986#section-2.3). {{% /boxes/note %}} ## 3PID Types Third-party Identifiers (3PIDs) represent identifiers on other namespaces that might be associated with a particular person. They comprise a tuple of `medium` which is a string that identifies the namespace in which the identifier exists, and an `address`: a string representing the identifier in that namespace. This must be a canonical form of the identifier, *i.e.* if multiple strings could represent the same identifier, only one of these strings must be used in a 3PID address, in a well-defined manner. For example, for e-mail, the `medium` is 'email' and the `address` would be the email address, *e.g.* the string `bob@example.com`. Since domain resolution is case-insensitive, the email address `bob@Example.com` is also has the 3PID address of `bob@example.com` (without the capital 'e') rather than `bob@Example.com`. The namespaces defined by this specification are listed below. More namespaces may be defined in future versions of this specification. ### E-Mail Medium: `email` Represents E-Mail addresses. The `address` is the raw email address in `user@domain` form with the domain in lowercase. It must not contain other text such as real name, angle brackets or a mailto: prefix. In addition to lowercasing the domain component of an email address, implementations are expected to apply the unicode case-folding algorithm as described under "Caseless Matching" in [chapter 5 of the unicode standard](https://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode13.0.0/ch05.pdf#G21790). For example, `Strauß@Example.com` must be considered to be `strauss@example.com` while processing the email address. ### PSTN Phone numbers Medium: `msisdn` Represents telephone numbers on the public switched telephone network. The `address` is the telephone number represented as a MSISDN (Mobile Station International Subscriber Directory Number) as defined by the E.164 numbering plan. Note that MSISDNs do not include a leading '+'. ## Glob-style matching It is useful to match strings via globbing in some situations. Globbing in Matrix uses the following rules: * The character `*` matches zero or more characters. * `?` matches exactly one character. ## Dot-separated property paths It is useful to express the "path" to an event property by concatenating property names with dots, e.g. `content.body` would represent a `body` property in the event's `content`. To handle ambiguity when a property name contains a dot, any literal dot or backslash found in a property name should be escaped with a backslash. E.g. a property `m.relates_to` in the `content` would be expressed as `content.m\.relates_to`. Similarly, a `content` property named `m\foo` would be expressed as `content.m\\foo`. Other escape sequences are left as-is, e.g. a `\x` would be treated as a literal backslash followed by 'x'. It is recommended that implementations do not redundantly escape characters, as other escape sequences are reserved for future use. ## Security Threat Model ### Denial of Service The attacker could attempt to prevent delivery of messages to or from the victim in order to: - Disrupt service or marketing campaign of a commercial competitor. - Censor a discussion or censor a participant in a discussion. - Perform general vandalism. #### Threat: Resource Exhaustion An attacker could cause the victim's server to exhaust a particular resource (e.g. open TCP connections, CPU, memory, disk storage) #### Threat: Unrecoverable Consistency Violations An attacker could send messages which created an unrecoverable "split-brain" state in the cluster such that the victim's servers could no longer derive a consistent view of the chatroom state. #### Threat: Bad History An attacker could convince the victim to accept invalid messages which the victim would then include in their view of the chatroom history. Other servers in the chatroom would reject the invalid messages and potentially reject the victims messages as well since they depended on the invalid messages. #### Threat: Block Network Traffic An attacker could try to firewall traffic between the victim's server and some or all of the other servers in the chatroom. #### Threat: High Volume of Messages An attacker could send large volumes of messages to a chatroom with the victim making the chatroom unusable. #### Threat: Banning users without necessary authorisation An attacker could attempt to ban a user from a chatroom without the necessary authorisation. ### Spoofing An attacker could try to send a message claiming to be from the victim without the victim having sent the message in order to: - Impersonate the victim while performing illicit activity. - Obtain privileges of the victim. #### Threat: Altering Message Contents An attacker could try to alter the contents of an existing message from the victim. #### Threat: Fake Message "origin" Field An attacker could try to send a new message purporting to be from the victim with a phony "origin" field. ### Spamming The attacker could try to send a high volume of solicited or unsolicited messages to the victim in order to: - Find victims for scams. - Market unwanted products. #### Threat: Unsolicited Messages An attacker could try to send messages to victims who do not wish to receive them. #### Threat: Abusive Messages An attacker could send abusive or threatening messages to the victim ### Spying The attacker could try to access message contents or metadata for messages sent by the victim or to the victim that were not intended to reach the attacker in order to: - Gain sensitive personal or commercial information. - Impersonate the victim using credentials contained in the messages. (e.g. password reset messages) - Discover who the victim was talking to and when. #### Threat: Disclosure during Transmission An attacker could try to expose the message contents or metadata during transmission between the servers. #### Threat: Disclosure to Servers Outside Chatroom An attacker could try to convince servers within a chatroom to send messages to a server it controls that was not authorised to be within the chatroom. #### Threat: Disclosure to Servers Within Chatroom An attacker could take control of a server within a chatroom to expose message contents or metadata for messages in that room. ## Cryptographic Test Vectors To assist in the development of compatible implementations, the following test values may be useful for verifying the cryptographic event signing code. ### Signing Key The following test vectors all use the 32-byte value given by the following Base64-encoded string as the seed for generating the `ed25519` signing key: SIGNING_KEY_SEED = decode_base64( "YJDBA9Xnr2sVqXD9Vj7XVUnmFZcZrlw8Md7kMW+3XA1" ) In each case, the server name and key ID are as follows: SERVER_NAME = "domain" KEY_ID = "ed25519:1" ### JSON Signing Given an empty JSON object: ```json {} ``` The JSON signing algorithm should emit the following signed data: ```json { "signatures": { "domain": { "ed25519:1": "K8280/U9SSy9IVtjBuVeLr+HpOB4BQFWbg+UZaADMtTdGYI7Geitb76LTrr5QV/7Xg4ahLwYGYZzuHGZKM5ZAQ" } } } ``` Given the following JSON object with data values in it: ```json { "one": 1, "two": "Two" } ``` The JSON signing algorithm should emit the following signed JSON: ```json { "one": 1, "signatures": { "domain": { "ed25519:1": "KqmLSbO39/Bzb0QIYE82zqLwsA+PDzYIpIRA2sRQ4sL53+sN6/fpNSoqE7BP7vBZhG6kYdD13EIMJpvhJI+6Bw" } }, "two": "Two" } ``` ### Event Signing Given the following minimally-sized event: ```json { "room_id": "!x:domain", "sender": "@a:domain", "origin": "domain", "origin_server_ts": 1000000, "signatures": {}, "hashes": {}, "type": "X", "content": {}, "prev_events": [], "auth_events": [], "depth": 3, "unsigned": { "age_ts": 1000000 } } ``` The event signing algorithm should emit the following signed event: ```json { "auth_events": [], "content": {}, "depth": 3, "hashes": { "sha256": "5jM4wQpv6lnBo7CLIghJuHdW+s2CMBJPUOGOC89ncos" }, "origin": "domain", "origin_server_ts": 1000000, "prev_events": [], "room_id": "!x:domain", "sender": "@a:domain", "signatures": { "domain": { "ed25519:1": "KxwGjPSDEtvnFgU00fwFz+l6d2pJM6XBIaMEn81SXPTRl16AqLAYqfIReFGZlHi5KLjAWbOoMszkwsQma+lYAg" } }, "type": "X", "unsigned": { "age_ts": 1000000 } } ``` Given the following event containing redactable content: ```json { "content": { "body": "Here is the message content" }, "event_id": "$0:domain", "origin": "domain", "origin_server_ts": 1000000, "type": "m.room.message", "room_id": "!r:domain", "sender": "@u:domain", "signatures": {}, "unsigned": { "age_ts": 1000000 } } ``` The event signing algorithm should emit the following signed event: ```json { "content": { "body": "Here is the message content" }, "event_id": "$0:domain", "hashes": { "sha256": "onLKD1bGljeBWQhWZ1kaP9SorVmRQNdN5aM2JYU2n/g" }, "origin": "domain", "origin_server_ts": 1000000, "type": "m.room.message", "room_id": "!r:domain", "sender": "@u:domain", "signatures": { "domain": { "ed25519:1": "Wm+VzmOUOz08Ds+0NTWb1d4CZrVsJSikkeRxh6aCcUwu6pNC78FunoD7KNWzqFn241eYHYMGCA5McEiVPdhzBA" } }, "unsigned": { "age_ts": 1000000 } } ``` ## Conventions for Matrix APIs This section is intended primarily to guide API designers when adding to Matrix, setting guidelines to follow for how those APIs should work. This is important to maintain consistency with the Matrix protocol, and thus improve developer experience. ### HTTP endpoint and JSON property naming The names of the API endpoints for the HTTP transport follow a convention of using underscores to separate words (for example `/delete_devices`). The key names in JSON objects passed over the API also follow this convention. {{% boxes/note %}} There are a few historical exceptions to this rule, such as `/createRoom`. These inconsistencies may be addressed in future versions of this specification. {{% /boxes/note %}} ### Pagination REST API endpoints which can return multiple "pages" of results should adopt the following conventions. * If more results are available, the endpoint should return a property named `next_batch`. The value should be a string token which can be passed into a subsequent call to the endpoint to retrieve the next page of results. If no more results are available, this is indicated by *omitting* the `next_batch` property from the results. * The endpoint should accept a query-parameter named `from` which the client is expected to set to the value of a previous `next_batch`. * Some endpoints might support pagination in two directions (example: `/messages`, which can be used to move forward or backwards in the timeline from a known point). In this case, the endpoint should return a `prev_batch` property which can be passed into `from` to receive the previous page of results. Avoid having a separate "direction" parameter, which is generally redundant: the tokens returned by `next_batch` and `prev_batch` should contain enough information for subsequent calls to the API to know which page of results they should return.