.. Copyright 2016 OpenMarket Ltd .. Copyright 2017 Kamax.io .. Copyright 2017 New Vector Ltd .. Copyright 2018 New Vector Ltd .. .. Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); .. you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. .. You may obtain a copy of the License at .. .. http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 .. .. Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software .. distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, .. WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. .. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and .. limitations under the License. Identity Service API ==================== {{unstable_warning_block_IDENTITY_RELEASE_LABEL}} The Matrix client-server and server-server APIs are largely expressed in Matrix user identifiers. From time to time, it is useful to refer to users by other ("third-party") identifiers, or "3PID"s, e.g. their email address or phone number. This Identity Service Specification describes how mappings between third-party identifiers and Matrix user identifiers can be established, validated, and used. This description technically may apply to any 3PID, but in practice has only been applied specifically to email addresses and phone numbers. .. contents:: Table of Contents .. sectnum:: Changelog --------- .. topic:: Version: %IDENTITY_RELEASE_LABEL% {{identity_service_changelog}} This version of the specification is generated from `matrix-doc `_ as of Git commit `{{git_version}} `_. For the full historical changelog, see https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/blob/master/changelogs/identity_service.rst Other versions of this specification ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The following other versions are also available, in reverse chronological order: - `HEAD `_: Includes all changes since the latest versioned release. - `r0.2.0 `_ - `r0.1.0 `_ General principles ------------------ The purpose of an identity server is to validate, store, and answer questions about the identities of users. In particular, it stores associations of the form "identifier X represents the same user as identifier Y", where identities may exist on different systems (such as email addresses, phone numbers, Matrix user IDs, etc). The identity server has some private-public keypairs. When asked about an association, it will sign details of the association with its private key. Clients may validate the assertions about associations by verifying the signature with the public key of the identity server. In general, identity servers are treated as reliable oracles. They do not necessarily provide evidence that they have validated associations, but claim to have done so. Establishing the trustworthiness of an individual identity server is left as an exercise for the client. 3PID types are described in `3PID Types`_ Appendix. API standards ------------- The mandatory baseline for identity server communication in Matrix is exchanging JSON objects over HTTP APIs. HTTPS is required for communication, and all API calls use a Content-Type of ``application/json``. In addition, strings MUST be encoded as UTF-8. Any errors which occur at the Matrix API level MUST return a "standard error response". This is a JSON object which looks like: .. code:: json { "errcode": "", "error": "" } 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``. 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_NOT_FOUND``: The resource requested could not be located. :``M_MISSING_PARAMS``: The request was missing one or more parameters. :``M_INVALID_PARAM``: The request contained one or more invalid parameters. :``M_SESSION_NOT_VALIDATED``: The session has not been validated. :``M_NO_VALID_SESSION``: A session could not be located for the given parameters. :``M_SESSION_EXPIRED``: The session has expired and must be renewed. :``M_INVALID_EMAIL``: The email address provided was not valid. :``M_EMAIL_SEND_ERROR``: There was an error sending an email. Typically seen when attempting to verify ownership of a given email address. :``M_INVALID_ADDRESS``: The provided third party address was not valid. :``M_SEND_ERROR``: There was an error sending a notification. Typically seen when attempting to verify ownership of a given third party address. :``M_UNRECOGNIZED``: The request contained an unrecognised value, such as an unknown token or medium. :``M_THREEPID_IN_USE``: The third party identifier is already in use by another user. Typically this error will have an additional ``mxid`` property to indicate who owns the third party identifier. :``M_UNKNOWN``: An unknown error has occurred. Privacy ------- Identity is a privacy-sensitive issue. While the identity server exists to provide identity information, access should be restricted to avoid leaking potentially sensitive data. In particular, being able to construct large-scale connections between identities should be avoided. To this end, in general APIs should allow a 3PID to be mapped to a Matrix user identity, but not in the other direction (i.e. one should not be able to get all 3PIDs associated with a Matrix user ID, or get all 3PIDs associated with a 3PID). Web browser clients ------------------- It is realistic to expect that some clients will be written to be run within a web browser or similar environment. In these cases, the identity server should respond to pre-flight requests and supply Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) headers on all requests. When a client approaches the server with a pre-flight (OPTIONS) request, the server should respond with the CORS headers for that route. The recommended CORS headers to be returned by servers on all requests are:: Access-Control-Allow-Origin: * Access-Control-Allow-Methods: GET, POST, PUT, DELETE, OPTIONS Access-Control-Allow-Headers: Origin, X-Requested-With, Content-Type, Accept, Authorization Authentication -------------- Most ``v2`` endpoints in the Identity Service API require authentication in order to ensure that the requesting user has accepted all relevant policies and is otherwise permitted to make the request. The ``v1`` API (currently deprecated) does not require this authentication, however using ``v1`` is strongly discouraged as it will be removed in a future release. Identity Servers use a scheme similar to the Client-Server API's concept of access tokens to authenticate users. The access tokens provided by an Identity Server cannot be used to authenticate Client-Server API requests. An access token is provided to an endpoint in one of two ways: 1. Via a query string parameter, ``access_token=TheTokenHere``. 2. Via a request header, ``Authorization: Bearer TheTokenHere``. Clients are encouraged to the use the ``Authorization`` header where possible to prevent the access token being leaked in access/HTTP logs. The query string should only be used in cases where the ``Authorization`` header is inaccessible for the client. When credentials are required but missing or invalid, the HTTP call will return with a status of 401 and the error code ``M_MISSING_TOKEN`` or ``M_UNKNOWN_TOKEN`` respectively. {{v2_auth_is_http_api}} Status check ------------ {{ping_is_http_api}} {{v2_ping_is_http_api}} Key management -------------- An identity server has some long-term public-private keypairs. These are named in a scheme ``algorithm:identifier``, e.g. ``ed25519:0``. When signing an association, the standard `Signing JSON`_ algorithm applies. .. TODO: Actually allow identity servers to revoke all keys See: https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/issues/1633 .. In the event of key compromise, the identity server may revoke any of its keys. An HTTP API is offered to get public keys, and check whether a particular key is valid. The identity server may also keep track of some short-term public-private keypairs, which may have different usage and lifetime characteristics than the service's long-term keys. {{pubkey_is_http_api}} {{v2_pubkey_is_http_api}} Association lookup ------------------ {{lookup_is_http_api}} .. TODO: TravisR - Add v2 lookup API in future PR Establishing associations ------------------------- The flow for creating an association is session-based. Within a session, one may prove that one has ownership of a 3PID. Once this has been established, the user can form an association between that 3PID and a Matrix user ID. Note that this association is only proved one way; a user can associate *any* Matrix user ID with a validated 3PID, i.e. I can claim that any email address I own is associated with @billg:microsoft.com. Sessions are time-limited; a session is considered to have been modified when it was created, and then when a validation is performed within it. A session can only be checked for validation, and validation can only be performed within a session, within a 24 hour period since its most recent modification. Any attempts to perform these actions after the expiry will be rejected, and a new session should be created and used instead. To start a session, the client makes a request to the appropriate ``/requestToken`` endpoint. The identity server then sends a validation token to the user, and the user provides the token to the client. The client then provides the token to the appropriate ``/submitToken`` endpoint, completing the session. At this point, the client should ``/bind`` the third party identifier or leave it for another entity to bind. Format of a validation token ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The format of the validation token is left up to the identity server: it should choose one appropriate to the 3PID type. (For example, it would be inappropriate to expect a user to copy a long passphrase including punctuation from an SMS message into a client.) Whatever format the identity server uses, the validation token must consist of at most 255 Unicode codepoints. Clients must pass the token through without modification. Email associations ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ {{email_associations_is_http_api}} {{v2_email_associations_is_http_api}} Phone number associations ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ {{phone_associations_is_http_api}} {{v2_phone_associations_is_http_api}} General ~~~~~~~ {{associations_is_http_api}} {{v2_associations_is_http_api}} Invitation storage ------------------ An identity server can store pending invitations to a user's 3PID, which will be retrieved and can be either notified on or look up when the 3PID is associated with a Matrix user ID. At a later point, if the owner of that particular 3PID binds it with a Matrix user ID, the identity server will attempt to make an HTTP POST to the Matrix user's homeserver via the `/3pid/onbind`_ endpoint. The request MUST be signed with a long-term private key for the identity server. {{store_invite_is_http_api}} {{v2_store_invite_is_http_api}} Ephemeral invitation signing ---------------------------- To aid clients who may not be able to perform crypto themselves, the identity server offers some crypto functionality to help in accepting invitations. This is less secure than the client doing it itself, but may be useful where this isn't possible. {{invitation_signing_is_http_api}} {{v2_invitation_signing_is_http_api}} .. _`Unpadded Base64`: ../appendices.html#unpadded-base64 .. _`3PID Types`: ../appendices.html#pid-types .. _`Signing JSON`: ../appendices.html#signing-json .. _`/3pid/onbind`: ../server_server/%SERVER_RELEASE_LABEL%.html#put-matrix-federation-v1-3pid-onbind