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.. title:: Proposals for Spec Changes to Matrix
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.. contents:: Table of Contents
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.. sectnum::
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Proposals for Spec Changes to Matrix
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------------------------------------
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If you are interested in submitting a change to the Matrix Specification,
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please take note of the following guidelines.
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All changes to Specification content require a formal proposal process. This
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involves writing a proposal, having it reviewed by the Matrix community, having
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the proposal being accepted, then actually having your ideas implemented as
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committed changes to the `Specification repository
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<https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc>`_.
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The process for submitting a Matrix Spec Change (MSC) Proposal in detail is as
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follows:
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- Create a first draft of your proposal using `GitHub-flavored markdown
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<https://help.github.com/articles/basic-writing-and-formatting-syntax/>`_
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- In the document, clearly state the problem being solved, and the possible
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solutions being proposed for solving it and their respective trade-offs.
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- Proposal documents are intended to be as lightweight and flexible as the
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author desires; there is no formal template; the intention is to iterate
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as quickly as possible to get to a good design.
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- However, a `template with suggested headers
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<https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/blob/master/proposals/proposals_template.md>`_
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is available to get you started if necessary.
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- Take care in creating your proposal. Specify your intended changes, and
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give reasoning to back them up. Changes without justification will likely
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be poorly received by the community.
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- Fork and make a PR to the `matrix-doc
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<https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc>`_ repository.
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- Your proposal must live in the ``proposals/`` directory with a filename
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that follows the format ``1234-my-new-proposal.md`` where 1234 is the MSC
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ID.
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- Your PR description must include a link to the rendered markdown document
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and a summary of the proposal.
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- It is often very helpful to link any related MSCs or `matrix-doc issues
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<https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/issues>`_ to give context
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for your proposal.
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- Gather feedback as widely as possible from the community and core team.
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- The aim is to get maximum consensus towards an optimal solution. Sometimes
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trade-offs are required to meet this goal. Decisions should be made to the
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benefit of all major use cases.
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- A good place to ask for feedback on a specific proposal is
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`#matrix-spec:matrix.org <https://matrix.to/#/#matrix-spec:matrix.org>`_.
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If preferred, an alternative room can be created and advertised in
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#matrix-spec:matrix.org. Please also link to the room in your PR
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description.
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- For additional discussion areas, know that that #matrix-dev:matrix.org is
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for developers using existing Matrix APIs, #matrix:matrix.org is for users
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trying to run Matrix apps (clients & servers) and
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#matrix-architecture:matrix.org is for cross-cutting discussion of matrix's
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architectural design.
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- The point of the spec proposal process is to be collaborative rather than
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competitive, and to try to solve the problem in question with the optimal
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set of trade-offs. The author should neutrally gather the various
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viewpoints and get consensus, but this can sometimes be time-consuming (or
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the author may be biased), in which case an impartial 'shepherd' can be
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assigned to help guide the proposal through this process. A shepherd is
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typically a neutral party from the core team or an experienced member of
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the community. Having a shepherd is not a requirement for proposal
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acceptance.
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- Members of the core team and community will review and discuss the PR in the
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comments and in relevant rooms on Matrix. Discussion outside of GitHub should
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be summarised in a comment on the PR.
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- At some point a member of the core team will propose a motion for a final
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comment period (FCP) with a *disposition* of merge, close or postpone. This
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is usually preceded with a comment summarising the current state of the
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discussion, along with reasoning for the motion.
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- A concern can be raised by a core team member at any time, which will block
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the FCP from beginning. An FCP will only be begin when a **majority** of core
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team members agree on its outcome, and all existing concerns have been
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resolved.
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- The FCP will then begin and last for 5 days, giving anyone else some time to
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speak up before it concludes. On its conclusion, the disposition of the FCP
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will be carried out. If, however, sufficient reasoning for the FCP not to
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conclude is raised, the FCP can be cancelled and the MSC will continue to
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evolve accordingly.
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- Once your proposal has been accepted and merged, it is time to submit the
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actual change to the Specification that your proposal reasoned about. This is
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known as a spec PR. However in order for your spec PR to be accepted, you
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**must** show an implementation to prove that it works well in practice. In
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addition, any significant unforeseen changes to the original idea found
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during this process will warrant another MSC.
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- Please sign off the spec PR as per the `CONTRIBUTING.rst
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<https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.rst>`_
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guidelines.
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- Your PR will then be reviewed and hopefully merged on the grounds it is
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implemented sufficiently. If so, then give yourself a pat on the back knowing
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you've contributed to the Matrix protocol for the benefit of users and
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developers alike :)
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Proposals **must** act to the greater benefit of the entire Matrix ecosystem,
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rather than benefiting or privileging any single player or subset of players
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- and must not contain any patent encumbered IP. The Matrix core team pledges
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to act as a neutral custodian for Matrix on behalf of the whole ecosystem,
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just as it has since Matrix's inception in May 2014.
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For clarity: the Matrix ecosystem is anyone who uses the Matrix protocol. That
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includes client users, server admins, client developers, bot developers,
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bridge and AS developers, users and admins who are indirectly using Matrix via
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3rd party networks which happen to be bridged, server developers, room
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moderators and admins, companies/projects building products or services on
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Matrix, spec contributors, translators, and the core team who created it in
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the first place.
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"Greater benefit" could include maximising:
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* the number of end-users reachable on the open Matrix network.
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* the number of regular users on the Matrix network (e.g. 30-day retained
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federated users)
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* the number of online servers in the open federation.
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* the number of developers building on Matrix.
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* the number of independent implementations which use Matrix
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* the quality and utility of the Matrix spec.
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The guiding principles of the overall project are being worked on as part of
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the upcoming governance proposal, but could be something like:
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* Supporting the whole long-term ecosystem rather than individual stakeholder gain
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* Openness rather than proprietariness
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* Collaboration rather than competition
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* Accessibility rather than elitism
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* Transparency rather than stealth
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* Empathy rather than contrariness
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* Pragmatism rather than perfection
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* Proof rather than conjecture
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The above directions are intended to be simple and pragmatic rather than
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exhaustive, and aim to provide guidelines until we have a formal spec
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governance process in place that covers the whole Matrix community. In order
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to get Matrix out of beta as quickly as possible, as of May 2018 we are
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prioritising spec and reference implementation development over writing formal
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governance, but a formal governance document will follow as rapidly as
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possible.
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The process for handling proposals is described in the following diagram. Note
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that the lifetime of a proposal is tracked through the corresponding labels for
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each stage in the `matrix-doc issue tracker
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<https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/issues>`_.
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::
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+ +
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Proposals | Spec PRs | Additional States
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+-------+ | +------+ | +---------------+
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+----------------------+ | +---------+ | +-----------+
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| Proposal | | +------> Spec PR | | | Postponed |
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| Drafting and Initial | | | | Missing | | | |
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| Feedback Gathering | | | | | | +-----------+
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| | | | +----+----+ |
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+----------+-----------+ | | | | +----------+
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| | | v | | |
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v | | +-----------------+ | | Closed |
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+-------------------+ | | | | | | |
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| | | | | Spec PR Created | | +----------+
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| Proposal PR | | | | and In Review | |
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| Created | | | | | |
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| | | | +--------+--------+ |
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+---------+---------+ | | | |
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| | | v |
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v | | +-----------+ |
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+-----------+ | | | | |
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| | | | | Spec PR | |
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| Proposal | | | | Merged! | |
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| In Review | | | | | |
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| | | | +-----------+ |
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+-----+-----+ | | |
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v | | |
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+----------------------+ | | |
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| Final Comment Period | | | |
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+----------+-----------+ | | |
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v | | |
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+-------------+ | | |
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| Proposal PR | | | |
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| Merged! | | | |
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+------+------+ | | |
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+-----------------+ |
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+ +
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Lifetime States
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---------------
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============================= =======================================================
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Proposal WIP A proposal document which is still work-in-progress but is being shared to incorporate feedback
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Proposal In Review A proposal document which is now ready and waiting for review by the core team and community
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Proposal Final Comment Period A proposal document which has reached final comment period either for merge, closure or postponement
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Proposal Merged A proposal document which has passed review
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Spec PR Missing A proposal that has been accepted but has not currently been implemented in the spec
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Spec PR In Review A proposal that has been PR'd against the spec and is currently under review
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Spec PR Merged A proposal with a sufficient working implementation and whose Spec PR has been merged!
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Postponed A proposal that is temporarily blocked or a feature that may not be useful currently but perhaps sometime in the future
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Closed A proposal which has been reviewed and deemed unsuitable for acceptance
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============================= =======================================================
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Proposal Tracking
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-----------------
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This is a living document generated from the list of proposals at
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`matrix-doc/issues <https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/issues>`_ on
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GitHub.
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We use labels and some metadata in MSC PR descriptions to generate this page.
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Labels are assigned by the core team whilst triaging the issues based on those
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which exist in the `matrix-doc <https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc>`_
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repo already.
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It is worth mentioning that a previous version of the MSC process used a
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mixture of GitHub issues and PRs, leading to some MSC numbers deriving from
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GitHub issue IDs instead. A useful feature of GitHub is that it does
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automatically resolve to an issue, if an issue ID is placed in a pull URL. This
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means that https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/pull/$MSCID will correctly
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resolve to the desired MSC, whether it started as an issue or a PR.
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Other metadata:
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- The MSC (Matrix Spec Change) number is taken from the GitHub Pull Request ID.
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This is carried for the lifetime of the proposal. These IDs do not necessary
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represent a chronological order.
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- The GitHub PR title will act as the MSC's title.
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- Please link to the spec PR (if any) by adding a "PRs: #1234" line in the
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issue description.
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- The creation date is taken from the GitHub PR, but can be overridden by
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adding a "Date: yyyy-mm-dd" line in the PR description.
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- Updated Date is taken from GitHub.
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- Author is the creator of the MSC PR, but can be overridden by adding a
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"Author: @username" line in the body of the issue description. Please make
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sure @username is a GitHub user (include the @!)
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- A shepherd can be assigned by adding a "Shepherd: @username" line in the
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issue description. Again, make sure this is a real GitHub user.
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