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252 lines
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Markdown
252 lines
10 KiB
Markdown
weight: 340
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### Spaces
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{{% added-in v="1.2" %}}
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Often used to group rooms of similar subject matter (such as a public "Official
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matrix.org rooms" space or personal "Work stuff" space), spaces are a way to
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organise rooms while being represented as rooms themselves.
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A space is defined by the [`m.space` room type](#types), making it known as a
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"space-room". The space's name, topic, avatar, aliases, etc are all defined through
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the existing relevant state events within the space-room.
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Sending normal [`m.room.message`](#mroommessage) events within the space-room is
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discouraged - clients are not generally expected to have a way to render the timeline
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of the room. As such, space-rooms should be created with [`m.room.power_levels`](#mroompower_levels)
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which prohibit normal events by setting `events_default` to a suitably high number.
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In the default power level structure, this would be `100`. Clients might wish to
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go a step further and explicitly ignore notification counts on space-rooms.
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Membership of a space is defined and controlled by the existing mechanisms which
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govern a room: [`m.room.member`](#mroommember), [`m.room.history_visibility`](#mroomhistory_visibility),
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and [`m.room.join_rules`](#mroomjoin_rules). Public spaces are encouraged to have
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a similar setup to public rooms: `world_readable` history visibility, published
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canonical alias, and suitably public `join_rule`. Invites, including third-party
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invites, still work just as they do in normal rooms as well.
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All other aspects of regular rooms are additionally carried over, such as the
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ability to set arbitrary state events, hold room account data, etc. Spaces are
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just rooms with extra functionality on top.
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#### Managing rooms/spaces included in a space
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Spaces form a hierarchy of rooms which clients can use to structure their room
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list into a tree-like view. The parent/child relationship can be defined in two
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ways: with [`m.space.child`](#mspacechild) state events in the space-room, or with
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[`m.space.parent`](#mspaceparent) state events in the child room.
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In most cases, both the child and parent relationship should be defined to aid
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discovery of the space and its rooms. When only a `m.space.child` is used, the space
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is effectively a curated list of rooms which the rooms themselves might not be aware
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of. When only a `m.space.parent` is used, the rooms are "secretly" added to spaces
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with the effect of not being advertised directly by the space.
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{{% boxes/warning %}}
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Considering spaces are rooms themselves, it is possible to nest spaces within spaces,
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and it is possible to create a loop. Though the creation of loops is explicitly disallowed,
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implementations might still encounter them and must be careful not to loop infinitely when
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this happens.
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Clients and servers should additionally be aware of excessively long trees which may
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cause performance issues.
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{{% /boxes/warning %}}
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##### `m.space.child` relationship
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When using this approach, the state events get sent into the space-room which is the
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parent to the room. The `state_key` for the event is the child room's ID.
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For example, to achieve the following:
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```
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#space:example.org
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#general:example.org (!abcdefg:example.org)
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!private:example.org
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```
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the state of `#space:example.org` would consist of:
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*Unimportant fields trimmed for brevity.*
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```json
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{
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"type": "m.space.child",
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"state_key": "!abcdefg:example.org",
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"content": {
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"via": ["example.org"]
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}
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}
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```
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```json
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{
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"type": "m.space.child",
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"state_key": "!private:example.org",
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"content": {
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"via": ["example.org"]
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}
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}
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```
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No state events in the child rooms themselves would be required (though they
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can also be present). This allows for users
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to define personal/private spaces to organise their own rooms without needing explicit
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permission from the room moderators/admins.
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Child rooms can be removed from a space by omitting the `via` key of `content` on the
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relevant state event, such as through redaction or otherwise clearing the `content`.
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{{% event event="m.space.child" %}}
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###### Ordering of children within a space
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When the client is displaying the children of a space, the children should be ordered
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using the algorithm below. In some cases, like a traditional left side room list, the
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client may override the ordering to provide better user experience. A theoretical
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space summary view would however show the children ordered.
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Taking the set of space children, first order the children with a valid `order` key
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lexicographically by Unicode code-points such that `\x20` (space) is sorted before
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`\x7E` (`~`). Then, take the remaining children and order them by the `origin_server_ts`
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of their `m.space.child` event in ascending numeric order, placing them after the
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children with a valid `order` key in the resulting set.
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In cases where the `order` values are the same, the children are ordered by their
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timestamps. If the timestamps are the same, the children are ordered lexicographically
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by their room IDs (state keys) in ascending order.
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Noting the careful use of ASCII spaces here, the following demonstrates a set of space
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children being ordered appropriately:
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*Unimportant fields trimmed for brevity.*
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```json
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[
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{
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"type": "m.space.child",
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"state_key": "!b:example.org",
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"origin_server_ts": 1640341000000,
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"content": {
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"order": " ",
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"via": ["example.org"]
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}
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},
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{
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"type": "m.space.child",
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"state_key": "!a:example.org",
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"origin_server_ts": 1640141000000,
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"content": {
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"order": "aaaa",
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"via": ["example.org"]
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}
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},
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{
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"type": "m.space.child",
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"state_key": "!c:example.org",
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"origin_server_ts": 1640841000000,
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"content": {
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"order": "first",
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"via": ["example.org"]
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}
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},
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{
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"type": "m.space.child",
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"state_key": "!e:example.org",
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"origin_server_ts": 1640641000000,
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"content": {
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"via": ["example.org"]
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}
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},
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{
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"type": "m.space.child",
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"state_key": "!d:example.org",
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"origin_server_ts": 1640741000000,
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"content": {
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"via": ["example.org"]
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}
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}
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]
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```
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1. `!b:example.org` is first because `\x20` is before `aaaa` lexically.
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2. `!a:example.org` is next because `aaaa` is before `first` lexically.
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3. `!c:example.org` is next because `first` is the last `order` value.
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4. `!e:example.org` is next because the event timestamp is smallest.
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5. `!d:example.org` is last because the event timestamp is largest.
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##### `m.space.parent` relationships
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Rooms can additionally claim to be part of a space by populating their own state
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with a parent event. Similar to child events within spaces, the parent event's
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`state_key` is the room ID of the parent space, and they have a similar `via` list
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within their `content` to denote both whether or not the link is valid and which
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servers might be possible to join through.
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To avoid situations where a room falsely claims it is part of a given space,
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`m.space.parent` events should be ignored unless one of the following is true:
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* A corresponding `m.space.child` event can be found in the supposed parent space.
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* The sender of the `m.space.parent` event has sufficient power level in the
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supposed parent space to send `m.space.child` state events (there doesn't need
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to be a matching child event).
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{{% boxes/note %}}
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Clients might need to peek into a parent space to inspect the room state if they
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aren't already joined. If the client is unable to peek the state, the link should
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be assumed to be invalid.
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{{% /boxes/note %}}
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{{% boxes/note %}}
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A consequence of the second condition is that a room admin being demoted in the
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parent space, leaving the parent space, or otherwise being removed from the parent
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space can mean that a previously valid `m.space.parent` event becomes invalid.
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{{% /boxes/note %}}
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`m.space.parent` events can additionally include a `canonical` boolean key in their
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`content` to denote that the parent space is the main/primary space for the room.
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This can be used to, for example, have the client find other rooms by peeking into
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that space and suggesting them to the user. Only one canonical parent should exist,
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though this is not enforced. To tiebreak, use the lowest room ID sorted lexicographically
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by Unicode code-points.
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{{% event event="m.space.parent" %}}
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#### Discovering rooms within spaces
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Often the client will want to assist the user in exploring what rooms/spaces are part
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of a space. This can be done with crawling [`m.space.child`](#mspacechild) state events
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in the client and peeking into the rooms to get information like the room name, though
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this is impractical for most cases.
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Instead, a hierarchy API is provided to walk the space tree and discover the rooms with
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their aesthetic details.
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The [`GET /hierarchy`](#get_matrixclientv1roomsroomidhierarchy) API works in a depth-first
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manner: when it encounters another space as a child it recurses into that space before
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returning non-space children.
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{{% boxes/warning %}}
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Though prohibited, it is still possible for loops to occur. Servers should gracefully
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break loops.
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Additionally, a given child room might appear multiple times in the response as a
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grandchild (for example).
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{{% /boxes/warning %}}
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{{% http-api spec="client-server" api="space_hierarchy" %}}
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##### Server behaviour
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In the case where the server does not have access to the state of a child room, it can
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request the information over federation with the
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[`GET /hierarchy`](/server-server-api/#get_matrixfederationv1hierarchyroomid) API. The
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response to this endpoint should be cached for a period of time. The response might
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additionally contain information about rooms the requesting user is already a member
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of, or that the server is aware of - the local data should be used instead of the remote
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server's data.
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Note that the response to the client endpoint is contextual based on the user. Servers are
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encouraged to cache the data for a period of time, though permission checks may need to
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be performed to ensure the response is accurate for that user.
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