8.6 KiB
Restricting room membership based on space membership
A desirable feature is to give room admins the power to restrict membership of their room based on the membership of one or more spaces from MSC1772: spaces, for example:
members of the #doglovers space can join this room without an invitation1
Proposal
A new join_rule
(restricted
) will be used to reflect a cross between invite
and public
join rules. The content of the join rules would include the rooms
to trust for membership. For example:
{
"type": "m.room.join_rules",
"state_key": "",
"content": {
"join_rule": "restricted",
"allow": [
{
"space": "!mods:example.org",
"via": ["example.org"]
},
{
"space": "!users:example.org",
"via": ["example.org"]
}
]
}
}
This means that a user must be a member of the !mods:example.org
space or
!users:example.org
space in order to join without an invite2.
Membership in a single space is enough.
If the allow
key is an empty list (or not a list at all), then no users are
allowed to join without an invite. Each entry is expected to be an object with the
following keys, or a string representing the MXID of the user exempted:
space
: The room ID of the space to check the membership of.via
: A list of servers which may be used to peek for membership of the space.
Any entries in the list which do not match the expected format are ignored.
When a homeserver receives a /join
request from a client or a /make_join
/ /send_join
request from a server, the request should only be permitted if the user has a valid
invite or is in one of the listed spaces. Note that the server may not know if the user
is in a particular space, this is left to a future MSC to solve.
If the user is not part of the proper space, the homeserver should return an error
response with HTTP status code of 403 and an errcode
of M_FORBIDDEN
.
Unlike the invite
join rule, confirmation that the allow
rules were properly
checked cannot be enforced over federation by event authorization, so servers in
the room are trusted not to allow invalid users to join.3
However, user IDs listed as strings can be properly checked over federation.
Summary of the behaviour of join rules
See the join rules
specification for full details, but the summary below should highlight the differences
between public
, invite
, and restricted
.
public
: anyone can join, subject toban
andserver_acls
, as today.invite
: only people with membershipinvite
can join, as today.knock
: the same asinvite
, except anyone can knock, subject toban
andserver_acls
. See MSC2403.private
: This is reserved and not implemented.restricted
: the same aspublic
from the perspective of the auth rules, but with the additional caveat that servers are expected to check theallow
rules before generating ajoin
event (whether for a local or a remote user).
Security considerations
The allow
feature for join_rules
places increased trust in the servers in the
room. We consider this acceptable: if you don't want evil servers randomly
joining spurious users into your rooms, then:
- Don't let evil servers in your room in the first place
- Don't use
allow
lists, given the expansion increases the attack surface anyway by letting members in other rooms dictate who's allowed into your room.
Unstable prefix
The restricted
join rule will be included in a future room version to ensure
that servers and clients opt-into the new functionality.
During development it is expected that an unstable room version of
org.matrix.msc3083
is used. Since the room version namespaces the behaviour,
the allow
key and the restricted
value do not need unstable prefixes.
History / Rationale
Note that this replaces the second half of an older version of MSC2962.
It may seem that just having the allow
key with public
join rules is enough,
as suggested in MSC2962,
but there are concerns that having a public
join rule that is restricted may
cause issues if an implementation does not understand the semantics of the allow
keyword. Using an allow
key with invite
join rules also does not make sense as
from the perspective of the auth rules, this is akin to public
(since the checking
of whether a member is in the space is done during the call to /join
or /make_join
/ /send_join
).
The above concerns about an implementation not understanding the semantics of allow
could be solved by introducing a new room version, but if this is done it seems clearer
to just introduce a a new join rule - restricted
- as described above.
Future extensions
Potential future extensions which should not be designed out include, but are not included in this MSC.
Checking space membership over federation
If a server is not in a space (and thus doesn't know the membership of a space) it cannot enforce membership of a space during a join. Peeking over federation, as described in MSC2444, could be used to establish if the user is in any of the proper spaces.
Note that there are additional security considerations with this, namely that
the peek server has significant power. For example, a poorly chosen peek
server could lie about the space membership and add an @evil_user:example.org
to a space to gain membership to a room.
Kicking users out when they leave the allowed space
In the above example, suppose @bob:server.example
leaves !users:example.org
:
should they be removed from the room? Likely not, by analogy with what happens
when you switch the join rules from public to invite. Join rules currently govern
joins, not existing room membership.
It is left to a future MSC to consider this, but some potential thoughts are given below.
If you assume that a user should be removed in this case, one option is to
leave the departure up to Bob's server server.example
, but this places a
relatively high level of trust in that server. Additionally, if server.example
were offline, other users in the room would still see Bob in the room (and their
servers would attempt to send message traffic to it).
Another consideration is that users may have joined via a direct invite, not via access through a space.
Fixing this is thorny. Some sort of annotation on the membership events might help. but it's unclear what the desired semantics are:
- Assuming that users in a given space are not kicked when that space is
removed from
allow
, are those users then given a pass to remain in the room indefinitely? What happens if the space is added back toallow
and then the user leaves it? - Suppose a user joins a room via a space (SpaceA). Later, SpaceB is added to
the
allow
list and SpaceA is removed. What should happen when the user leaves SpaceB? Are they exempt from the kick?
It is possible that completely different state should be kept, or a different
m.room.member
state could be used in a more reasonable way to track this.
Inheriting join rules
If you make a parent space invite-only, should that (optionally?) cascade into child rooms? Seems to have some of the same problems as inheriting power levels, as discussed in MSC2962.
Footnotes
- Users in the banned space could simply leave it at any time
- This functionality is already somewhat provided by Moderation policy lists. ↩
[2]: Note that there is nothing stopping users sending and
receiving invites in public
rooms today, and they work as you might expect.
The only difference is that you are not required to hold an invite when
joining the room. ↩
[3]: This is a marginal decrease in security from the current situation. Currently, a misbehaving server can allow unauthorized users to join any room by first issuing an invite to that user. In theory that can be prevented by raising the PL required to send an invite, but in practice that is rarely done. ↩