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matrix-spec/content/client-server-api/modules/threading.md

7.2 KiB

Threading

{{% added-in v="1.4" %}}

Threads allow users to visually branch their conversations in a room. Typically mostly used when a room is discussing multiple topics, threads provide more organisation of communication that traditional rich replies can't always offer.

Clients SHOULD render threads differently to regular messages or replies in the timeline, such as by providing some context to what is going on in the thread but keeping the full conversation history behind a disclosure.

Threads are established using a rel_type of m.thread and reference the thread root (the first event in a thread). It is not possible to create a thread from an event with a rel_type, which includes not being able to nest threads. All conversation in a thread reference the thread root instead of the most recent message, unlike rich reply chains.

As a worked example, the following represents a thread and how it'd be formed:

{
  // irrelevant fields excluded
  "type": "m.room.message",
  "event_id": "$alice_hello",
  "sender": "@alice:example.org",
  "content": {
    "msgtype": "m.text",
    "body": "Hello world! How are you?"
  }
}
{
  // irrelevant fields excluded
  "type": "m.room.message",
  "event_id": "$bob_hello",
  "sender": "@bob:example.org",
  "content": {
    "m.relates_to": {
      "rel_type": "m.thread",
      "event_id": "$alice_hello"
    },
    "msgtype": "m.text",
    "body": "I'm doing okay, thank you! How about yourself?"
  }
}
{
  // irrelevant fields excluded
  "type": "m.room.message",
  "event_id": "$alice_reply",
  "sender": "@alice:example.org",
  "content": {
    "m.relates_to": {
      "rel_type": "m.thread",
      "event_id": "$alice_hello" // note: always references the *thread root*
    },
    "msgtype": "m.text",
    "body": "I'm doing great! Thanks for asking."
  }
}

As shown, any event without a rel_type can become a thread root by simply referencing it using an m.thread relationship.

Fallback for unthreaded clients

Clients which understand how to work with threads should simply do so, however clients which might not be aware of threads (due to age or scope) might not be able to helpfully represent the conversation history to its users.

To work around this, events sent by clients which understand threads include rich reply metadata to attempt to form a reply chain representation of the conversation. This representation is not ideal for heavily threaded rooms, but allows for users to have context as to what is being discussed with respect to other messages in the room.

This representation is achieved by merging the two relationships and setting a new is_falling_back flag to true.

// within an event's content...
"m.relates_to": {
  // The m.thread relationship structure
  "rel_type": "m.thread",
  "event_id": "$root",

  // The rich reply structure
  "m.in_reply_to": {
    // The most recent message known to the client in the thread.
    // This should be something with a high chance of being rendered by the other client,
    // such as an `m.room.message` event.
    "event_id": "$target"
  },

  // A flag to denote that this is a thread with reply fallback
  "is_falling_back": true
}

For m.room.message events represented this way, no reply fallback is specified. This allows thread-aware clients to discard the m.in_reply_to object entirely when is_falling_back is true.

{{% boxes/note %}} Clients which are acutely aware of threads (they do not render threads, but are otherwise aware of the feature existing in the spec) can treat rich replies to an event with a rel_type of m.thread as a threaded reply, for conversation continuity on the threaded client's side.

To do this, copy the event_id (thread root) from the event being replied to, add the m.in_reply_to metadata, and add is_falling_back: true to m.relates_to. {{% /boxes/note %}}

Replies within threads

In the fallback for unthreaded clients section, a new is_falling_back flag is added to m.relates_to. This flag defaults to false when not provided, which also allows a threaded message to contain a reply itself.

Aside from is_falling_back being false (or not specified), the fallback for unthreaded clients is used to create a reply within a thread: clients should render the event accordingly.

Server behaviour

Validation of m.thread relationships

Servers SHOULD reject client requests which attempt to start a thread off an event with a rel_type. If the client attempts to target an event which already has an m.thread, m.reference, or any other rel_type then it should receive a HTTP 400 error response with appropriate error message, as per the standard error response structure.

{{% boxes/note %}} A specific error code is not currently available for this case: servers should use M_UNKNOWN alongside the HTTP 400 status code. {{% /boxes/note %}}

Server-side aggregation of m.thread relationships

Given threads always reference the thread root, an event can have multiple "child" events which then form the thread itself. These events should be aggregated by the server.

The aggregation for threads includes some information about the user's participation in the thread, the approximate number of events in the thread (as known to the server), and the most recent event in the thread (topologically). This is then bundled into the event as m.thread:

{
  "event_id": "$root_event",
  // irrelevant fields not shown
  "unsigned": {
    "m.relations": {
      "m.thread": {
        "latest_event": {
          // A serialized copy of the latest event in the thread.
          // Some fields are not shown here for brevity.
          "event_id": "$message",
          "sender": "@alice:example.org",
          "room_id": "!room:example.org",
          "type": "m.room.message",
          "content": {
            "msgtype": "m.text",
            "body": "Woo! Threads!"
          }
        },
        "count": 7,
        "current_user_participated": true
      }
    }
  }
}

latest_event is the most recent event (topologically to the server) in the thread sent by an un-ignored user.

Note that any bundled aggregations on latest_event should also be present. The server should be careful to avoid loops, though loops are not currently possible due to m.thread not being possible to target an event with a rel_type already.

count is simply the number of events using m.thread as a rel_type pointing to the target event. It does not include events sent by ignored users.

current_user_participated is true when the authenticated user is either:

  1. The sender of the event receiving the bundle (they sent the thread root).
  2. The sender of an event which references the thread root with a rel_type of m.thread.

Querying threads in a room

Clients looking to get all the events in a thread can use GET /relations/{threadRootId}/m.thread, however getting all threads in a room is done through a dedicated API:

{{% http-api spec="client-server" api="threads_list" %}}