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author | Paul "LeoNerd" Evans <paul@matrix.org> | 2014-11-17 16:59:24 +0000 |
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committer | Paul "LeoNerd" Evans <paul@matrix.org> | 2014-11-17 16:59:24 +0000 |
commit | 31a049eb692d37387a2db972da754f7ec56218c7 (patch) | |
tree | 9e5f47abad904d30c08d2f340b543a631e436894 /docs/client-server/OLD_specification.rst | |
parent | Include room membership in room initialSync (diff) | |
parent | SYN-148: Add the alias after creating the room (diff) | |
download | synapse-31a049eb692d37387a2db972da754f7ec56218c7.tar.xz |
Merge branch 'develop' into room-initial-sync
Conflicts: synapse/handlers/message.py
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/client-server/OLD_specification.rst')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/client-server/OLD_specification.rst | 1283 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 1283 deletions
diff --git a/docs/client-server/OLD_specification.rst b/docs/client-server/OLD_specification.rst deleted file mode 100644 index 47fba5eeac..0000000000 --- a/docs/client-server/OLD_specification.rst +++ /dev/null @@ -1,1283 +0,0 @@ -======================== -Matrix Client-Server API -======================== - - -.. WARNING:: - This specification is old. Please see /docs/specification.rst instead. - - - - - - - - - - - -The following specification outlines how a client can send and receive data from -a home server. - -[[TODO(kegan): 4/7/14 Grilling -- Mechanism for getting historical state changes (e.g. topic updates) - add - query param flag? -- Generic mechanism for linking first class events (e.g. feedback) with other s - first class events (e.g. messages)? -- Generic mechanism for updating 'stuff about the room' (e.g. favourite coffee) - AND specifying clobbering rules (clobber/add to list/etc)? -- How to ensure a consistent view for clients paginating through room lists? - They aren't really ordered in any way, and if you're paginating - through them, how can you show them a consistent result set? Temporary 'room - list versions' akin to event version? How does that work? -]] - -[[TODO(kegan): -Outstanding problems / missing spec: -- Push -- Typing notifications -]] - -Terminology ------------ -Stream Tokens: -An opaque token used to make further streaming requests. When using any -pagination streaming API, responses will contain a start and end stream token. -When reconnecting to the stream, these tokens can be used to tell the server -where the client got up to in the stream. - -Event ID: -Every event that comes down the event stream or that is returned from the REST -API has an associated event ID (event_id). This ID will be the same between the -REST API and the event stream, so any duplicate events can be clobbered -correctly without knowing anything else about the event. - -Message ID: -The ID of a message sent by a client in a room. Clients send IMs to each other -in rooms. Each IM sent by a client must have a unique message ID which is unique -for that particular client. - -User ID: -The @username:host style ID of the client. When registering for an account, the -client specifies their username. The user_id is this username along with the -home server's unique hostname. When federating between home servers, the user_id -is used to uniquely identify users across multiple home servers. - -Room ID: -The room_id@host style ID for the room. When rooms are created, the client either -specifies or is allocated a room ID. This room ID must be used to send messages -in that room. Like with clients, there may be multiple rooms with the same ID -across multiple home servers. The room_id is used to uniquely identify a room -when federating. - -Global message ID: -The globally unique ID for a message. This ID is formed from the msg_id, the -client's user_id and the room_id. This uniquely identifies any -message. It is represented with '-' as the delimeter between IDs. The -global_msg_id is of the form: room_id-user_id-msg_id - - -REST API and the Event Stream ------------------------------ -Clients send data to the server via a RESTful API. They can receive data via -this API or from an event stream. An event stream is a special path which -streams all events the client may be interested in. This makes it easy to -immediately receive updates from the REST API. All data is represented as JSON. - -Pagination streaming API -======================== -Clients are often interested in very large datasets. The data itself could -be 1000s of messages in a given room, 1000s of rooms in a public room list, or -1000s of events (presence, typing, messages, etc) in the system. It is not -practical to send vast quantities of data to the client every time they -request a list of public rooms for example. There needs to be a way to show a -subset of this data, and apply various filters to it. This is what the pagination -streaming API is. This API defines standard request/response parameters which -can be used when navigating this stream of data. - -Pagination Request Query Parameters ------------------------------------ -Clients may wish to paginate results from the event stream, or other sources of -information where the amount of information may be a problem, -e.g. in a room with 10,000s messages. The pagination query parameters provide a -way to navigate a 'window' around a large set of data. These -parameters are only valid for GET requests. - - S e r v e r - s i d e d a t a - |-------------------------------------------------| -START ^ ^ END - |_______________| - | - Client-extraction - -'START' and 'END' are magic token values which specify the start and end of the -dataset respectively. - -Query parameters: - from : $streamtoken - The opaque token to start streaming from. - to : $streamtoken - The opaque token to end streaming at. Typically, - clients will not know the item of data to end at, so this will usually be - START or END. - limit : integer - An integer representing the maximum number of items to - return. - -For example, the event stream has events E1 -> E15. The client wants the last 5 -events and doesn't know any previous events: - -S E -|-E1-E2-E3-E4-E5-E6-E7-E8-E9-E10-E11-E12-E13-E14-E15-| -| | | -| _____| | -|__________________ | ___________________| - | | | - GET /events?to=START&limit=5&from=END - Returns: - E15,E14,E13,E12,E11 - - -Another example: a public room list has rooms R1 -> R17. The client is showing 5 -rooms at a time on screen, and is on page 2. They want to -now show page 3 (rooms R11 -> 15): - -S E -| 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 | stream token -|-R1-R2-R3-R4-R5-R6-R7-R8-R9-R10-R11-R12-R13-R14-R15-R16-R17| room - |____________| |________________| - | | - Currently | - viewing | - | - GET /rooms/list?from=9&to=END&limit=5 - Returns: R11,R12,R13,R14,R15 - -Note that tokens are treated in an *exclusive*, not inclusive, manner. The end -token from the intial request was '9' which corresponded to R10. When the 2nd -request was made, R10 did not appear again, even though from=9 was specified. If -you know the token, you already have the data. - -Pagination Response -------------------- -Responses to pagination requests MUST follow the format: -{ - "chunk": [ ... , Responses , ... ], - "start" : $streamtoken, - "end" : $streamtoken -} -Where $streamtoken is an opaque token which can be used in another query to -get the next set of results. The "start" and "end" keys can only be omitted if -the complete dataset is provided in "chunk". - -If the client wants earlier results, they should use from=$start_streamtoken, -to=START. Likewise, if the client wants later results, they should use -from=$end_streamtoken, to=END. - -Unless specified, the default pagination parameters are from=START, to=END, -without a limit set. This allows you to hit an API like -/events without any query parameters to get everything. - -The Event Stream ----------------- -The event stream returns events using the pagination streaming API. When the -client disconnects for a while and wants to reconnect to the event stream, they -should specify from=$end_streamtoken. This lets the server know where in the -event stream the client is. These tokens are completely opaque, and the client -cannot infer anything from them. - - GET /events?from=$LAST_STREAM_TOKEN - REST Path: /events - Returns (success): A JSON array of Event Data. - Returns (failure): An Error Response - -LAST_STREAM_TOKEN is the last stream token obtained from the event stream. If the -client is connecting for the first time and does not know any stream tokens, -they can use "START" to request all events from the start. For more information -on this, see "Pagination Request Query Parameters". - -The event stream supports shortpoll and longpoll with the "timeout" query -parameter. This parameter specifies the number of milliseconds the server should -hold onto the connection waiting for incoming events. If no events occur in this -period, the connection will be closed and an empty chunk will be returned. To -use shortpoll, specify "timeout=0". - -Event Data ----------- -This is a JSON object which looks like: -{ - "event_id" : $EVENT_ID, - "type" : $EVENT_TYPE, - $URL_ARGS, - "content" : { - $EVENT_CONTENT - } -} - -EVENT_ID - An ID identifying this event. This is so duplicate events can be suppressed on - the client. - -EVENT_TYPE - The namespaced event type (m.*) - -URL_ARGS - Path specific data from the REST API. - -EVENT_CONTENT - The event content, matching the REST content PUT previously. - -Events are differentiated via the event type "type" key. This is the type of -event being received. This can be expanded upon by using different namespaces. -Every event MUST have a 'type' key. - -Most events will have a corresponding REST URL. This URL will generally have -data in it to represent the resource being modified, -e.g. /rooms/$room_id. The event data will contain extra top-level keys to expose -this information to clients listening on an event -stream. The event content maps directly to the contents submitted via the REST -API. - -For example: - Event Type: m.example.room.members - REST Path: /examples/room/$room_id/members/$user_id - REST Content: { "membership" : "invited" } - -is represented in the event stream as: - -{ - "event_id" : "e_some_event_id", - "type" : "m.example.room.members", - "room_id" : $room_id, - "user_id" : $user_id, - "content" : { - "membership" : "invited" - } -} - -As convention, the URL variable "$varname" will map directly onto the name -of the JSON key "varname". - -Error Responses ---------------- -If the client sends an invalid request, the server MAY respond with an error -response. This is of the form: -{ - "error" : "string", - "errcode" : "string" -} -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". These error codes should have their namespace -first in ALL CAPS, followed by a single _. For example, if there was a custom -namespace com.mydomain.here, and a "FORBIDDEN" code, the error code should look -like "COM.MYDOMAIN.HERE_FORBIDDEN". There may be additional keys depending on -the error, but the keys 'error' and 'errcode' will always be present. - -Some standard error codes are below: - -M_FORBIDDEN: -Forbidden access, e.g. joining a room without permission, failed login. - -M_UNKNOWN_TOKEN: -The access token specified was not recognised. - -M_BAD_JSON: -Request contained valid JSON, but it was malformed in some way, e.g. missing -required keys, invalid values for keys. - -M_NOT_JSON: -Request did not contain valid JSON. - -M_NOT_FOUND: -No resource was found for this request. - -Some requests have unique error codes: - -M_USER_IN_USE: -Encountered when trying to register a user ID which has been taken. - -M_ROOM_IN_USE: -Encountered when trying to create a room which has been taken. - -M_BAD_PAGINATION: -Encountered when specifying bad pagination values to a Pagination Streaming API. - - -======== -REST API -======== - -All content must be application/json. Some keys are required, while others are -optional. Unless otherwise specified, -all HTTP PUT/POST/DELETEs will return a 200 OK with an empty response body on -success, and a 4xx/5xx with an optional Error Response on failure. When sending -data, if there are no keys to send, an empty JSON object should be sent. - -All POST/PUT/GET/DELETE requests MUST have an 'access_token' query parameter to -allow the server to authenticate the client. All -POST requests MUST be submitted as application/json. - -All paths MUST be namespaced by the version of the API being used. This should -be: - -/_matrix/client/api/v1 - -All REST paths in this section MUST be prefixed with this. E.g. - REST Path: /rooms/$room_id - Absolute Path: /_matrix/client/api/v1/rooms/$room_id - -Registration -============ -Clients must register with the server in order to use the service. After -registering, the client will be given an -access token which must be used in ALL requests as a query parameter -'access_token'. - -Registering for an account --------------------------- - POST /register - With: A JSON object containing the key "user_id" which contains the desired - user_id, or an empty JSON object to have the server allocate a user_id - automatically. - Returns (success): 200 OK with a JSON object: - { - "user_id" : "string [user_id]", - "access_token" : "string" - } - Returns (failure): An Error Response. M_USER_IN_USE if the user ID is taken. - - -Unregistering an account ------------------------- - POST /unregister - With query parameters: access_token=$ACCESS_TOKEN - Returns (success): 200 OK - Returns (failure): An Error Response. - - -Logging in to an existing account -================================= -If the client has already registered, they need to be able to login to their -account. The home server may provide many different ways of logging in, such -as user/password auth, login via a social network (OAuth), login by confirming -a token sent to their email address, etc. This section does NOT define how home -servers should authorise their users who want to login to their existing -accounts. This section defines the standard interface which implementations -should follow so that ANY client can login to ANY home server. - -The login process breaks down into the following: - 1: Get login process info. - 2: Submit the login stage credentials. - 3: Get access token or be told the next stage in the login process and repeat - step 2. - -Getting login process info: - GET /login - Returns (success): 200 OK with LoginInfo. - Returns (failure): An Error Response. - -Submitting the login stage credentials: - POST /login - With: LoginSubmission - Returns (success): 200 OK with LoginResult - Returns (failure): An Error Response - -Where LoginInfo is a JSON object which MUST have a "type" key which denotes the -login type. If there are multiple login stages, this object MUST also contain a -"stages" key, which has a JSON array of login types denoting all the steps in -order to login, including the first stage which is in "type". This allows the -client to make an informed decision as to whether or not they can natively -handle the entire login process, or whether they should fallback (see below). - -Where LoginSubmission is a JSON object which MUST have a "type" key. - -Where LoginResult is a JSON object which MUST have either a "next" key OR an -"access_token" key, depending if the login process is over or not. This object -MUST have a "session" key if multiple POSTs need to be sent to /login. - -Fallback --------- -If the client does NOT know how to handle the given type, they should: - GET /login/fallback -This MUST return an HTML page which can perform the entire login process. - -Password-based --------------- -Type: "m.login.password" -LoginSubmission: -{ - "type": "m.login.password", - "user": <user_id>, - "password": <password> -} - -Example: -Assume you are @bob:matrix.org and you wish to login on another mobile device. -First, you GET /login which returns: -{ - "type": "m.login.password" -} -Your client knows how to handle this, so your client prompts the user to enter -their username and password. This is then submitted: -{ - "type": "m.login.password", - "user": "@bob:matrix.org", - "password": "monkey" -} -The server checks this, finds it is valid, and returns: -{ - "access_token": "abcdef0123456789" -} -The server may optionally return "user_id" to confirm or change the user's ID. -This is particularly useful if the home server wishes to support localpart entry -of usernames (e.g. "bob" rather than "@bob:matrix.org"). - -OAuth2-based ------------- -Type: "m.login.oauth2" -This is a multi-stage login. - -LoginSubmission: -{ - "type": "m.login.oauth2", - "user": <user_id> -} -Returns: -{ - "uri": <Authorization Request uri OR service selection uri> -} - -The home server acts as a 'confidential' Client for the purposes of OAuth2. - -If the uri is a "sevice selection uri", it is a simple page which prompts the -user to choose which service to authorize with. On selection of a service, they -link through to Authorization Request URIs. If there is only 1 service which the -home server accepts when logging in, this indirection can be skipped and the -"uri" key can be the Authorization Request URI. - -The client visits the Authorization Request URI, which then shows the OAuth2 -Allow/Deny prompt. Hitting 'Allow' returns the redirect URI with the auth code. -Home servers can choose any path for the redirect URI. The client should visit -the redirect URI, which will then finish the OAuth2 login process, granting the -home server an access token for the chosen service. When the home server gets -this access token, it knows that the cilent has authed with the 3rd party, and -so can return a LoginResult. - -The OAuth redirect URI (with auth code) MUST return a LoginResult. - -Example: -Assume you are @bob:matrix.org and you wish to login on another mobile device. -First, you GET /login which returns: -{ - "type": "m.login.oauth2" -} -Your client knows how to handle this, so your client prompts the user to enter -their username. This is then submitted: -{ - "type": "m.login.oauth2", - "user": "@bob:matrix.org" -} -The server only accepts auth from Google, so returns the Authorization Request -URI for Google: -{ - "uri": "https://accounts.google.com/o/oauth2/auth?response_type=code& - client_id=CLIENT_ID&redirect_uri=REDIRECT_URI&scope=photos" -} -The client then visits this URI and authorizes the home server. The client then -visits the REDIRECT_URI with the auth code= query parameter which returns: -{ - "access_token": "0123456789abcdef" -} - -Email-based (code) ------------------- -Type: "m.login.email.code" -This is a multi-stage login. - -First LoginSubmission: -{ - "type": "m.login.email.code", - "user": <user_id> - "email": <email address> -} -Returns: -{ - "session": <session id> -} - -The email contains a code which must be sent in the next LoginSubmission: -{ - "type": "m.login.email.code", - "session": <session id>, - "code": <code in email sent> -} -Returns: -{ - "access_token": <access token> -} - -Example: -Assume you are @bob:matrix.org and you wish to login on another mobile device. -First, you GET /login which returns: -{ - "type": "m.login.email.code" -} -Your client knows how to handle this, so your client prompts the user to enter -their email address. This is then submitted: -{ - "type": "m.login.email.code", - "user": "@bob:matrix.org", - "email": "bob@mydomain.com" -} -The server confirms that bob@mydomain.com is linked to @bob:matrix.org, then -sends an email to this address and returns: -{ - "session": "ewuigf7462" -} -The client's screen changes to a code submission page. The email arrives and it -says something to the effect of "please enter 2348623 into the app". This is -the submitted along with the session: -{ - "type": "m.login.email.code", - "session": "ewuigf7462", - "code": "2348623" -} -The server accepts this and returns: -{ - "access_token": "abcdef0123456789" -} - -Email-based (url) ------------------ -Type: "m.login.email.url" -This is a multi-stage login. - -First LoginSubmission: -{ - "type": "m.login.email.url", - "user": <user_id> - "email": <email address> -} -Returns: -{ - "session": <session id> -} - -The email contains a URL which must be clicked. After it has been clicked, the -client should perform a request: -{ - "type": "m.login.email.code", - "session": <session id> -} -Returns: -{ - "access_token": <access token> -} - -Example: -Assume you are @bob:matrix.org and you wish to login on another mobile device. -First, you GET /login which returns: -{ - "type": "m.login.email.url" -} -Your client knows how to handle this, so your client prompts the user to enter -their email address. This is then submitted: -{ - "type": "m.login.email.url", - "user": "@bob:matrix.org", - "email": "bob@mydomain.com" -} -The server confirms that bob@mydomain.com is linked to @bob:matrix.org, then -sends an email to this address and returns: -{ - "session": "ewuigf7462" -} -The client then starts polling the server with the following: -{ - "type": "m.login.email.url", - "session": "ewuigf7462" -} -(Alternatively, the server could send the device a push notification when the -email has been validated). The email arrives and it contains a URL to click on. -The user clicks on the which completes the login process with the server. The -next time the client polls, it returns: -{ - "access_token": "abcdef0123456789" -} - -N-Factor auth -------------- -Multiple login stages can be combined with the "next" key in the LoginResult. - -Example: -A server demands an email.code then password auth before logging in. First, the -client performs a GET /login which returns: -{ - "type": "m.login.email.code", - "stages": ["m.login.email.code", "m.login.password"] -} -The client performs the email login (See "Email-based (code)"), but instead of -returning an access_token, it returns: -{ - "next": "m.login.password" -} -The client then presents a user/password screen and the login continues until -this is complete (See "Password-based"), which then returns the "access_token". - -Rooms -===== -A room is a conceptual place where users can send and receive messages. Rooms -can be created, joined and left. Messages are sent -to a room, and all participants in that room will receive the message. Rooms are -uniquely identified via the room_id. - -Creating a room (with a room ID) --------------------------------- - Event Type: m.room.create [TODO(kegan): Do we generate events for this?] - REST Path: /rooms/$room_id - Valid methods: PUT - Required keys: None. - Optional keys: - visibility : [public|private] - Set whether this room shows up in the public - room list. - Returns: - On Failure: MAY return a suggested alternative room ID if this room ID is - taken. - { - suggested_room_id : $new_room_id - error : "Room already in use." - errcode : "M_ROOM_IN_USE" - } - - -Creating a room (without a room ID) ------------------------------------ - Event Type: m.room.create [TODO(kegan): Do we generate events for this?] - REST Path: /rooms - Valid methods: POST - Required keys: None. - Optional keys: - visibility : [public|private] - Set whether this room shows up in the public - room list. - Returns: - On Success: The allocated room ID. Additional information about the room - such as the visibility MAY be included as extra keys in this response. - { - room_id : $room_id - } - -Setting the topic for a room ----------------------------- - Event Type: m.room.topic - REST Path: /rooms/$room_id/topic - Valid methods: GET/PUT - Required keys: - topic : $topicname - Set the topic to $topicname in room $room_id. - - -See a list of public rooms --------------------------- - REST Path: /public/rooms?pagination_query_parameters - Valid methods: GET - This API can use pagination query parameters. - Returns: - { - "chunk" : JSON array of RoomInfo JSON objects - Required. - "start" : "string (start token)" - See Pagination Response. - "end" : "string (end token)" - See Pagination Response. - "total" : integer - Optional. The total number of rooms. - } - -RoomInfo: Information about a single room. - Servers MUST send the key: room_id - Servers MAY send the keys: topic, num_members - { - "room_id" : "string", - "topic" : "string", - "num_members" : integer - } - -Room Members -============ - -Invite/Joining/Leaving a room ------------------------------ - Event Type: m.room.member - REST Path: /rooms/$room_id/members/$user_id/state - Valid methods: PUT/GET/DELETE - Required keys: - membership : [join|invite] - The membership state of $user_id in room - $room_id. - Optional keys: - displayname, - avatar_url : String fields from the member user's profile - state, - status_msg, - mtime_age : Presence information - - These optional keys provide extra information that the client is likely to - be interested in so it doesn't have to perform an additional profile or - presence information fetch. - -Where: - join - Indicate you ($user_id) are joining the room $room_id. - invite - Indicate that $user_id has been invited to room $room_id. - -User $user_id can leave room $room_id by DELETEing this path. - -Checking the user list of a room --------------------------------- - REST Path: /rooms/$room_id/members/list - This API can use pagination query parameters. - Valid methods: GET - Returns: - A pagination response with chunk data as m.room.member events. - -Messages -======== -Users send messages to other users in rooms. These messages may be text, images, -video, etc. Clients may also want to acknowledge messages by sending feedback, -in the form of delivery/read receipts. - -Server-attached keys --------------------- -The server MAY attach additional keys to messages and feedback. If a client -submits keys with the same name, they will be clobbered by -the server. - -Required keys: -from : "string [user_id]" - The user_id of the user who sent the message/feedback. - -Optional keys: -hsob_ts : integer - A timestamp (ms resolution) representing when the message/feedback got to the - sender's home server ("home server outbound timestamp"). - -hsib_ts : integer - A timestamp (ms resolution) representing when the - message/feedback got to the receiver's home server ("home server inbound - timestamp"). This may be the same as hsob_ts if the sender/receiver are on the - same home server. - -Sending messages ----------------- - Event Type: m.room.message - REST Path: /rooms/$room_id/messages/$from/$msg_id - Valid methods: GET/PUT - URL parameters: - $from : user_id - The sender's user_id. This value will be clobbered by the - server before sending. - Required keys: - msgtype: [m.text|m.emote|m.image|m.audio|m.video|m.location|m.file] - - The type of message. Not to be confused with the Event 'type'. - Optional keys: - sender_ts : integer - A timestamp (ms resolution) representing the - wall-clock time when the message was sent from the client. - Reserved keys: - body : "string" - The human readable string for compatibility with clients - which cannot process a given msgtype. This key is optional, but - if it is included, it MUST be human readable text - describing the message. See individual msgtypes for more - info on what this means in practice. - -Each msgtype may have required fields of their own. - -msgtype: m.text ----------------- -Required keys: - body : "string" - The body of the message. -Optional keys: - None. - -msgtype: m.emote ------------------ -Required keys: - body : "string" - *tries to come up with a witty explanation*. -Optional keys: - None. - -msgtype: m.image ------------------ -Required keys: - url : "string" - The URL to the image. -Optional keys: - body : "string" - info : JSON object (ImageInfo) - The image info for image - referred to in 'url'. - thumbnail_url : "string" - The URL to the thumbnail. - thumbnail_info : JSON object (ImageInfo) - The image info for the image - referred to in 'thumbnail_url'. - -ImageInfo: Information about an image. -{ - "size" : integer (size of image in bytes), - "w" : integer (width of image in pixels), - "h" : integer (height of image in pixels), - "mimetype" : "string (e.g. image/jpeg)" -} - -Interpretation of 'body' key: The alt text of the image, or some kind of content -description for accessibility e.g. "image attachment". - -msgtype: m.audio ------------------ -Required keys: - url : "string" - The URL to the audio. -Optional keys: - info : JSON object (AudioInfo) - The audio info for the audio referred to in - 'url'. - -AudioInfo: Information about a piece of audio. -{ - "mimetype" : "string (e.g. audio/aac)", - "size" : integer (size of audio in bytes), - "duration" : integer (duration of audio in milliseconds) -} - -Interpretation of 'body' key: A description of the audio e.g. "Bee Gees - -Stayin' Alive", or some kind of content description for accessibility e.g. -"audio attachment". - -msgtype: m.video ------------------ -Required keys: - url : "string" - The URL to the video. -Optional keys: - info : JSON object (VideoInfo) - The video info for the video referred to in - 'url'. - -VideoInfo: Information about a video. -{ - "mimetype" : "string (e.g. video/mp4)", - "size" : integer (size of video in bytes), - "duration" : integer (duration of video in milliseconds), - "w" : integer (width of video in pixels), - "h" : integer (height of video in pixels), - "thumbnail_url" : "string (URL to image)", - "thumbanil_info" : JSON object (ImageInfo) -} - -Interpretation of 'body' key: A description of the video e.g. "Gangnam style", -or some kind of content description for accessibility e.g. "video attachment". - -msgtype: m.location --------------------- -Required keys: - geo_uri : "string" - The geo URI representing the location. -Optional keys: - thumbnail_url : "string" - The URL to a thumnail of the location being - represented. - thumbnail_info : JSON object (ImageInfo) - The image info for the image - referred to in 'thumbnail_url'. - -Interpretation of 'body' key: A description of the location e.g. "Big Ben, -London, UK", or some kind of content description for accessibility e.g. -"location attachment". - - -Sending feedback ----------------- -When you receive a message, you may want to send delivery receipt to let the -sender know that the message arrived. You may also want to send a read receipt -when the user has read the message. These receipts are collectively known as -'feedback'. - - Event Type: m.room.message.feedback - REST Path: /rooms/$room_id/messages/$msgfrom/$msg_id/feedback/$from/$feedback - Valid methods: GET/PUT - URL parameters: - $msgfrom - The sender of the message's user_id. - $from : user_id - The sender of the feedback's user_id. This value will be - clobbered by the server before sending. - $feedback : [d|r] - Specify if this is a [d]elivery or [r]ead receipt. - Required keys: - None. - Optional keys: - sender_ts : integer - A timestamp (ms resolution) representing the - wall-clock time when the receipt was sent from the client. - -Receiving messages (bulk/pagination) ------------------------------------- - Event Type: m.room.message - REST Path: /rooms/$room_id/messages/list - Valid methods: GET - Query Parameters: - feedback : [true|false] - Specify if feedback should be bundled with each - message. - This API can use pagination query parameters. - Returns: - A JSON array of Event Data in "chunk" (see Pagination Response). If the - "feedback" parameter was set, the Event Data will also contain a "feedback" - key which contains a JSON array of feedback, with each element as Event Data - with compressed feedback for this message. - -Event Data with compressed feedback is a special type of feedback with -contextual keys removed. It is designed to limit the amount of redundant data -being sent for feedback. This removes the type, event_id, room ID, -message sender ID and message ID keys. - - ORIGINAL (via event streaming) -{ - "event_id":"e1247632487", - "type":"m.room.message.feedback", - "from":"string [user_id]", - "feedback":"string [d|r]", - "room_id":"$room_id", - "msg_id":"$msg_id", - "msgfrom":"$msgfromid", - "content":{ - "sender_ts":139880943 - } -} - - COMPRESSED (via /messages/list) -{ - "from":"string [user_id]", - "feedback":"string [d|r]", - "content":{ - "sender_ts":139880943 - } -} - -When you join a room $room_id, you may want the last 10 messages with feedback. -This is represented as: - GET - /rooms/$room_id/messages/list?from=END&to=START&limit=10&feedback=true - -You may want to get 10 messages even earlier than that without feedback. If the -start stream token from the previous request was stok_019173, this request would -be: - GET - /rooms/$room_id/messages/list?from=stok_019173&to=START&limit=10& - feedback=false - -NOTE: Care must be taken when using this API in conjunction with event - streaming. It is possible that this will return a message which will - then come down the event stream, resulting in a duplicate message. Clients - should clobber based on the global message ID, or event ID. - - -Get current state for all rooms (aka IM Initial Sync API) -------------------------------- - REST Path: /im/sync - Valid methods: GET - This API can use pagination query parameters. Pagination is applied on a per - *room* basis. E.g. limit=1 means "get 1 message for each room" and not "get 1 - room's messages". If there is no limit, all messages for all rooms will be - returned. - If you want 1 room's messages, see "Receiving messages (bulk/pagination)". - Additional query parameters: - feedback: [true] - Bundles feedback with messages. - Returns: - An array of RoomStateInfo. - -RoomStateInfo: A snapshot of information about a single room. - { - "room_id" : "string", - "membership" : "string [join|invite]", - "messages" : { - "start": "string", - "end": "string", - "chunk": - m.room.message pagination stream events (with feedback if specified), - this is the same as "Receiving messages (bulk/pagination)". - } - } -The "membership" key is the calling user's membership state in the given -"room_id". The "messages" key may be omitted if the "membership" value is -"invite". Additional keys may be added to the top-level object, such as: - "topic" : "string" - The topic for the room in question. - "room_image_url" : "string" - The URL of the room image if specified. - "num_members" : integer - The number of members in the room. - - -Profiles -======== - -Getting/Setting your own displayname ------------------------------------- - REST Path: /profile/$user_id/displayname - Valid methods: GET/PUT - Required keys: - displayname : The displayname text - -Getting/Setting your own avatar image URL ------------------------------------------ -The homeserver does not currently store the avatar image itself, but offers -storage for the user to specify a web URL that points at the required image, -leaving it up to clients to fetch it themselves. - REST Path: /profile/$user_id/avatar_url - Valid methods: GET/PUT - Required keys: - avatar_url : The URL path to the required image - -Getting other user's profile information ----------------------------------------- -Either of the above REST methods may be used to fetch other user's profile -information by the client, either on other local users on the same homeserver or -for users from other servers entirely. - - -Presence -======== - -In the following messages, the presence state is a presence string as described in -the main specification document. - -Getting/Setting your own presence state ---------------------------------------- - REST Path: /presence/$user_id/status - Valid methods: GET/PUT - Required keys: - presence : <string> - The user's new presence state - Optional keys: - status_msg : text string provided by the user to explain their status - -Fetching your presence list ---------------------------- - REST Path: /presence_list/$user_id - Valid methods: GET/(post) - Returns: - An array of presence list entries. Each entry is an object with the - following keys: - { - "user_id" : string giving the observed user's ID - "presence" : int giving their status - "status_msg" : optional text string - "displayname" : optional text string from the user's profile - "avatar_url" : optional text string from the user's profile - } - -Maintaining your presence list ------------------------------- - REST Path: /presence_list/$user_id - Valid methods: POST/(get) - With: A JSON object optionally containing either of the following keys: - "invite" : a list of strings giving user IDs to invite for presence - subscription - "drop" : a list of strings giving user IDs to remove from your presence - list - -Receiving presence update events --------------------------------- - Event Type: m.presence - Keys of the event's content are the same as those returned by the presence - list. - -Examples -======== - -The following example is the story of "bob", who signs up at "sy.org" and joins -the public room "room_beta@sy.org". They get the 2 most recent -messages (with feedback) in that room and then send a message in that room. - -For context, here is the complete chat log for room_beta@sy.org: - -Room: "Hello world" (room_beta@sy.org) -Members: (2) alice@randomhost.org, friend_of_alice@randomhost.org -Messages: - alice@randomhost.org : hi friend! - [friend_of_alice@randomhost.org DELIVERED] - alice@randomhost.org : you're my only friend - [friend_of_alice@randomhost.org DELIVERED] - alice@randomhost.org : afk - [friend_of_alice@randomhost.org DELIVERED] - [ bob@sy.org joins ] - bob@sy.org : Hi everyone - [ alice@randomhost.org changes the topic to "FRIENDS ONLY" ] - alice@randomhost.org : Hello!!!! - alice@randomhost.org : Let's go to another room - alice@randomhost.org : You're not my friend - [ alice@randomhost.org invites bob@sy.org to the room - commoners@randomhost.org] - - -REGISTER FOR AN ACCOUNT -POST: /register -Content: {} -Returns: { "user_id" : "bob@sy.org" , "access_token" : "abcdef0123456789" } - -GET PUBLIC ROOM LIST -GET: /rooms/list?access_token=abcdef0123456789 -Returns: -{ - "total":3, - "chunk": - [ - { "room_id":"room_alpha@sy.org", "topic":"I am a fish" }, - { "room_id":"room_beta@sy.org", "topic":"Hello world" }, - { "room_id":"room_xyz@sy.org", "topic":"Goodbye cruel world" } - ] -} - -JOIN ROOM room_beta@sy.org -PUT -/rooms/room_beta%40sy.org/members/bob%40sy.org/state? - access_token=abcdef0123456789 -Content: { "membership" : "join" } -Returns: 200 OK - -GET LATEST 2 MESSAGES WITH FEEDBACK -GET -/rooms/room_beta%40sy.org/messages/list?from=END&to=START&limit=2& - feedback=true&access_token=abcdef0123456789 -Returns: -{ - "chunk": - [ - { - "event_id":"01948374", - "type":"m.room.message", - "room_id":"room_beta@sy.org", - "msg_id":"avefifu", - "from":"alice@randomhost.org", - "hs_ts":139985736, - "content":{ - "msgtype":"m.text", - "body":"afk" - } - "feedback": [ - { - "from":"friend_of_alice@randomhost.org", - "feedback":"d", - "hs_ts":139985850, - "content":{ - "sender_ts":139985843 - } - } - ] - }, - { - "event_id":"028dfe8373", - "type":"m.room.message", - "room_id":"room_beta@sy.org", - "msg_id":"afhgfff", - "from":"alice@randomhost.org", - "hs_ts":139970006, - "content":{ - "msgtype":"m.text", - "body":"you're my only friend" - } - "feedback": [ - { - "from":"friend_of_alice@randomhost.org", - "feedback":"d", - "hs_ts":139970144, - "content":{ - "sender_ts":139970122 - } - } - ] - }, - ], - "start": "stok_04823947", - "end": "etok_1426425" -} - -SEND MESSAGE IN ROOM -PUT -/rooms/room_beta%40sy.org/messages/bob%40sy.org/m0001? - access_token=abcdef0123456789 -Content: { "msgtype" : "text" , "body" : "Hi everyone" } -Returns: 200 OK - - -Checking the event stream for this user: -GET: /events?from=START&access_token=abcdef0123456789 -Returns: -{ - "chunk": - [ - { - "event_id":"e10f3d2b", - "type":"m.room.member", - "room_id":"room_beta@sy.org", - "user_id":"bob@sy.org", - "content":{ - "membership":"join" - } - }, - { - "event_id":"1b352d32", - "type":"m.room.message", - "room_id":"room_beta@sy.org", - "msg_id":"m0001", - "from":"bob@sy.org", - "hs_ts":140193857, - "content":{ - "msgtype":"m.text", - "body":"Hi everyone" - } - } - ], - "start": "stok_9348635", - "end": "etok_1984723" -} - -Client disconnects for a while and the topic is updated in this room, 3 new -messages arrive whilst offline, and bob is invited to another room. - -GET /events?from=etok_1984723&access_token=abcdef0123456789 -Returns: -{ - "chunk": - [ - { - "event_id":"feee0294", - "type":"m.room.topic", - "room_id":"room_beta@sy.org", - "from":"alice@randomhost.org", - "content":{ - "topic":"FRIENDS ONLY", - } - }, - { - "event_id":"a028bd9e", - "type":"m.room.message", - "room_id":"room_beta@sy.org", - "msg_id":"z839409", - "from":"alice@randomhost.org", - "hs_ts":140195000, - "content":{ - "msgtype":"m.text", - "body":"Hello!!!" - } - }, - { - "event_id":"49372d9e", - "type":"m.room.message", - "room_id":"room_beta@sy.org", - "msg_id":"z839410", - "from":"alice@randomhost.org", - "hs_ts":140196000, - "content":{ - "msgtype":"m.text", - "body":"Let's go to another room" - } - }, - { - "event_id":"10abdd01", - "type":"m.room.message", - "room_id":"room_beta@sy.org", - "msg_id":"z839411", - "from":"alice@randomhost.org", - "hs_ts":140197000, - "content":{ - "msgtype":"m.text", - "body":"You're not my friend" - } - }, - { - "event_id":"0018453d", - "type":"m.room.member", - "room_id":"commoners@randomhost.org", - "from":"alice@randomhost.org", - "user_id":"bob@sy.org", - "content":{ - "membership":"invite" - } - }, - ], - "start": "stok_0184288", - "end": "etok_1348723" -} |