summary refs log tree commit diff
path: root/docs/client-server/howto.rst
blob: 25394c05a00e7214981e56e4f03c4af2f471a6bf (plain) (blame)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
How to use the client-server API
================================

TODO(kegan): Tweak joinalias API keys/path? Event stream historical > live needs
a token (currently doesn't). im/sync responses include outdated event formats
(room membership change messages). Room config (specifically: message history,
public rooms)


If you haven't already, get a home server up and running on localhost:8080.


Accounts
========
Before you can send and receive messages, you must **register** for an account. 
If you already have an account, you must **login** into it.

Registration
------------
The aim of registration is to get a user ID and access token which you will need
when accessing other APIs::

    curl -XPOST -d '{"user_id":"example", "password":"wordpass"}' "http://localhost:8080/matrix/client/api/v1/register"

    {
        "access_token": "QGV4YW1wbGU6bG9jYWxob3N0.AqdSzFmFYrLrTmteXc", 
        "home_server": "localhost", 
        "user_id": "@example:localhost"
    }

NB: If a user ID is not specified, one will be randomly generated for you. If
you do not specify a password, you will be unable to login to the account if you
forget the access token.

Login
-----
The aim of login is to get an access token for your existing user ID::

    curl -XGET "http://localhost:8080/matrix/client/api/v1/login"

    {
        "type": "m.login.password"
    }

    curl -XPOST -d '{"type":"m.login.password", "user":"example", "password":"wordpass"}' "http://localhost:8080/matrix/client/api/v1/login"

    {
        "access_token": "QGV4YW1wbGU6bG9jYWxob3N0.vRDLTgxefmKWQEtgGd", 
        "home_server": "localhost", 
        "user_id": "@example:localhost"
    }
    
NB: Different home servers may implement different methods for logging in to an
existing account. In order to check that you know how to login to this home 
server, you must perform a GET first and make sure you recognise the type. If 
you do not know how to login, you can GET /login/fallback which will return a 
basic webpage which you can use to login.


Communicating
=============

In order to communicate with another user, you must **create a room** with that 
user and **send a message** to that room.

Creating a room
---------------
If you want to send a message to someone, you have to be in a room with them. To
create a room::

    curl -XPOST -d '{"room_alias_name":"tutorial"}' "http://localhost:8080/matrix/client/api/v1/rooms?access_token=QGV4YW1wbGU6bG9jYWxob3N0.vRDLTgxefmKWQEtgGd"

    {
        "room_alias": "#tutorial:localhost", 
        "room_id": "!CvcvRuDYDzTOzfKKgh:localhost"
    }
    
The "room alias" is a human-readable string which can be shared with other users
so they can join a room, rather than the room ID which is a randomly generated
string. You can have multiple room aliases per room.

TODO(kegan): How to add/remove aliases from an existing room.
    

Sending messages
----------------
You can now send messages to this room::

    curl -XPUT -d '{"msgtype":"m.text", "body":"hello"}' "http://localhost:8080/matrix/client/api/v1/rooms/%21CvcvRuDYDzTOzfKKgh:localhost/messages/%40example%3Alocalhost/msgid1?access_token=QGV4YW1wbGU6bG9jYWxob3N0.vRDLTgxefmKWQEtgGd"
    
NB: There are no limitations to the types of messages which can be exchanged.
The only requirement is that 'msgtype' is specified.

NB: Depending on the room config, users who join the room may be able to see
message history from before they joined.

Users and rooms
===============

Each room can be configured to allow or disallow certain rules. In particular,
these rules may specify if you require an **invitation** from someone already in
the room in order to **join the room**. In addition, you may also be able to 
join a room **via a room alias** if one was set up.

Inviting a user to a room
-------------------------
You can directly invite a user to a room like so::

    curl -XPUT -d '{"membership":"invite"}' "http://localhost:8080/matrix/client/api/v1/rooms/%21CvcvRuDYDzTOzfKKgh:localhost/members/%40myfriend%3Alocalhost/state?access_token=QGV4YW1wbGU6bG9jYWxob3N0.vRDLTgxefmKWQEtgGd"
    
This informs @myfriend:localhost of the room ID !CvcvRuDYDzTOzfKKgh:localhost
and allows them to join the room.

Joining a room via an invite
----------------------------
If you receive an invite, you can join the room by changing the membership to
join::

    curl -XPUT -d '{"membership":"join"}' "http://localhost:8080/matrix/client/api/v1/rooms/%21CvcvRuDYDzTOzfKKgh:localhost/members/%40myfriend%3Alocalhost/state?access_token=QG15ZnJpZW5kOmxvY2FsaG9zdA...XKuGdVsovHmwMyDDvK"
    
NB: Only the person invited (@myfriend:localhost) can change the membership
state to 'join'.

Joining a room via an alias
---------------------------
Alternatively, if you know the room alias for this room and the room config 
allows it, you can directly join a room via the alias::

    curl -XPUT -d '{}' "http://localhost:8080/matrix/client/api/v1/join/%23tutorial%3Alocalhost?access_token=QG15ZnJpZW5kOmxvY2FsaG9zdA...XKuGdVsovHmwMyDDvK"
    
    {
        "room_id": "!CvcvRuDYDzTOzfKKgh:localhost"
    }
    
You will need to use the room ID when sending messages, not the room alias.

NB: If the room is configured to be an invite-only room, you will still require
the invite in order to join the room even though you know the room alias. As a
result, it is more common to see a room alias in relation to a public room, 
which do not require invitations.

Getting events
==============
An event is some interesting piece of data that a client may be interested in. 
It can be a message in a room, a room invite, etc. There are many different ways
of getting events, depending on what the client already knows.

Getting all state
-----------------
If the client doesn't know any information on the rooms the user is 
invited/joined on, you can get all your state for all your rooms like so::

    curl -XGET "http://localhost:8080/matrix/client/api/v1/im/sync?access_token=QG15ZnJpZW5kOmxvY2FsaG9zdA...XKuGdVsovHmwMyDDvK"
    
    [
        {
            "membership": "join", 
            "messages": {
                "chunk": [
                    {
                        "content": {
                            "body": "@example:localhost joined the room.", 
                            "hsob_ts": 1408444664249, 
                            "membership": "join", 
                            "membership_source": "@example:localhost", 
                            "membership_target": "@example:localhost", 
                            "msgtype": "m.text"
                        }, 
                        "event_id": "lZjmmlrEvo", 
                        "msg_id": "m1408444664249", 
                        "room_id": "!CvcvRuDYDzTOzfKKgh:localhost", 
                        "type": "m.room.message", 
                        "user_id": "_homeserver_"
                    }, 
                    {
                        "content": {
                            "body": "hello", 
                            "hsob_ts": 1408445405672, 
                            "msgtype": "m.text"
                        }, 
                        "event_id": "BiBJqamISg", 
                        "msg_id": "msgid1", 
                        "room_id": "!CvcvRuDYDzTOzfKKgh:localhost", 
                        "type": "m.room.message", 
                        "user_id": "@example:localhost"
                    }, 
                    [...]
                    {
                        "content": {
                            "body": "@myfriend:localhost joined the room.", 
                            "hsob_ts": 1408446501661, 
                            "membership": "join", 
                            "membership_source": "@myfriend:localhost", 
                            "membership_target": "@myfriend:localhost", 
                            "msgtype": "m.text"
                        }, 
                        "event_id": "IMmXbOzFAa", 
                        "msg_id": "m1408446501661", 
                        "room_id": "!CvcvRuDYDzTOzfKKgh:localhost", 
                        "type": "m.room.message", 
                        "user_id": "_homeserver_"
                    }
                ], 
                "end": "20", 
                "start": "0"
            }, 
            "room_id": "!CvcvRuDYDzTOzfKKgh:localhost"
        }
    ]
    
This returns all the room IDs of rooms you are invited/joined on, as well as all
of the messages and feedback for these rooms. This can be a LOT of data. You may
just want the most recent message for each room. This can be done by applying
pagination stream parameters to this request::

    curl -XGET "http://localhost:8080/matrix/client/api/v1/im/sync?access_token=QG15ZnJpZW5kOmxvY2FsaG9zdA...XKuGdVsovHmwMyDDvK&from=END&to=START&limit=1"
    
    [
        {
            "membership": "join", 
            "messages": {
                "chunk": [
                    {
                        "content": {
                            "body": "@myfriend:localhost joined the room.", 
                            "hsob_ts": 1408446501661, 
                            "membership": "join", 
                            "membership_source": "@myfriend:localhost", 
                            "membership_target": "@myfriend:localhost", 
                            "msgtype": "m.text"
                        }, 
                        "event_id": "IMmXbOzFAa", 
                        "msg_id": "m1408446501661", 
                        "room_id": "!CvcvRuDYDzTOzfKKgh:localhost", 
                        "type": "m.room.message", 
                        "user_id": "_homeserver_"
                    }
                ], 
                "end": "20", 
                "start": "21"
            }, 
            "room_id": "!CvcvRuDYDzTOzfKKgh:localhost"
        }
    ]

Getting live state
------------------
Once you know which rooms the client has previously interacted with, you need to
listen for incoming events. This can be done like so::

    curl -XGET "http://localhost:8080/matrix/client/api/v1/events?access_token=QG15ZnJpZW5kOmxvY2FsaG9zdA...XKuGdVsovHmwMyDDvK&from=END"
    
    {
        "chunk": [], 
        "end": "215", 
        "start": "215"
    }
    
This will block waiting for an incoming event, timing out after several seconds.
A client should repeatedly make requests with the "from" query parameter with
the value of "end" (in this case "215"). This value should be stored so when the
client reopens your app after a period of inactivity, you can resume from where
you got up to in the event stream. If it has been a long period of inactivity,
there may be LOTS of events waiting for you. In this case, you may wish to get 
all state instead and then resume getting live state from a newer end token.

NB: The timeout can be changed by adding a "timeout" query parameter, which is
in milliseconds. A timeout of 0 will not block.