Flesh out ID conventions
Going down the API route.
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@ -333,16 +333,74 @@ including the AS token on a ``/register`` request, along with a login type of
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user: "<desired user localpart in AS namespace>"
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}
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ID conventions ``[TODO]``
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ID conventions ``[Draft]``
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-------------------------
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.. NOTE::
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- Giving HSes the freedom to namespace still feels like the Right Thing here.
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- Exposing a public API provides the consistency which was the main complaint
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against namespacing.
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- This may have knock-on effects for the AS registration API. E.g. why don't
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we let ASes specify the *URI* regex they want?
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This concerns the well-defined conventions for mapping 3P network IDs to matrix
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IDs, which we expect clients to be able to do by themselves.
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- What do user IDs look like? Butchered URIs? Can all 3P network IDs be
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reasonably expressed as URIs? (e.g. tel, email, irc, xmpp, ...)
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- What do room aliases look like? Some cases are clear (e.g. IRC) but others
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are a lot more fiddly (e.g. email? You don't want to share a room with
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everyone who has ever sent an email to ``bob@gmail.com``)...
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User IDs
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~~~~~~~~
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Matrix users may wish to directly contact a virtual user, e.g. to send an email.
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The URI format is a well-structured way to represent a number of different ID
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types, including:
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- MSISDNs (``tel``)
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- Email addresses (``mailto``)
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- IRC nicks (``irc`` - https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-butcher-irc-url-04)
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- XMPP (xep-0032)
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- SIP URIs (RFC 3261)
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As a result, virtual user IDs SHOULD relate to their URI counterpart. This
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mapping from URI to user ID can be expressed in a number of ways:
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- Expose a C-S API on the HS which takes URIs and responds with user IDs.
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- Munge the URI with the user ID.
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Exposing an API would allow HSes to internally map user IDs however they like,
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at the cost of an extra round trip (of which the response can be cached).
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Munging the URI would allow clients to apply the mapping locally, but would force
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user X on service Y to always map to the same munged user ID. Considering the
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exposed API could just be applying this munging, there is more flexibility if
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an API is exposed.
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::
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GET /_matrix/app/v1/user?uri=$url_encoded_uri
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Returns 200 OK:
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{
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user_id: <complete user ID on local HS>
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}
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Room Aliases
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~~~~~~~~~~~~
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We may want to expose some 3P network rooms so Matrix users can join them directly,
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e.g. IRC rooms. We don't want to expose every 3P network room though, e.g. mailto,
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tel. Rooms which are publicly accessible (e.g. IRC rooms) can be exposed as an alias by
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the application service. Private rooms (e.g. sending an email to someone) should not
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be exposed in this way, but should instead operate using normal invite/join semantics.
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Therefore, the ID conventions discussed below are only valid for public rooms which
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expose room aliases.
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Matrix users may wish to join XMPP rooms (e.g. using XEP-0045) or IRC rooms. In both
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cases, these rooms can be expressed as URIs. For consistency, these "room" URIs
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SHOULD be mapped in the same way as "user" URIs.
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::
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GET /_matrix/app/v1/alias?uri=$url_encoded_uri
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Returns 200 OK:
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{
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alias: <complete room alias on local HS>
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}
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Examples
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--------
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