Internet-Draft | MIMI Content | December 2024 |
Mahy | Expires 23 June 2025 | [Page] |
This document describes content semantics common in Instant Messaging (IM) systems and describes a profile suitable for instant messaging interoperability of messages end-to-end encrypted inside the MLS (Message Layer Security) Protocol.¶
This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.¶
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This Internet-Draft will expire on 23 June 2025.¶
Copyright (c) 2024 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the document authors. All rights reserved.¶
This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal Provisions Relating to IETF Documents (https://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of publication of this document. Please review these documents carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect to this document. Code Components extracted from this document must include Revised BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as described in the Revised BSD License.¶
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.¶
The terms MLS client, MLS group, and KeyPackage have the same meanings as in the MLS protocol [RFC9420]. Other relevant terminology cab be found in [I-D.ietf-mimi-arch].¶
RFC EDITOR: PLEASE REMOVE THE FOLLOWING PARAGRAPH. The source for this draft is maintained in GitHub. Suggested changes should be submitted as pull requests at https://github.com/ietf-wg-mimi/draft-ietf-mimi-content. Editorial changes can be managed in GitHub, but any substantive change should be discussed on the MIMI mailing list (mimi@ietf.org).¶
MLS [RFC9420] is a group key establishment protocol motivated by the desire for group chat with efficient end-to-end encryption. While one of the motivations of MLS is interoperable standards-based secure messaging, the MLS protocol does not define or prescribe any format for the encrypted "application messages" encoded by MLS. The development of MLS was strongly motivated by the needs of a number of Instant Messaging (IM) systems, which encrypt messages end-to-end using variations of the Double Ratchet protocol [DoubleRatchet].¶
End-to-end encrypted instant messaging was also a motivator for the Common Protocol for Instant Messaging (CPIM) [RFC3862], however the model used at the time assumed standalone encryption of each message using a protocol such as S/MIME [RFC8551] or PGP [RFC3156] to interoperate between IM protocols such as SIP [RFC3261] and XMPP [RFC6120]. For a variety of practical reasons, interoperable end-to-end encryption between IM systems was never deployed commercially.¶
There are now several instant messaging vendors implementing MLS, and the MIMI (More Instant Messaging Interoperability) Working Group is chartered to standardize an extensible interoperable messaging format for common features to be conveyed "inside" MLS application messages.¶
This document assumes that MLS clients advertise media types they support and can determine what media types are required to join a specific MLS group using the content advertisement extensions in Section 2.3 of [I-D.ietf-mls-extensions]. It allows implementations to define MLS groups with different media type requirements and allows MLS clients to send extended or proprietary messages that would be interpreted by some members of the group while assuring that an interoperable end-to-end encrypted baseline is available to all members, even when the group spans multiple systems or vendors.¶
Below is a list of some features commonly found in IM group chat systems:¶
The MIMI Content format is encoded in Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR) [RFC8949]. The Working Group chose a binary format in part because:¶
All examples start with an instance document annotated in the CBOR Extended Diagnostic Notation (described in [Appendix G of @!RFC8610] and more rigorously specified in [I-D.ietf-cbor-edn-literals]), and then include a hex dump of the CBOR data in the pretty printed format popularized by the CBOR playground website (https://cbor.me) with some minor whitespace and comment reformatting. Finally a message ID for the message is included for most messages.¶
All the instance documents validate using the CDDL schemas in Appendix B and are included in the examples directory in the github repo for this document.¶
IM systems have a number of types of identifiers. These are described in detail in [I-D.mahy-mimi-identity]. A few of these used in this document are:¶
This proposal relies on URIs for naming and identifiers. All the example use
the im:
URI scheme (defined in [RFC3862]), but any instant messaging scheme
could be used.¶
The MIMI content format relies heavily of message IDs to refer to other messages, to reply, react, edit, delete, and report on the status of messages. Every MIMI content message contains a 32-octet per-message cryptographically random salt, and has a 32-octet message ID which is calculated from the hash of the message (including the salt).¶
Calculation of the message ID works as follows. The first octet of the MessageID is the hash function ID from the IANA hash algorithm registry. The sender URI, room URI, and the entire MIMI message content (which includes the salt) are concatenated and then hashed with the algorithm identified in the first octet. The first 31 octets of the hash_output is appended to the hash function ID.¶
hash_output = hash( senderUri || roomUri || message ) messageId = hashAlg || hash_output[0..30]¶
The MIMI content format uses the SHA-256 hash algorithm (identifier 0x01) by default, regardless of the hash algorithm of the cipher suite of a room's MLS group. The initial octet allows the MIMI protocol to deprecate SHA-256 and specify a new default algorithm in the future (for example if a practical birthday attack on SHA_256 becomes feasible).¶
As described in the the MIMI architecture [I-D.ietf-mimi-arch], one provider, called the hub, is responsible for ordering messages. The hub is also responsible for recording the time that any application message is accepted, and conveying it to any "follower" providers which receive messages from the group. It is represented as the whole number of milliseconds since the start of the UNIX epoch (01-Jan-1970 00:00:00 UTC). The accepted timestamp MUST be available to each receiving MIMI client. The client can use it for fine grain sorting of messages into a consistent order.¶
This document also describes the semantics of a status report of other messages. Because some messaging systems deliver messages in batches and allow a user to mark several messages read at a time, the report format allows a single report to convey the read/delivered status of multiple messages (by message ID) within the same MLS group at a time.¶
Each MIMI Content message is a container format with two categories of information:¶
The object fields in the structure defined below are numbered in curly braces for reference in the text.¶
The subsections that follow contain snippets of Concise Data Definition Language (CDDL) [RFC8610] schemas for the MIMI Content Container. The complete collected CDDL schema for MIMI Content Container is available in Appendix A.1.¶
mimiContent = [ salt: bstr .size 32, replaces: null / MessageId, ; {1} topicId: bstr, ; {2} expires: uint .size 4, ; {3} inReplyTo: null / InReplyTo, ; {4} lastSeen: [* MessageId], ; {5} extensions: {* name => value }, ; {6} nestedPart: NestedPart ; {7} ] MessageId = bstr .size 32¶
The first data field is the per-message unique salt which MUST be cryptographically random. An example algorithm for generating the salt is described in Section 8.2.¶
The replaces
{1} data field indicates that the current message
is a replacement or update to a previous message whose message ID
is in the replaces
data field. It is used to edit previously-sent
messages, delete previously-sent messages, and adjust reactions to
messages to which the client previously reacted.
If the replaces
field is absent, the receiver
assumes that the current message has not identified any special
relationship with another previous message.¶
The topicId
{2} data field indicates that the current message is
part of a logical grouping of messages which all share the same
value in the topicId
data field. If the topicId
is zero length,
there is no such grouping.¶
The expires
{3} data field is a hint from the sender to the receiver
that the message should be locally deleted and disregarded at either a specific
timestamp in the future, or a relative amount of time after the receiving client
reads the message. Indicate a message with no specific expiration
time with the value null. If non-null, the data field is an array of two items.¶
Expiration = [ relative: bool, time: uint .size 4 ]¶
The first is a boolean indicating if the time is relative (true) or absolute (false). The second is an unsigned integer. If relative, it is the whole number of seconds the message should be visible before it is deleted. If absolute, it is the number of seconds after the start of the UNIX epoch, at which point the message should be deleted. Using an 32-bit unsigned integer allows expiration dates until the year 2106. Note that specifying an expiration time provides no assurance that the client actually honors or can honor the expiration time, nor that the end user didn't otherwise save the expiring message (ex: via a screenshot).¶
The inReplyTo
{4} data field indicates that the current message is
a related continuation of another message sent in the same MLS group.
If present, it contains the message ID of the referenced message. Otherwise,
the receiver assumes that the current message has not identified any special
reply relationship with another previous message. The message id of the
referenced message is also used to make sure that a MIMI
message cannot refer to a sequence of referred messages which refers
back to itself. When replying, a client MUST NOT knowingly create a sequence
of replies which create a loop.¶
When receiving a message with inReplyTo message, the client checks if the referenced message is itself inReplyTo another message. If so, it continues following the referenced messages, checking that the message ID of none of the referenced messages "loop" back to a message later in the inReplyTo chain.¶
Note that a inReplyTo
always references a specific message ID. Even if the original message
was edited several times, a reply always refers to a specific version
of that message, and SHOULD refer to the most current version at the
time the reply is sent.¶
The lastSeen
{5} data field indicates the latest message the sender
was aware of in the group. It is a list of message ids.¶
If the sender recently joined the group and has not yet seen any messages, the list is empty.¶
If the sender identifies a single message as unambiguously the latest
message in the group, the lastSeen
list contains a single message id
from that message.¶
Imagine however that two users (Bob and Cathy) see a message from Alice
offering free Hawaiian pizza, and reply at the same time. Bob and Cathy both send
messages with their lastSeen
including a single message id (Alice's)
message about pizza. Their messages don't need to be replies or reactions.
Bob might just send a message saying he doesn't like pineapple on pizza.
Now Doug receives all these messages and replies
as well. Doug's message contains a lastSeen
including the message id
list of both Bob's and Cathy's replies, effectively "merging" the order
of messages.¶
The next message after Doug's message contains a lastSeen
containing
only the message id of Doug's message.¶
In order to add additional functionality to MIMI, senders can include
extension fields in the message format {6}. Each extension has a CBOR map key
which is a positive integer, negative integer, or text string containing between
1 and 255 octets of UTF-8. The value can be any CBOR (including combinations of maps and arrays) which can be represented in between 0 and 4096 octets.
The message content extensions
field MUST NOT include more than one
extension field with the same map key.¶
name = int / tstr .size (1..255) value = any .size (0..4095)¶
An IANA registry Section 7.3 is defined for positive integer keys. Negative integer and text string keys are only for private use.¶
Every MIMI content message has a body {7} which can have multiple, possibly nested parts. A body with zero parts is permitted when deleting or unliking. External body parts Section 4.5 are also supported. When there is a single (inline) part or a (single) externally reference part, its IANA media type, subtype, and parameters are included in the contentType field {8}.¶
NestedPart = [ disposition: baseDispos / $extDispos / unknownDispos, ; {10} language: tstr, ; {11} ( NullPart // SinglePart // ExternalPart // MultiPart) ] NullPart = ( cardinality: nullpart ) SinglePart = ( cardinality: single, contentType: tstr, ; {8} content: bstr ) ExternalPart = ( cardinality: external, contentType: tstr, url: uri, expires: uint .size 4, size: uint .size 8, encAlg: uint .size 2, key: bstr, nonce: bstr, aad: bstr, hashAlg: uint .size 1, contentHash: bstr, description: tstr, filename: tstr ) MultiPart = ( cardinality: multi, partSemantics: chooseOne / singleUnit / processAll, parts: [2* NestedPart] ) ; cardinality nullpart = 0 single = 1 external = 2 multi = 3 ; part semantics {9} chooseOne = 0 ; receiver picks exactly one part to process singleUnit = 1 ; receiver processes all parts as single unit processAll = 2 ; receiver processes all parts individually¶
With some types of message content, there are multiple media types associated with the same message which need to be rendered together, for example a rich-text message with an inline image. With other messages, there are multiple choices available for the same content, for example a choice among multiple languages, or between two different image formats. The relationship semantics among the parts is specified as an enumeration {9}.¶
The chooseOne
part semantic is roughly analogous to the semantics of the
multipart/alternative
media type, except that the ordering of the
nested body parts is merely a preference of the sender. The receiver
can choose the body part among those provided according to its own
policy.¶
The singleUnit
part semantic is roughly analogous to the semantics
of the multipart/related
media type, in that all the nested body
parts at this level are part of a single entity (for example, a
rich text message with an inline image). If the receiver does not
understand even one of the nested parts at this level, the receiver
should not process any of them.¶
The processAll
part semantic is roughly analogous to the semantics
of the multipart/mixed
media type. The receiver should process as
many of the nested parts at this level as possible. For example, a
rich text document with a link, and a preview image of the link target
could be expressed using this semantic. Processing the preview image
is not strictly necessary for the correct rendering of the rich text
part.¶
The disposition {10} and language {11} of each part can be specified for any part, including for nested parts. The disposition represents the intended semantics of the body part or a set of nested parts. It is inspired by the values in the Content-Disposition MIME header [RFC2183].¶
baseDispos = &( unspecified: 0, render: 1, reaction: 2, profile: 3, inline: 4, icon: 5, attachment: 6, session: 7, preview: 8 ) unknownDispos = &( unknown: 9..255 ) ; Note: any ext_dispos take precedence¶
The render
disposition means that the content should be rendered
according to local policy. The inline
dispositions means that the
content should be rendered "inline" directly in the chat interface.
The attachment
disposition means that the content is intended to
be downloaded by the receiver instead of being rendered immediately.
The reaction
disposition means that the content is a single
reaction to another message, typically an emoji, but which could be
an image, sound, or video. The reaction
disposition was originally published
in [RFC9078], but was incorrectly placed in the Content Disposition
Parameters IANA registry instead of in the Content Disposition Values
registry.
The session
disposition means that the content is a description of
a multimedia session, or a URI used to join one.
The preview
disposition means that the content is a sender-generated
preview of something, such as the contents of a link.¶
The value of the language data field is an empty string or a
comma-separated list of one or more Language-tag
s as defined
in [RFC5646].¶
Each part also has an implied part index, which is a zero-indexed, depth-first integer. It is used to efficiently refer to a specific body part (for example, an inline image) within another part. See Appendix B.3 for an example of how the part index is calculated.¶
The partIndex can be used inside a content ID URI [RFC2392] in a "container"
part (for example HTML, Markdown, vCard [RFC6350], or iCal [RFC5545]) to
reference another part inside the same MIMI message. In a MIMI message it has
the form cid:
partIndex@local.invalid
.¶
It is common in Instant Messaging systems to reference external content via URI that will be processed automatically, either to store bulky content (ex: videos, images, recorded sounds) outside the messaging infrastructure, or to access a specific service URI, for example, a media forwarding service for conferencing.¶
An ExternalPart
is a convenient way to reference this content. It
provides a similar function to the message/external-body
media type.
It optionally includes the size of the data in octets (or zero if
the length is not provided). It also includes an optional timestamp
after which the external content is invalid, expressed as seconds
since the start of the UNIX epoch (01-Jan-1970), or zero if the
content does not expire.¶
ExternalPart = ( cardinality: external, contentType: tstr, ; An IANA media type {8} url: uri, ; A URL where the content can be fetched expires: uint .size 4, ; expiration in seconds since UNIX epoch size: uint .size 8, ; size of content in octets encAlg: uint .size 2, ; An IANA AEAD Algorithm number, or zero key: bstr, ; AEAD key nonce: bstr, ; AEAD nonce aad: bstr, ; AEAD additional authentiation data hashAlg: uint .size 1, ; An IANA Named Information Hash Algorithm contentHash: bstr, ; hash of the content at the target url description: tstr, ; an optional text description filename: tstr ; an optional suggested filename )¶
Typically, external content is encrypted with an ephemeral symmetric key before it is uploaded, and whatever is necessary for decryption is shared over the message channel.¶
It is a matter of local policy to where the content is uploaded. Often in federated messaging systems, the sender of the content stores the external content in their own domain, but in some systems the content is stored in the "owning" or "hub" domain of the MLS group.¶
Before being uploaded, private external content is encrypted with an
IANA-registered Authenticated Encryption with Additional Data (AEAD)
algorithm as described in [RFC5116]. The key, nonce, and additional
authenticated data (aad) values are set to the values used during the
encryption. Unless modified by an extension, the default value of the
aad
is empty.¶
If the external URL is a service, or the external content is not considered
private, the encAlg
is set to zero, and the key
, nonce
, and aad
fields are zero length.¶
Implementations of this specification MUST implement the AES-128-GCM algorithm.¶
In addition to fields which are contained in a MIMI content message, there are also two fields which the implementation can definitely derive (the MLS group ID {12}, and the leaf index of the sender {13}). Many implementations could also determine one or more of: the sender's client identifier URL {14}, the user identifier URL of the credential associated with the sender {15}, and the identifier URL for the MIMI room {16}.¶
MessageDerivedValues = [ messageId: MessageId, ; sha256 hash of message ciphertext hubAcceptedTimestamp: Timestamp, mlsGroupId: bstr, ; value always available {12} senderLeafIndex: uint .size 4, ; value always available {13} senderClientUrl: uri ; {14}, senderUserUrl: uri, ; "From" {15} roomUrl: uri ; "To" {16} ] MessageId = bstr .size 32 Timestamp = #6.62(uint .size 8) ; milliseconds since start of UNIX epoch¶
In the following examples, we assume that an MLS group is already established and that either out-of-band or using the MLS protocol or MLS extensions, or their client to provider protocol that the following is known to every member of the group:¶
Messages sent to an MLS group are delivered to every member of the group active during the epoch in which the message was sent.¶
All the examples start with a CBOR instance document annotated in the Extended Diagnostic Format (described in [Appendix G of @!RFC8610] and more rigorously specified in [I-D.ietf-cbor-edn-literals]), and then include a hex dump of the CBOR data in the pretty printed format popularized by the CBOR playground website (https://cbor.me) with some minor whitespace and comment reformatting. Finally a message ID for the message is included for most messages.¶
All the instance documents validate using the CDDL schemas in Appendix B and are included in the examples directory in the github repo for this document.¶
In this example, Alice Smith sends a rich-text (Markdown) [RFC7763] message to the Engineering Team MLS group. The following values are derived from the client, except for the hub received timestamp, which might be available for the client from its provider:¶
Below is the message in annotated Extended Diagnostic Notation, and pretty printed CBOR.¶
[ null, / replaces / h'', / topicId / null, / expires / null, / inReplyTo / [], / lastSeen / {}, / extensions / [ / body (NestedPart) / 1, / dispostion = render / "", / language / 1, / cardinality = single part / "text/markdown;variant=GFM", / contentType / / content / 'Hi everyone, we just shipped release 2.0. __Good work__!' ] ]¶
88 # array(8) 58 20 # bytes(20) d3c14744d1791d02548232c23d35efa97668174ba385af066011e43bd7e51501 f6 # primitive(22) 40 # bytes(0) # "" f6 # primitive(22) f6 # primitive(22) 80 # array(0) a0 # map(0) 86 # array(6) 01 # unsigned(1) 60 # text(0) # "" 00 # unsigned(0) 01 # unsigned(1) 78 1b # text(27) 746578742f6d61726b646f776e3b636861727365743d7574662d38 # "text/markdown;charset=utf-8" 58 38 # bytes(56) 48692065766572796f6e652c207765206a757374207368697070656420 72656c6561736520322e302e205f5f476f6f6420776f726b5f5f21 # "Hi everyone, we just shipped release 2.0. __Good work__!"¶
Below are the rest of the implied values for this message:¶
[ / messageId (Original message) / h'd3c14744d1791d02548232c23d35efa97668174ba385af066011e43bd7e51501', / hubAcceptedTimestamp = 2022-02-08T22:13:45.019-00:00 / 62(1644387225019), / mlsGroupId / h'eeee0d12a7b5b5b78115ad1a1ddb13811c83fd7387c43e66799a594beeda26bf', / senderLeafIndex / 4, / senderClientUrl / "mimi://example.com/d/3b52249d-68f9-45ce-8bf5-c799f3cad7ec/0003", / senderUserUrl / "mimi://example.com/u/alice-smith", / roomUrl / "mimi://example.com/r/engineering_team" ]¶
A reply message looks similar, but contains the message ID of the
original message in the inReplyTo
data field. The derived MLS
group ID, URL, and name do not change in this example. The derived
senderClientId and senderLeafIndex are not especially relevant so
all but the user handle URL, message ID, and hub received timestamp
will be omitted.¶
Below is the annotated message in EDN and pretty printed CBOR:¶
[ null, / replaces / h'', / topicId / null, / expires = never / [ / InReplyTo / / message = Original message / h'd3c14744d1791d02548232c23d35efa97668174ba385af066011e43bd7e51501', 1, / hashAlg = sha256 / / hash / h'6b44053cb68e3f0cdd219da8d7104afc2ae5ffff782154524cef093de39345a5' ], [ / lastSeen (1 item) / / Original message / h'd3c14744d1791d02548232c23d35efa97668174ba385af066011e43bd7e51501' ], {}, / extensions / [ / body (NestedPart) / 1, / dispostion = render / "", / language / 1, / cardinality = single / "text/markdown;variant=GFM", / contentType / / content / 'Right on! _Congratulations_ \'all!' ] ]¶
87 # array(7) f6 # primitive(22) 40 # bytes(0) # "" f6 # primitive(22) 83 # array(3) 58 20 # bytes(32) d3c14744d1791d02548232c23d35efa97668174ba385af066011e43bd7e51501 01 # unsigned(1) 58 20 # bytes(32) 6b44053cb68e3f0cdd219da8d7104afc2ae5ffff782154524cef093de39345a5 81 # array(1) 58 20 # bytes(32) d3c14744d1791d02548232c23d35efa97668174ba385af066011e43bd7e51501 a0 # map(0) 86 # array(6) 01 # unsigned(1) 60 # text(0) # "" 00 # unsigned(0) 01 # unsigned(1) 78 1b # text(27) 746578742f6d61726b646f776e3b636861727365743d7574662d38 # "text/markdown;charset=utf-8" 58 21 # bytes(33) 5269676874206f6e21205f436f6e67726174756c6174696f6e735f2027616c6c21 # "Right on! _Congratulations_ 'all!"¶
A reaction looks like a reply, but uses the Disposition token of reaction. It is modeled on the reaction Content-Disposition token defined in [RFC9078]. Both indicate that the intended disposition of the contents of the message is a reaction.¶
The content in the sample message is a single Unicode heart character (U+2665) which is expressed in UTF-8 as 0xe299a5. Discovering the range of characters each implementation could render as a reaction can occur out-of-band and is not within the scope of this proposal. However, an implementation which receives a reaction character string it does not recognize could render the reaction as a reply, possibly prefixing with a localized string such as "Reaction: ". Note that a reaction could theoretically even be another media type (ex: image, audio, or video), although not currently implemented in major instant messaging systems. Note that many systems allow mutiple independent reactions per sender.¶
Below is the annotated message in EDN and pretty printed CBOR:¶
[ null, / replaces / h'', / topicId / null, / expires = never / [ / InReplyTo / / message = Original message / h'd3c14744d1791d02548232c23d35efa97668174ba385af066011e43bd7e51501', 1, / hashAlg = sha256 / / hash / h'6b44053cb68e3f0cdd219da8d7104afc2ae5ffff782154524cef093de39345a5' ], [ / lastSeen (1 item) / / Reply message / h'e701beee59f9376282f39092e1041b2ac2e3aad1776570c1a28de244979c71ed' ], {}, / extensions / [ / body (NestedPart) / 2, / dispostion = reaction / "", / language / 1, / cardinality = single / "text/plain;charset=utf-8", / contentType / '❤' / content = U+2665 (heart) / ] ]¶
87 # array(7) f6 # primitive(22) 40 # bytes(0) # "" f6 # primitive(22) 83 # array(3) 58 20 # bytes(32) d3c14744d1791d02548232c23d35efa97668174ba385af066011e43bd7e51501 01 # unsigned(1) 58 20 # bytes(32) 6b44053cb68e3f0cdd219da8d7104afc2ae5ffff782154524cef093de39345a5 81 # array(1) 58 20 # bytes(32) e701beee59f9376282f39092e1041b2ac2e3aad1776570c1a28de244979c71ed a0 # map(0) 86 # array(6) 02 # unsigned(2) 60 # text(0) # "" 00 # unsigned(0) 01 # unsigned(1) 78 18 # text(24) 746578742f706c61696e3b636861727365743d7574662d38 # "text/plain;charset=utf-8" 43 # bytes(3) e299a5 # "♥"¶
In instant messaging systems and social media, a mention allows special formatting and behavior when a name, handle, or tag associated with a known group is encountered, often when prefixed with a commercial-at "@" character for mentions of users or a hash "#" character for groups or tags. A message which contains a mention may trigger distinct notifications on the IM client.¶
We can convey a mention by linking the user handle URI, or group URI in Markdown or HTML rich content. For example, a mention using Markdown is indicated below.¶
Below is the annotated message in EDN and pretty printed CBOR:¶
[ null, / replaces / h'', / topicId / null, / expires = never / null, / InReplyTo / [ / lastSeen (1 item) / / Reply message / h'e701beee59f9376282f39092e1041b2ac2e3aad1776570c1a28de244979c71ed' ], {}, / extensions / [ / body (NestedPart) / 1, / dispostion = render / "", / language / 1, / cardinality = single / "text/markdown;variant=GFM", / contentType / / content / 'Kudos to [@Alice Smith](im:alice-smith@example.com)' ' for making the release happen!' ] ]¶
87 # array(7) f6 # primitive(22) 40 # bytes(0) # "" f6 # primitive(22) f6 # primitive(22) 81 # array(1) 58 20 # bytes(32) e701beee59f9376282f39092e1041b2ac2e3aad1776570c1a28de244979c71ed a0 # map(0) 86 # array(6) 01 # unsigned(1) 60 # text(0) # "" 00 # unsigned(0) 01 # unsigned(1) 78 1b # text(27) 746578742f6d61726b646f776e3b636861727365743d7574662d38 # "text/markdown;charset=utf-8" 58 52 # bytes(82) 4b75646f7320746f205b40416c69636520536d6974685d28696d3a 616c6963652d736d697468406578616d706c652e636f6d2920666f 72206d616b696e67207468652072656c656173652068617070656e21 # "Kudos to [@Alice Smith](im:alice-smith@example.com) # for making the release happen!"¶
The same mention using HTML [W3C.CR-html52-20170808] would instead replace in the EDN the contentType and content indicated below.¶
/ ... / "text/html;charset=utf-8", '<p>Kudos to <a href="im:alice-smith@example.com">@Alice Smith</a> for making the release happen!</p>'¶
Unlike with email messages, it is common in IM systems to allow the sender of a message to edit or delete the message after the fact. Typically the message is replaced in the user interface of the receivers (even after the original message is read) but shows a visual indication that it has been edited.¶
The replaces
data field includes the message ID of the message to
edit/replace. The message included in the body is a replacement for the message
with the replaced message ID.¶
Here Bob Jones corrects a typo in his original message:¶
[ / replaces = Reply message / h'e701beee59f9376282f39092e1041b2ac2e3aad1776570c1a28de244979c71ed', h'', / topicId / null, / expires = never / [ / InReplyTo / / message = Original message / h'd3c14744d1791d02548232c23d35efa97668174ba385af066011e43bd7e51501', 1, / hashAlg = sha256 / / hash / h'6b44053cb68e3f0cdd219da8d7104afc2ae5ffff782154524cef093de39345a5' ], [ / lastSeen (2 items) / / Reaction message / h'4dcab7711a77ea1dd025a6a1a7fe01ab 3b0d690f82417663cb752dfcc37779a1', / Mention message / h'6b50bfdd71edc83554ae21380080f4a3 ba77985da34528a515fac3c38e4998b8' ], {}, / extensions / [ / body (NestedPart) / 1, / dispostion = render / "", / language / 1, / cardinality = single / "text/markdown;variant=GFM", / contentType / / content / 'Right on! _Congratulations_ y\'all' ] ]¶
87 # array(7) 58 20 # bytes(32) e701beee59f9376282f39092e1041b2ac2e3aad1776570c1a28de244979c71ed 40 # bytes(0) # "" f6 # primitive(22) 83 # array(3) 58 20 # bytes(32) d3c14744d1791d02548232c23d35efa97668174ba385af066011e43bd7e51501 01 # unsigned(1) 58 20 # bytes(32) 6b44053cb68e3f0cdd219da8d7104afc2ae5ffff782154524cef093de39345a5 82 # array(2) 58 20 # bytes(32) 4dcab7711a77ea1dd025a6a1a7fe01ab3b0d690f82417663cb752dfcc37779a1 58 20 # bytes(32) 6b50bfdd71edc83554ae21380080f4a3ba77985da34528a515fac3c38e4998b8 a0 # map(0) 86 # array(6) 01 # unsigned(1) 60 # text(0) # "" 00 # unsigned(0) 01 # unsigned(1) 78 1b # text(27) 746578742f6d61726b646f776e3b636861727365743d7574662d38 # "text/markdown;charset=utf-8" 58 22 # bytes(34) 5269676874206f6e21205f436f6e67726174756c6174696f6e735f 207927616c6c21 # "Right on! _Congratulations_ y'all!"¶
Note that replies and reactions always refer to a specific message id, and therefore a specific "version" of a message, which could have been edited before and/or after the message id referenced in the reply or reaction. It is a matter of local policy how to render (if at all) a reaction to a subsequently edited message.¶
In IM systems, a delete means that the author of a specific message has retracted the message, regardless if other users have read the message or not. Typically a placeholder remains in the user interface showing that a message was deleted. Replies which reference a deleted message typically hide the quoted portion and reflect that the original message was deleted.¶
If Bob deleted his message instead of modifying it, we would represent it
using the replaces
data field, and using an empty body (NullPart),
as shown below.¶
[ / replaces = Reply message / h'e701beee59f9376282f39092e1041b2ac2e3aad1776570c1a28de244979c71ed', h'', / topicId / null, / expires = never / [ / InReplyTo / / message = Original message / h'd3c14744d1791d02548232c23d35efa97668174ba385af066011e43bd7e51501', 1, / hashAlg = sha256 / / hash / h'6b44053cb68e3f0cdd219da8d7104afc2ae5ffff782154524cef093de39345a5' ], [ / lastSeen (1 items) / / Edit message / h'89d3472622a4d9de526742bcd00b09dc78fa4edceaf2720e17b730c6dfba8be4' ], {}, / extensions / [ / body (NestedPart) / 1, / dispostion = render / "", / language / 0 / cardinality = zero parts / ] ]¶
87 # array(7) 58 20 # bytes(32) 4dcab7711a77ea1dd025a6a1a7fe01ab3b0d690f82417663cb752dfcc37779a1 40 # bytes(0) # "" f6 # primitive(22) 83 # array(3) 58 20 # bytes(32) d3c14744d1791d02548232c23d35efa97668174ba385af066011e43bd7e51501 01 # unsigned(1) 58 20 # bytes(32) 6b44053cb68e3f0cdd219da8d7104afc2ae5ffff782154524cef093de39345a5 81 # array(1) 58 20 # bytes(32) 89d3472622a40d6ceeb27c42490fdc64c0e9c20c598f9d7c8e81640dae8db0fb a0 # map(0) 84 # array(4) 02 # unsigned(2) 60 # text(0) # "" 00 # unsigned(0) 00 # unsigned(0)¶
In most IM systems, not only is it possible to react to a message ("Like"), but it is possible to remove a previous reaction ("Unlike"). This can be accomplished by deleting the message which creates the original reaction¶
If Cathy removes her reaction, we would represent the removal using a
replaces
data field with an empty body, referring to the message which
created the reaction, as shown below.¶
[ / replaces = Reaction message / h'4dcab7711a77ea1dd025a6a1a7fe01ab3b0d690f82417663cb752dfcc37779a1', h'', / topicId / null, / expires = never / [ / InReplyTo / / message = Original message / h'd3c14744d1791d02548232c23d35efa97668174ba385af066011e43bd7e51501', 1, / hashAlg = sha256 / / hash / h'6b44053cb68e3f0cdd219da8d7104afc2ae5ffff782154524cef093de39345a5' ], [ / lastSeen (1 items) / / Delete message / h'89d3472622a40d6ceeb27c42490fdc64c0e9c20c598f9d7c8e81640dae8db0fb' ], {}, / extensions / [ / body (NestedPart) / 2, / dispostion = reaction / "", / language / 0 / cardinality = zero parts / ] ]¶
87 # array(7) 58 20 # bytes(32) e701beee59f9376282f39092e1041b2ac2e3aad1776570c1a28de244979c71ed 40 # bytes(0) # "" f6 # primitive(22) 83 # array(3) 58 20 # bytes(32) d3c14744d1791d02548232c23d35efa97668174ba385af066011e43bd7e51501 01 # unsigned(1) 58 20 # bytes(32) 6b44053cb68e3f0cdd219da8d7104afc2ae5ffff782154524cef093de39345a5 81 # array(1) 58 20 # bytes(32) 89d3472622a4d9de526742bcd00b09dc78fa4edceaf2720e17b730c6dfba8be4 a0 # map(0) 84 # array(4) 01 # unsigned(1) 60 # text(0) # "" 00 # unsigned(0) 00 # unsigned(0)¶
There are two types of expiring messages in instant messaging systems. In the typical implementation, messages are deleted a specific amount of time relative to (after) when the receiving client reads the message. We will refer to this as relative expiration.¶
Absolute expiring messages are designed to be deleted automatically by the receiving client at a certain time whether they have been read or not.¶
As with manually deleted messages, there is no guarantee that an uncooperative client or a determined user will not save the content of the message. The goal instead is to allow cooperating client that respect the convention to signal expiration times clearly.¶
The expires
data field contains the absolute timestamp when, or relative
amount of time after reading after which the message can be deleted.
The semantics of the header are that the message is automatically deleted
by the receiving clients at the indicated time without user interaction or
network connectivity necessary.¶
[ null, / replaces / h'', / topicId / [ / Expiration / false, / absolute, not relative / 1644390004, / expires = 10 minutes after it was sent / ] null, / inReplyTo / [ / lastSeen (1 item) / / Unlike message / h'1a771ca1d84f8fda4184a1e02a549e201bf434c6bfcf1237fa45463c6861853b' ], {}, / extensions / [ / body (NestedPart) / 1, / dispostion = render / "", / language / 1, / cardinality = single part / "text/markdown;variant=GFM", / contentType / / content / '__*VPN GOING DOWN*__ I\'m rebooting the VPN in ten minutes' ' unless anyone objects.' ] ]¶
87 # array(7) f6 # primitive(22) 40 # bytes(0) # "" 82 # array(2) f4 # primitive(20) 1a 62036674 # unsigned(1644390004) f6 # primitive(22) 81 # array(1) 58 20 # bytes(32) 1a771ca1d84f8fda4184a1e02a549e201bf434c6bfcf1237fa45463c6861853b a0 # map(0) 86 # array(6) 01 # unsigned(1) 60 # text(0) # "" 00 # unsigned(0) 01 # unsigned(1) 78 1b # text(27) 746578742f6d61726b646f776e3b636861727365743d7574662d38 # "text/markdown;charset=utf-8" 58 50 # bytes(80) 5f5f2a56504e20474f494e4720444f574e2a5f5f0a49276d207265 626f6f74696e67207468652056504e20696e2074656e206d696e75 74657320756e6c65737320616e796f6e65206f626a656374732e # "__*VPN GOING DOWN*__\nI'm rebooting the VPN in ten # minutes unless anyone objects."¶
An ExternalPart is a convenient way to present both "attachments" and (possibly inline rendered) content which is too large to be included in an MLS application message. The disposition data field is set to inline if the sender recommends inline rendering, or attachment if the sender intends the content to be downloaded or rendered separately.¶
[ null, / replaces / h'', / topicId / null, / expires = never / null, / inReplyTo / [ / lastSeen (1 item) / / Expiring message / h'5c95a4dfddab84348bcc265a479299fbd3a2eecfa3d490985da5113e5480c7f1' ], {}, / extensions / [ / body (NestedPart) / 6, / dispostion = attachment / "en", / language = en / 2, / cardinality = external part / "video/mp4", / contentType / "https://example.com/storage/8ksB4bSrrRE.mp4", / url / 0, / expires / 708234961, / size / 1, / encAlg = AES-128-GCM / h'21399320958a6f4c745dde670d95e0d8', / key / h'c86cf2c33f21527d1dd76f5b', / nonce / h'', / aad / 1, / hashAlg = sha256 / / content hash / h'9ab17a8cf0890baaae7ee016c7312fcc080ba46498389458ee44f0276e783163', "2 hours of key signing video", / description / "bigfile.mp4" / filename / ] ]¶
87 # array(7) f6 # primitive(22) 40 # bytes(0) # "" f6 # primitive(22) f6 # primitive(22) 81 # array(1) 58 20 # bytes(32) 5c95a4dfddab84348bcc265a479299fbd3a2eecfa3d490985da5113e5480c7f1 a0 # map(0) 90 # array(16) 06 # unsigned(6) 62 # text(2) 656e # "en" 00 # unsigned(0) 02 # unsigned(2) 69 # text(9) 766964656f2f6d7034 # "video/mp4" 78 2b # text(43) 68747470733a2f2f6578616d706c652e636f6d2f73746f72616 7652f386b7342346253727252452e6d7034 # "https://example.com/storage/8ksB4bSrrRE.mp4" 00 # unsigned(0) 1a 2a36ced1 # unsigned(708234961) 01 # unsigned(1) 50 # bytes(16) 21399320958a6f4c745dde670d95e0d8 4c # bytes(12) c86cf2c33f21527d1dd76f5b 40 # bytes(0) # "" 01 # unsigned(1) 58 20 # bytes(32) 9ab17a8cf0890baaae7ee016c7312fcc080ba46498389458ee44f0276e783163 78 1c # text(28) 3220686f757273206f66206b6579207369676e696e6720766964656f # "2 hours of key signing video" 6b # text(11) 62696766696c652e6d7034 # "bigfile.mp4"¶
message ID 0xb267614d43e7676d28ef5b15e8676f23 679fe365c78849d83e2ba0ae8196ec4e¶
Other dispositions of external content are also possible, for example an external GIF animation of a rocket ship could be used with a reaction disposition.¶
Joining a conference via an external URL is possible. The link could be
rendered to the user, requiring a click. Alternatively the URL could be
rendered the
disposition could be specified as session
which could be processed
differently by the client (for example, alerting the user or presenting
a dialog box).
Further discussion of calling and conferencing functionality is out-of-scope
of this document.¶
[ null, / replaces / h'466f6f20313138', / topicId = Foo 118 / null, / expires / null, / inReplyTo / [ / lastSeen (1 item) / / Attachment message / h'b267614d43e7676d28ef5b15e8676f23679fe365c78849d83e2ba0ae8196ec4e' ], {}, / extensions / [ / body (NestedPart) / 7, / dispostion = session / "", / language / 2, / cardinality = external part / "", / contentType / "https://example.com/join/12345", / url / 0, / expires / 0, / size / 0, / encAlg = none / h'', / key / h'', / nonce / h'', / aad / 0, / hashAlg = none / h'', / content hash / "Join the Foo 118 conference", / description / "" / filename / ] ]¶
87 # array(7) f6 # primitive(22) 47 # bytes(7) 466f6f20313138 # "Foo 118" f6 # primitive(22) f6 # primitive(22) 81 # array(1) 58 20 # bytes(32) b267614d43e7676d28ef5b15e8676f23679fe365c78849d83e2ba0ae8196ec4e a0 # map(0) 90 # array(16) 07 # unsigned(7) 60 # text(0) # "" 00 # unsigned(0) 02 # unsigned(2) 60 # text(0) # "" 78 1e # text(30) 68747470733a2f2f6578616d706c652e636f6d2f6a6f696e2f3132333435 # "https://example.com/join/12345" 00 # unsigned(0) 00 # unsigned(0) 00 # unsigned(0) 40 # bytes(0) # "" 40 # bytes(0) # "" 40 # bytes(0) # "" 00 # unsigned(0) 40 # bytes(0) # "" 78 1b # text(27) 4a6f696e2074686520466f6f2031313820636f6e666572656e6365 # "Join the Foo 118 conference" 60 # text(0) # ""¶
message ID 0xb267614d43e7676d28ef5b15e8676f23 679fe365c78849d83e2ba0ae8196ec4e¶
As popularized by the messaging application Slack, some messaging
applications have a notion of a Topic or message Thread
(not to be confused with message threading as used in email).
Clients beginning a new "topic" populate the topicId
with a unique
opaque octet string. This could be the message ID of the first message
sent related to the topic. Subsequent messages may include the same
topicId
for those messages to be associated with the same topic. The sort order
for messages within a thread uses the timestamp field. If more than
one message has the same timestamp, the lexically lowest message ID
sorts earlier.¶
In instant messaging systems, read receipts typically generate a distinct indicator for each message. In some systems, the number of users in a group who have read the message is subtly displayed and the list of users who read the message is available on further inspection.¶
Of course, Internet mail has support for read receipts as well, but the existing message disposition notification mechanism defined for email in [RFC8098] is completely inappropriate in this context:¶
Instead we would like to be able to include status changes about multiple messages in each report, the ability to mark a message delivered, then read, then unread, then expired for example.¶
The format below, application/mimi-message-status is sent by one member of an MLS group to the entire group and can refer to multiple messages in that group. The format contains its own timestamp, and a list of message ID / status pairs. As the status at the recipient changes, the status can be updated in a subsequent notification. Below is the CDDL schema for message status.¶
MessageStatusReport = [ timestamp: Timestamp, statuses: [ * PerMessageStatus ] ] PerMessageStatus = [ messageId: MessageId, status: baseStatus / $extStatus / unknownStatus ] baseStatus = &( unread: 0, delivered: 1, read: 2, expired: 3, deleted: 4, hidden: 5, error: 6 ) unknownStatus = &( unknown: 7..255 ) MessageId = bstr .size 32 Timestamp = #6.62(uint .size 8) ; milliseconds since start of UNIX epoch¶
[ 62(1644284703227), / Timestamp of the report / [ [ / Original message / h'd3c14744d1791d02548232c23d35efa97668174ba385af066011e43bd7e51501', 2 / status = read / ], [ / Reply message / h'e701beee59f9376282f39092e1041b2ac2e3aad1776570c1a28de244979c71ed', 2 / status = read / ], [ / Mention message / h'6b50bfdd71edc83554ae21380080f4a3ba77985da34528a515fac3c38e4998b8', 0 / status = unread / ], [ / Expiring message / h'5c95a4dfddab84348bcc265a479299fbd3a2eecfa3d490985da5113e5480c7f1', 3 / status = expired / ] ] ]¶
82 # array(2) d8 3e # tag(62) 1b 0000017ed70171fb # unsigned(1644284703227) 84 # array(4) 82 # array(2) 58 20 # bytes(32) d3c14744d1791d02548232c23d35efa97668174ba385af066011e43bd7e51501 02 # unsigned(2) 82 # array(2) 58 20 # bytes(32) e701beee59f9376282f39092e1041b2ac2e3aad1776570c1a28de244979c71ed 02 # unsigned(2) 82 # array(2) 58 20 # bytes(32) 6b50bfdd71edc83554ae21380080f4a3ba77985da34528a515fac3c38e4998b8 00 # unsigned(0) 82 # array(2) 58 20 # bytes(32) 5c95a4dfddab84348bcc265a479299fbd3a2eecfa3d490985da5113e5480c7f1 03 # unsigned(3)¶
As the MIMI Content container is just a container, the plain text or rich text messages sent inside, and any image or other formats needs to be specified. Clients compliant with MIMI MUST be able to receive the following media types:¶
Note that it is acceptable to render the contents of a received markdown document as plain text.¶
The following MIME types are RECOMMENDED:¶
Clients compliant with this specification must be able to download
ExternalParts with http
and https
URLs, and decrypt downloaded content
encrypted with the AES-128-GCM AEAD algorithm.¶
A MIMI content client supports GitHub Flavored Markdown as defined in [GFM],
with two changes: the Autolink extension is not supported; and instead of the
Disallowed Raw HTML extension (tagfilter
), the No HTML extension (nohtml
),
which is defined here, is MANDATORY. (For clarity, a fixed list of supported
extensions, is further described in the bullet points below.)¶
To implement the No HTML extension to GFM, the opening angle bracket (<
) of
any HTML tag
(as defined in Section 6.10 of [GFM]) is replaced with <
before sending. Any HTML tag
in a received message is rendered as plain text.
Note that HTML tag
includes open tags, closing tags, HTML comments, processing
instructions, declarations, and CDATA sections.¶
The following GitHub Flavored Markdown extensions are supported. No other extensions are allowed:¶
This document specifies what can be sent inside a MIMI content message; it does not restrict or prescribe in any way how input from a user is interpreted by an Instant Messaging client that support MIMI, before any message resulting from that input is sent.¶
Note that rendering Markdown as plain text is an acceptable form of "support".¶
As most messaging systems are proprietary, standalone systems, it is useful to allow clients to send and receive proprietary formats among themselves. Using the functionality in the MIMI Content container, clients can send a message using the basic functionality described in this document AND a proprietary format for same-vendor clients simultaneously over the same group with end-to-end encryption. An example is given in the Appendix.¶
RFC EDITOR: Please replace XXXX throughout with the RFC number assigned to this document.¶
This document proposes registration of a media subtype with IANA.¶
Type name: application Subtype name: mimi-content Required parameters: none Optional parameters: none Encoding considerations: This message type should be encoded as binary data Security considerations: See Section A of RFC XXXX Interoperability considerations: See Section Y.Z of RFC XXXX Published specification: RFC XXXX Applications that use this media type: Instant Messaging Applications Fragment identifier considerations: N/A Additional information: Deprecated alias names for this type: N/A Magic number(s): N/A File extension(s): N/A Macintosh file type code(s): N/A Person & email address to contact for further information: IETF MIMI Working Group mimi@ietf.org¶
This document proposes registration of a media subtype with IANA.¶
Type name: application Subtype name: mimi-message-status Required parameters: none Optional parameters: none Encoding considerations: This message type should be encoded as binary data Security considerations: See Section A of RFC XXXX Interoperability considerations: See Section Y.Z of RFC XXXX Published specification: RFC XXXX Applications that use this media type: Instant Messaging Applications Fragment identifier considerations: N/A Additional information: Deprecated alias names for this type: N/A Magic number(s): N/A File extension(s): N/A Macintosh file type code(s): N/A Person & email address to contact for further information: IETF MIMI Working Group mimi@ietf.org¶
This document requests the creation of a new MIMI Content Extension Keys registry. The registry should be under the heading of "More Instant Messaging Interoperability (MIMI)".¶
The MIMI Content format defined in this document, contains an extensions map in each message. The keys in the extensions map can be (positive or negative) integers, or text strings. Text strings and negative integer keys are reserved for private use. Positive integer keys are assigned in the registry under the Expert Review policy [RFC8126]. Integer keys between 1 and 255 are restricted to IETF consensus specifications.¶
The columns in the registry are as follows:¶
Recommended: Whether support for this MIMI content extension is recommended by the IETF. Valid values are "Y", "N", and "D", as described below. The default value of the "Recommended" column is "N". Setting the Recommended item to "Y" or "D", or changing an item whose current value is "Y" or "D", requires Standards Action [RFC8126].¶
Initial Contents:¶
Key | Name | Type | R | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
0 | (reserved) | - | - | RFCXXXX |
Expert Review [RFC8126] registry requests are registered after a three-week review period on the MIMI Designated Expert (DE) mailing list mimi-reg-review@ietf.org on the advice of one or more of the MIMI DEs.¶
Registration requests sent to the MIMI DEs' mailing list for review SHOULD use an appropriate subject (e.g., "Request to register value in MIMI Content Extensions Keys registry").¶
Within the review period, the MIMI DEs will either approve or deny the registration request, communicating this decision to the MIMI DEs' mailing list and IANA. Denials SHOULD include an explanation and, if applicable, suggestions as to how to make the request successful. Registration requests that are undetermined for a period longer than 21 days can be brought to the IESG's attention for resolution using the iesg@ietf.org mailing list.¶
Criteria that SHOULD be applied by the MIMI DEs includes determining whether the proposed registration duplicates existing functionality, whether it is likely to be of general applicability or useful only for a single application, and whether the registration description is clear.¶
IANA MUST only accept registry updates from the MIMI DEs and SHOULD direct all requests for registration to the MIMI DEs' mailing list.¶
In cases where a registration decision could be perceived as creating a conflict of interest for a particular MIMI DE, that MIMI DE SHOULD defer to the judgment of the other MIMI DEs.¶
This document registers a new Markdown variant in the IANA Markdown Variants registry. The registration template below conforms with [RFC7763].¶
Identifier: GFM-MIMI Name: GitHub Flavored Markdown Subset for MIMI Description: GitHub Flavored Markdown, without Autolinks and with no embedded HTML References: RFCXXXX Contact Information: IETF MIMI Working Group <mimi@ietf.org>¶
The following cases are examples of nonsensical values that most likely represent malicious messages. These should be logged and discarded.¶
sender of the message¶
message IDs¶
timestamps¶
topicId¶
topicId
is very long (greater than 4096 octets)¶
expires¶
lastSeen¶
body¶
For the avoidance of doubt, the following cases may be examples of legitimate use cases, and should not be considered the result of a malicious sender.¶
To ensure a strong source of entropy for the per-message unique salt required in
each message, the client can export a secret from the MLS key schedule, for
example with the label salt_base_secret
and calculate the salt as the HMAC of a locally generated nonce and the franking_base_secret.¶
salt = HMAC_SHA256( salt_base_secret, nonce )¶
The timestamp is the time a message is accepted by the hub provider. As such, the hub provider can manipulate the timestamp, and the sending provider can delay sending messages selectively to cause the timestamp on a hub to be later. Note that the optional franking mechanism discussed in Section 5.4.1.2 of [I-D.ietf-mimi-protocol] prevents follower servers from modifying the timestamp.¶
TODO: Discuss how to sanity check lastSeen, timestamp and the MLS epoch and generation, and the limitations of this approach.¶
This document includes a mechanism where the sender can offer alternate versions of content in a single message. For example, the sender could send:¶
A malicious client could use this mechanism to send content that will appear different to a subset of the members of a group and possibly elicit an incorrect or misleading response.¶
Message as seen by Alice (manager) Xavier: Do you want me to reserve a room for the review meeting? Message as seen by Bob (Alice's assistant) Xavier: @Bob I need to pickup Alice's Ferarri keys. She'll confirm Reply sent by Alice Alice: Yes please.¶
Both Markdown and HTML support links. Using the example of an https
link,
if the rendered text and the link target match exactly or are canonically
equivalent, there is no need for confirmation if the end user selects the link.¶
[example.com/foobar](https://example.com/foobar) [https://example.com/foobar](https://example.com/foobar) [https://example.com:443/foobar](https://example.com/foobar)¶
However, if the link text is different, or the scheme is downgraded from https to http, the user should be presented with an alert warning that the text is not the same.¶
[https://example.com/foobar](https://spearphishers.example/foobar) [https://example.com/foobar](http://example.com/foobar)¶
An IM URI link to a user who has a member client in the MLS group in which the message was sent is considered a mention. Clients may support special rendering of mentions instead of treating them like any other type of link. In Markdown and HTML, the display text portion of a link is considered a rendering hint from the sender to the receiver of the message. The receiver should use local policy to decide if the hint is an acceptable local representation of the user represented by the link itself. If the hint is not an acceptable representation, the client should instead display its canonical representation for the user.¶
For example, in the first example, the sender expresses no preference about how to render the mention. In the second example, the sender requests that the mention is rendered as the literal URI. In the third example, the sender requests the canonical handle for Alice. In the fourth example, the sender requests Alice's first name.¶
<im:alice-smith@example.com> [im:alice-smith@example.com](im:alice-smith@example.com) [@AliceSmith](im:alice-smith@example.com) [Alice](im:alice-smith@example.com)¶
Note that in some clients, presence of a mention for the local user may result in a different notification policy.¶
If the client does not support special rendering of mentions, the application, should render the text like any other link.¶
Delivery and Read Receipts can provide useful information inside a group, or they can reveal sensitive private information. In many IM systems there is are per-group policies for and/or delivery read receipts:¶
In the first case, everyone in the group would have to claim to support read receipts to be in the group and agree to the policy of sending them whenever a message was read. A user who did not wish to send read receipts could review the policy (automatically or manually) and choose not to join the group. Of course, requiring read receipts is a cooperative effort just like using self-deleting messages. A malicious client could obviously read a message and not send a read receipt, or send a read receipt for a message that was never rendered. However, cooperating clients have a way to agree that they will send read receipts when a message is read in a specific group.¶
In the second case, sending a read receipt would be at the discretion of each receiver of the message (via local preferences).¶
Below are Concise Data Definition Language (CDDL) [RFC8610] schemas for the formats described in the body of the document.¶
mimiContent = [ salt: bstr .size 32, replaces: null / MessageId, topicId: bstr, expires: null / Expiration, inReplyTo: null / MessageId, inReplyTo: null / InReplyTo, lastSeen: [* MessageId], extensions: {* name => value }, nestedPart: NestedPart ] NestedPart = [ disposition: baseDispos / $extDispos / unknownDispos, language: tstr, ( NullPart // SinglePart // ExternalPart // MultiPart) ] NullPart = ( cardinality: nullpart ) SinglePart = ( cardinality: single, contentType: tstr, content: bstr ) ExternalPart = ( cardinality: external, contentType: tstr, url: tstr, expires: uint .size 4, size: uint .size 8, encAlg: uint .size 2, key: bstr, nonce: bstr, aad: bstr, hashAlg: uint .size 1, contentHash: bstr, description: tstr, filename: tstr ) MultiPart = ( cardinality: multi, partSemantics: chooseOne / singleUnit / processAll, parts: [2* NestedPart] ) Expiration = [ relative: bool, time: uint .size 4 ] baseDispos = &( unspecified: 0, render: 1, reaction: 2, profile: 3, inline: 4, icon: 5, attachment: 6, session: 7, preview: 8 ) unknownDispos = &( unknown: 9..255 ) ; Note: any ext_dispos take precedence MessageId = bstr .size 32 ; MessageId is derived from SHA256 hash name = int / tstr .size (1..255) value = any .size (0..4095) nullpart = 0 single = 1 external = 2 multi = 3 chooseOne = 0 singleUnit = 1 processAll = 2¶
Below is a CDDL schema for the implied message fields.¶
MessageDerivedValues = [ messageId: MessageId, ; sha256 hash of message ciphertext hubAcceptedTimestamp: Timestamp, mlsGroupId: bstr, senderLeafIndex: uint .size 4, senderClientUrl: MsgUri, senderUserUrl: MsgUri, roomUrl: MsgUri ] MsgUri = tstr MessageId = bstr .size 32 Timestamp = #6.62(uint .size 8) ; milliseconds since start of UNIX epoch¶
MessageStatusReport = [ timestamp: Timestamp, statuses: [ * PerMessageStatus ] ] PerMessageStatus = [ messageId: MessageId, status: baseStatus / $extStatus / unknownStatus ] baseStatus = &( unread: 0, delivered: 1, read: 2, expired: 3, deleted: 4, hidden: 5, error: 6 ) unknownStatus = &( unknown: 7..255 ) MessageId = bstr .size 32 Timestamp = #6.62(uint .size 8) ; milliseconds since start of UNIX epoch¶
In a heterogenous group of IM clients, it is often desirable to send more than one
media type as alternatives, such that IM clients have a choice of which media
type to render. For example, imagine an IM group containing a set of clients
which support a common video format and a subset which only support animated GIFs.
The sender could use a MultiPart
NestablePart with chooseOne
semantics
containing both media types. Every client in the group chat could render something
resembling the media sent. This is analogous to the multipart/alternative
[RFC2046]
media type.¶
Likewise it is often desirable to send more than one media type intended to be
rendered together as in (for example a rich text document with embedded images),
which can be represented using a MultiPart
NestablePart with processAll
semantics. This is analogous to the multipart/mixed
[RFC2046] media type.¶
Note that there is a minor semantic difference between multipart/alternative and
MultiPart
with chooseOne
semantics. In multipart/alternative, the parts are
presented in preference order by the sender. With MultiPart
the receiver
chooses its "best" format to render according to its own preferences.¶
This shows sending a message containing both this profile and a proprietary messaging format simultaneously.¶
[ null, / replaces / h'', / topicId / null, / expires / null, / inReplyTo / [], / lastSeen / {}, / extensions / [ 1, / disposition = render / "", / language / / partIndex = 0 (1st part) / 3, / cardinality = multi / 0, / partSemantics = chooseOne / [ [ 1, / disposition = render / "", / language / / partIndex = 1 / 1, / cardinality = single / "text/markdown;variant=GFM", / contentType / '# Welcome!' / content / ], [ 1, / disposition = render / "", / language / / partIndex = 2 / 1, / cardinality = single / / contentType / "application/vnd.examplevendor-fancy-im-message", h'dc861ebaa718fd7c3ca159f71a2001' / content / ] ] ] ]¶
This example shows sending a reaction with multiple separate emojis.¶
[ null, / replaces / h'', / topicId / null, / expires / null, / inReplyTo / [], / lastSeen / {}, / extensions / [ 1, / disposition = render / "", / language / / partIndex = 0 (1st part) / 3, / cardinality = multi / 2, / partSemantics = processAll / [ [ 1, / disposition = render / "", / language / / partIndex = 1 / 1, / cardinality = single / "text/plain;charset=utf-8", / contentType / h'E2 9D A4' / content = Unicode "heart" / ], [ 1, / disposition = render / "", / language / / partIndex = 2 / 1, / cardinality = single / "text/plain;charset=utf-8", / contentType / h'F0 9F A5 B3' / content = Unicode "party face" / ], [ 1, / disposition = render / "", / language / / partIndex = 3 / 1, / cardinality = single / "text/plain;charset=utf-8", / contentType / h'F0 9F A4 9E' / content = Unicode "fingers crossed" / ] ] ] ]¶
This example shows separate GIF and PNG inline images with English and French versions of an HTML message. A summary of the 11 parts are shown below.¶
Part Description 0 choose either GIF or PNG 1 (with GIF) process all 2 choose either English or French 3 English 4 French 5 GIF 6 (with PNG) process all 7 choose either English or French 8 English 9 French 10 PNG¶
[ null, / replaces / h'', / topicId / null, / expires / null, / inReplyTo / [], / lastSeen / {}, / extensions / [ 1, / disposition = render / "", / language / / partIndex = 0 (1st part) / 3, / cardinality = multi / 0, / partSemantics = chooseOne / [ [ 1, / disposition = render / "", / language / / partIndex = 1 / 3, / cardinality = multi / 2, / partSemantics = processAll / [ [ 1, / disposition = render / "", / language / / partIndex = 2 / 3, / cardinality = multi / 0, / partSemantics = chooseOne / [ [ 1, / disposition = render / "en", / language / / partIndex = 3 / 1, / cardinality = single / "text/html;charset=utf-8", / contentType / / content / '<html><body><h1>Welcome!</h1>\n' '<img src="cid:5@local.invalid" alt="Welcome image"/>\n' '</body></html>' ], / English HTML / [ 1, / disposition = render / "fr", / language / / partIndex = 4 / 1, / cardinality = single / "text/html;charset=utf-8", / contentType / / content / '<html><body><h1>Bienvenue!</h1>\n' '<img src="cid:5@local.invalid" alt="Image bienvenue"/>\n' '</body></html>' ] / French HTML / ] ], / English or French HTML (refers to GIF)/ [ 4, / disposition = inline / "", / language / / partIndex = 5 / 1, / cardinality = single / "image/gif", / contentType / h'028f83c894ca744f' / content / ] / GIF / ] ], / GIF with English or French HTML / [ 1, / disposition = render / "", / language / / partIndex = 6 / 3, / cardinality = multi / 2, / partSemantics = processAll / [ [ 1, / disposition = render / "", / language / / partIndex = 7 / 3, / cardinality = multi / 0, / partSemantics = chooseOne / [ [ 1, / disposition = render / "en", / language / / partIndex = 8 / 1, / cardinality = single / "text/html;charset=utf-8", / contentType / / content / '<html><body><h1>Welcome!</h1>\n' '<img src="cid:10@local.invalid" alt="Welcome image"/>\n' '</body></html>' ], / English HTML / [ 1, / disposition = render / "fr", / language / / partIndex = 9 / 1, / cardinality = single / "text/html;charset=utf-8", / contentType / / content / '<html><body><h1>Bienvenue!</h1>\n' '<img src="cid:10@local.invalid" alt="Image bienvenue"/>\n' '</body></html>' ] / French HTML / ] ], / English or French HTML (refers to PNG)/ [ 4, / disposition = inline / "", / language / / partIndex = 10 / 1, / cardinality = single / "image/png", h'6963cff36275fdb8' / content / ] / PNG / ] ] / PNG with English or French HTML / ] / GIF or PNG (with English or French HTML) / ] ]¶
RFC Editor, please remove this entire section.¶
render
and inline
dispositions¶