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# MSC3051: Scalable relations | ||
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Edits, reactions, replies, threads, message annotations and other MSCs have | ||
shown, that relations between events are very powerful and useful. Currently the | ||
format from [MSC2674](https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/pull/2674) is | ||
used. That format however limits each event to exactly one relation. As a result | ||
events rely on other ways to represent secondary relations. For example edits | ||
keep the relation from the previous event. Their support to change or delete | ||
that relation is limited. In theory you could pass that in `m.new_content`, but | ||
clients don't seem to support that and the actual deletion of a relation is | ||
unexplored as well. | ||
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There are many cases where 2 or more relations on an event would be useful. This | ||
MSC proposes a simple way to do that and replace the currently proposed format. | ||
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## Proposal | ||
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To support multiple relations per file this MSC proposes the following format: | ||
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```json | ||
{ | ||
"content": { | ||
"m.relations": [ | ||
{ | ||
"event_id": "$some-other-event", | ||
"rel_type": "m.in_reply_to" | ||
}, | ||
{ | ||
"event_id": "$some-third-event", | ||
"rel_type": "m.replaces" | ||
}, | ||
{ | ||
"event_id": "$event-four", | ||
"rel_type": "org.example.custom_relation", | ||
"key": "some_aggregation_key" | ||
} | ||
] | ||
}, | ||
"event_id": "$something", | ||
"type": "m.room.message" | ||
} | ||
``` | ||
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This has a few benefits: | ||
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- You can relate to multiple events at the same time. (I.e. you have a | ||
description for multiple files you sent.) | ||
- You can have multiple different relation types at once. (I.e. an edit, that | ||
is also a reply, or a reaction inside a thread.) | ||
- You don't need to look up reply relations in multiple events for edits. The | ||
edited event is canonical and can be used standalone, without having to look | ||
up the original event to figure out, what was replied to. You can also remove | ||
a relation with an edit now. (Useful if you replied to the wrong message or | ||
didn't mean to reply to anyone.) | ||
- This format is conceptually a lot simpler, if an event has multiple relations. | ||
You don't run into issues with packing relations into `m.new_content`, | ||
especially for encrypted events, etc. You just have a list of relations. | ||
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If clients want to stay backwards compatible (for a while at least), in many | ||
instances it is possible to generate an `m.relates_to` object from the relations | ||
list. This can be done by picking a primary relation, i.e. the edit relation, | ||
and then packaging up the remaining relations in `m.new_content` or simply | ||
throwing them away. Since this proposal uses `m.relations`, this does not | ||
conflict with the current relations from the other MSCs. One can also generate | ||
the relations object from this MSC from the old relations, since the new | ||
relations are a strict superset, which may be useful to make handling inside of | ||
a client easier. | ||
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## Potential issues | ||
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### Ordering | ||
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The list of relations is not hierarchical. As such there is no order like where | ||
you have a top level relation and a lower level relation like an edit having | ||
priority over a reply. | ||
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I don't believe that is an issue in practice. If you edit a message with a | ||
reply, there is a natural meaning to the combination of both relations. You can | ||
even apply them in any order, imo. But there may be other relations, where this | ||
causes more issues. An MSC introducing such a relation should specify how to | ||
handle conflicts then. | ||
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### Conflicting relations | ||
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Some relation types should probably not be combined. For example you may | ||
disallow editing a reaction, because clients probably won't be handling that | ||
correctly. This MSC however does not disallow that. Relations should specify, | ||
how clients should handle that and clients sending such combinations should be | ||
aware, that those probably won't get handled. I don't think just allowing 1 | ||
relation is the solution to handling such conflicts and I don't think they will | ||
happen much in practice. | ||
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## Alternatives | ||
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- We could just stick with the existing proposal to only have 1 relation per | ||
event. This is obviously limiting, but works well enough for a lot of | ||
relation types. | ||
- There are a few other ways to structure relations like using an object instead | ||
of an array, etc. I believe this is the most usable one. | ||
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## Security considerations | ||
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Multiple releations may increase load on the server and the client and provide | ||
more opportunities to introduce bad data. Servers and clients should take | ||
additional care and validate accordingly. It should not be considerably worse | ||
than single relations though and servers may limit relations to a reasonable | ||
amount (like they do for devices already). | ||
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## Unstable prefix | ||
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Clients should use `im.nheko.relations.v1.relations` instead of `m.relations` | ||
and `im.nheko.relations.v1.in_reply_to` as the relation type for replies in the | ||
mean time. | ||
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