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192 lines
6 KiB
Markdown
192 lines
6 KiB
Markdown
# How Plume Federates
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To federate with other Fediverse software (and itself), Plume uses various
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protocols:
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- [ActivityPub](http://activitypub.rocks/), as the main federation protocol.
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- [WebFinger](https://webfinger.net/), to find other users and blog easily.
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- [HTTP Signatures](https://tools.ietf.org/id/draft-cavage-http-signatures-01.html), to
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authenticate activities.
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- [NodeInfo](http://nodeinfo.diaspora.software/), which is not part of the
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federation itself, but that gives some metadata about each instance.
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Currently, the following are federated:
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- User profiles
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- Blogs
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- Articles
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- Comments
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- Likes
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- Reshares
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And these parts are not federated, but may be in the future:
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- Media gallery
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- Instance metadata
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## WebFinger
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WebFinger is used to discover remote profiles. When you open the page of an unknown
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user (`/@/username@instance.tld`),
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Plume will send a WebFinger request to the other instance, on the standard
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`/.well-known/webfinger` endpoint. Plume
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will ignore the `/.well-known/host-meta` endpoint (that can normally be used to
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define another WebFinger endpoint),
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and always use the standard URL.
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Plume uses the [`webfinger`](https://crates.io/crates/webfinger) crate to serve
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WebFinger informations and fetch them.
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## HTTP Signatures
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Plume check that each incoming Activity has been signed with the `actor`'s keypair.
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To achieve that, it uses the `Signature` HTTP header. For more details on how this
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header is generated, please refer to the [HTTP Signatures
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Specification](https://tools.ietf.org/id/draft-cavage-http-signatures-01.html).
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The `Digest` header should be present too, and used to generate the signature, so
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that we can verify the body of the request too.
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## NodeInfo
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Plume exposes instance metadata with NodeInfo on the `/nodeinfo` URL.
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*Example output*
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```json
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{
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"version": "2.0",
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"software": {
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"name": "Plume",
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"version": "0.2.0"
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},
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"protocols": ["activitypub"],
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"services": {
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"inbound": [],
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"outbound": []
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},
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"openRegistrations": true,
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"usage": {
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"users": {
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"total": 42
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},
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"localPosts": 7878,
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"localComments": 1312
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},
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"metadata": {}
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}
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```
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## ActivityPub
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Each user has a personal inbox at `/@/username/inbox`, and each instance has a shared
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inbox at `/inbox`.
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If available, Plume will use the shared inbox to deliver activities.
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### Object representation
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- `Note` represents a comment.
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- `Article` is an article.
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- `Person` is for users.
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- `Group` is for blogs.
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### Supported Activities
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Plume 0.2.0 supports the following activity types.
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#### Accept
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Accepts a follow request.
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It will be ignored when received, as Plume considered follow requests to be
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immediatly approved in all cases (however, this will change in the future).
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When a [`Follow`](#follow) activity is received, Plume will respond with this
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activity.
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- `actor` is the ID of the user accepting the request.
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- `object` is the `Follow` object being accepted.
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#### Announce
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Reshares an article (not available for other objects).
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Makes an user (`actor`) reshare a post (`object`).
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- `actor` is the ID of the user who reshared the post.
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- `object` is the ID of the post to reshare.
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#### Create
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Creates a new article or comment.
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If `object` is an `Article`:
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- `object.attibutedTo` is a list containing the ID of the authors and of the blog
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in which this article have been published. If no blog ID is specified, the article
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will be rejected. The `actor` of the activity corresponds to the user that clicked
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the "Publish" button, and should normally be one of the author in `attributedTo`.
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- `object.name` is the title of the article.
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- `object.content` is a string containing the HTML of the rendered article.
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- `object.creationDate` is the date of the first publication of this article.
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- `object.source` is a `Source` object, and its content is the Markdown source of
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this article.
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- `object.tag` is a list, and its elements are either:
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- a `Hashtag` object, for the tag of the article (no difference is made between
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global tags shown at the end of the article and hashtags in the article itself for
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the
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moment).
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- a `Mention` object, for every actor that have been mentionned in this
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article.
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If `object` is a `Note`:
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- `object.content` is the HTML source of the rendered comment.
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- `object.inReplyTo` is the ID of the previous comment in the thread, or of the
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post that is commented if there is no previous comment.
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- `object.spoilerText` is a string to be displayed in place of the comment, unless
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the reader explicitely express their will to see the actual content (what is called
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*Content Warning* in Mastodon)
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- `object.tag` is a list of `Mention` that correspond to the mentionned users.
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#### Delete
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Deletes an object that was first created with a `Create` activity.
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`object` is a `Tombstone`, and `object.id` the ID of the object to delete (either
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an Article ID, or a Note ID).
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#### Follow
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When received, the actor is added to the follower list of the target.
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These activities are immediatly accepted (see [`Accept`](#accept)) by Plume.
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For blogs, they won't actually do anything else than sending back an `Accept`
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activity: following a blog is not yet implemented.
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- `actor` is the ID of an Actor, or a `Person` object. It represent the new
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follower.
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- `object` is the ID of the target user or blog.
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#### Like
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Can be used to add a like to an article.
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- `actor` is the ID of the user liking the article.
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- `object` is the ID of the post being liked.
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#### Update
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Updates an article.
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- `object` is an `Article` object. It has no mandatory field other than `id`. Only
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present fields will be updated.
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- `object.id` is the ID the of the article being updated.
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- `object.title` is the new title of the article.
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- `object.content` is the updated HTML of the article.
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- `object.subtitle` is the updated subtitle of the article.
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- `object.source` is a `Source` object, and its `content` property is the updated
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markdown of the article.
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#### Undo
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Cancels a previous action (either a like, reshare or follow).
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- `object` is the `Announce`, `Follow` or `Like` to undo.
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