Matrix is an ambitious new ecosystem for open federated Instant Messaging and VoIP[1].
Matrix specifies a set of pragmatic RESTful HTTP JSON APIs as an open standard, providing:
- Creating and managing fully distributed chat rooms with no
single points of control or failure
- Eventually-consistent cryptographically secure synchronisation of room
state across a global open network of federated servers and services
- Sending and receiving extensible messages in a room with (optional)
end-to-end encryption[2]
- Inviting, joining, leaving, kicking, banning room members
- Managing user accounts (registration, login, logout)
- Using 3rd Party IDs (3PIDs) such as email addresses, phone numbers,
Facebook accounts to authenticate, identify and discover users on Matrix.
- Placing 1:1 VoIP and Video calls (in development)
These APIs are intended to be implemented on a wide range of servers, services
and clients which then form the Matrix ecosystem, and allow developers to build
messaging and VoIP functionality on top of the open Matrix community rather than
using closed or proprietary solutions. The hope is for Matrix to act as the
building blocks for a new generation of fully open and interoperable messaging
and VoIP apps for the internet.
Synapse is a reference "homeserver" implementation of Matrix from the core
development team at matrix.org, written in Python/Twisted for clarity and
simplicity. It is intended to showcase the concept of Matrix and let folks see
the spec in the context of a codebase and let you run your own homeserver and
generally help bootstrap the ecosystem.
In Matrix, every user runs one or more Matrix clients, which connect through to
a Matrix homeserver which stores all their personal chat history and user
account information - much as a mail client connects through to an IMAP/SMTP
server. Just like email, you can either run your own Matrix homeserver and
control and own your own communications and history or use one hosted by someone
else (e.g. matrix.org) - there is no single point of control or mandatory
service provider in Matrix, unlike WhatsApp, Facebook, Hangouts, etc.
Synapse ships with two basic demo Matrix clients: webclient (a basic group chat web client demo implemented in AngularJS) and cmdclient (a basic Python commandline utility which lets you easily see what the JSON APIs are up to).
We'd like to invite you to take a look at the Matrix spec, try to run a homeserver, and join the existing Matrix chatrooms already out there, experiment with the APIs and the demo clients, and let us know your thoughts at https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues or at matrix@matrix.org.
Thanks for trying Matrix!
[1] VoIP currently in development
[2] End-to-end encryption is currently in development
Directory Structure
===================
::
.
├── cmdclient Basic CLI python Matrix client
├── demo Scripts for running standalone Matrix demos
├── docs All doc, including the draft Matrix API spec
│ ├── client-server The client-server Matrix API spec
│ ├── model Domain-specific elements of the Matrix API spec
│ ├── server-server The server-server model of the Matrix API spec
│ └── sphinx The internal API doc of the Synapse homeserver
├── experiments Early experiments of using Synapse's internal APIs
├── graph Visualisation of Matrix's distributed message store
├── synapse The reference Matrix homeserver implementation
│ ├── api Common building blocks for the APIs
│ │ ├── events Definition of state representation Events
│ │ └── streams Definition of streamable Event objects
│ ├── app The __main__ entry point for the homeserver
│ ├── crypto The PKI client/server used for secure federation
│ │ └── resource PKI helper objects (e.g. keys)
│ ├── federation Server-server state replication logic
│ ├── handlers The main business logic of the homeserver
│ ├── http Wrappers around Twisted's HTTP server & client
│ ├── rest Servlet-style RESTful API
│ ├── storage Persistence subsystem (currently only sqlite3)