Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                        N. Jenkins
Request for Comments: 8620                                      Fastmail
Category: Standards Track                                      C. Newman
ISSN: 2070-1721                                                   Oracle
                                                              July 2019


              The JSON Meta Application Protocol (JMAP)

Abstract

  This document specifies a protocol for clients to efficiently query,
  fetch, and modify JSON-based data objects, with support for push
  notification of changes and fast resynchronisation and for out-of-
  band binary data upload/download.

Status of This Memo

  This is an Internet Standards Track document.

  This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
  (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has
  received public review and has been approved for publication by the
  Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Further information on
  Internet Standards is available in Section 2 of RFC 7841.

  Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
  and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
  https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8620.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (c) 2019 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 Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
  the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
  described in the Simplified BSD License.







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Table of Contents

  1.  Introduction  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   4
    1.1.  Notational Conventions  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   4
    1.2.  The Id Data Type  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   6
    1.3.  The Int and UnsignedInt Data Types  . . . . . . . . . . .   6
    1.4.  The Date and UTCDate Data Types . . . . . . . . . . . . .   7
    1.5.  JSON as the Data Encoding Format  . . . . . . . . . . . .   7
    1.6.  Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   7
      1.6.1.  User  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   7
      1.6.2.  Accounts  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   7
      1.6.3.  Data Types and Records  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   8
    1.7.  The JMAP API Model  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   8
    1.8.  Vendor-Specific Extensions  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   9
  2.  The JMAP Session Resource . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   9
    2.1.  Example . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  14
    2.2.  Service Autodiscovery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  15
  3.  Structured Data Exchange  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  16
    3.1.  Making an API Request . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  16
    3.2.  The Invocation Data Type  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  16
    3.3.  The Request Object  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  16
      3.3.1.  Example Request . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  18
    3.4.  The Response Object . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  18
      3.4.1.  Example Response  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  19
    3.5.  Omitting Arguments  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  19
    3.6.  Errors  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  19
      3.6.1.  Request-Level Errors  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  20
      3.6.2.  Method-Level Errors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  21
    3.7.  References to Previous Method Results . . . . . . . . . .  22
    3.8.  Localisation of User-Visible Strings  . . . . . . . . . .  27
    3.9.  Security  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  28
    3.10. Concurrency . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  28
  4.  The Core/echo Method  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  28
    4.1.  Example . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  28
  5.  Standard Methods and Naming Convention  . . . . . . . . . . .  29
    5.1.  /get  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  29
    5.2.  /changes  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  30
    5.3.  /set  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  34
    5.4.  /copy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  40
    5.5.  /query  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  42
    5.6.  /queryChanges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  48
    5.7.  Examples  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  51
    5.8.  Proxy Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  58
  6.  Binary Data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  58
    6.1.  Uploading Binary Data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  59
    6.2.  Downloading Binary Data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  60
    6.3.  Blob/copy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  61




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  7.  Push  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  62
    7.1.  The StateChange Object  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  63
      7.1.1.  Example . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  64
    7.2.  PushSubscription  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  64
      7.2.1.  PushSubscription/get  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  67
      7.2.2.  PushSubscription/set  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  68
      7.2.3.  Example . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  69
    7.3.  Event Source  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  71
  8.  Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  73
    8.1.  Transport Confidentiality . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  73
    8.2.  Authentication Scheme . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  73
    8.3.  Service Autodiscovery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  73
    8.4.  JSON Parsing  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  74
    8.5.  Denial of Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  74
    8.6.  Connection to Unknown Push Server . . . . . . . . . . . .  74
    8.7.  Push Encryption . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  75
    8.8.  Traffic Analysis  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  76
  9.  IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  76
    9.1.  Assignment of jmap Service Name . . . . . . . . . . . . .  76
    9.2.  Registration of Well-Known URI Suffix for JMAP  . . . . .  76
    9.3.  Registration of the jmap URN Sub-namespace  . . . . . . .  77
    9.4.  Creation of "JMAP Capabilities" Registry  . . . . . . . .  77
      9.4.1.  Preliminary Community Review  . . . . . . . . . . . .  77
      9.4.2.  Submit Request to IANA  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  78
      9.4.3.  Designated Expert Review  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  78
      9.4.4.  Change Procedures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  78
      9.4.5.  JMAP Capabilities Registry Template . . . . . . . . .  79
      9.4.6.  Initial Registration for JMAP Core  . . . . . . . . .  79
      9.4.7.  Registration for JMAP Error Placeholder in JMAP
              Capabilities Registry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  80
    9.5.  Creation of "JMAP Error Codes" Registry . . . . . . . . .  80
      9.5.1.  Expert Review . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  80
      9.5.2.  JMAP Error Codes Registry Template  . . . . . . . . .  81
      9.5.3.  Initial Contents for the JMAP Error Codes Registry  .  81
  10. References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  86
    10.1.  Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  86
    10.2.  Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  89
  Authors' Addresses  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  90













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1.  Introduction

  The JSON Meta Application Protocol (JMAP) is used for synchronising
  data, such as mail, calendars, or contacts, between a client and a
  server.  It is optimised for mobile and web environments and aims to
  provide a consistent interface to different data types.

  This specification is for the generic mechanism of data
  synchronisation.  Further specifications define the data models for
  different data types that may be synchronised via JMAP.

  JMAP is designed to make efficient use of limited network resources.
  Multiple API calls may be batched in a single request to the server,
  reducing round trips and improving battery life on mobile devices.
  Push connections remove the need for polling, and an efficient delta
  update mechanism ensures a minimum amount of data is transferred.

  JMAP is designed to be horizontally scalable to a very large number
  of users.  This is facilitated by separate endpoints for users after
  login, the separation of binary and structured data, and a data model
  for sharing that does not allow data dependencies between accounts.

1.1.  Notational Conventions

  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 underlying format used for this specification is JSON.
  Consequently, the terms "object" and "array" as well as the four
  primitive types (strings, numbers, booleans, and null) are to be
  interpreted as described in Section 1 of [RFC8259].  Unless otherwise
  noted, all the property names and values are case sensitive.

  Some examples in this document contain "partial" JSON documents used
  for illustrative purposes.  In these examples, three periods "..."
  are used to indicate a portion of the document that has been removed
  for compactness.

  For compatibility with publishing requirements, line breaks have been
  inserted inside long JSON strings, with the following continuation
  lines indented.  To form the valid JSON example, any line breaks
  inside a string must be replaced with a space and any other white
  space after the line break removed.





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  Unless otherwise specified, examples of API exchanges only show the
  methodCalls array of the Request object or the methodResponses array
  of the Response object.  For compactness, the rest of the Request/
  Response object is omitted.

  Type signatures are given for all JSON values in this document.  The
  following conventions are used:

  o  "*" - The type is undefined (the value could be any type, although
     permitted values may be constrained by the context of this value).

  o  "String" - The JSON string type.

  o  "Number" - The JSON number type.

  o  "Boolean" - The JSON boolean type.

  o  "A[B]" - A JSON object where the keys are all of type "A", and the
     values are all of type "B".

  o  "A[]" - An array of values of type "A".

  o  "A|B" - The value is either of type "A" or of type "B".

  Other types may also be given, with their representation defined
  elsewhere in this document.

  Object properties may also have a set of attributes defined along
  with the type signature.  These have the following meanings:

  o  "server-set" -- Only the server can set the value for this
     property.  The client MUST NOT send this property when creating a
     new object of this type.

  o  "immutable" -- The value MUST NOT change after the object is
     created.

  o  "default" -- (This is followed by a JSON value).  The value that
     will be used for this property if it is omitted in an argument or
     when creating a new object of this type.











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1.2.  The Id Data Type

  All record ids are assigned by the server and are immutable.

  Where "Id" is given as a data type, it means a "String" of at least 1
  and a maximum of 255 octets in size, and it MUST only contain
  characters from the "URL and Filename Safe" base64 alphabet, as
  defined in Section 5 of [RFC4648], excluding the pad character ("=").
  This means the allowed characters are the ASCII alphanumeric
  characters ("A-Za-z0-9"), hyphen ("-"), and underscore ("_").

  These characters are safe to use in almost any context (e.g.,
  filesystems, URIs, and IMAP atoms).  For maximum safety, servers
  SHOULD also follow defensive allocation strategies to avoid creating
  risks where glob completion or data type detection may be present
  (e.g., on filesystems or in spreadsheets).  In particular, it is wise
  to avoid:

  o  Ids starting with a dash

  o  Ids starting with digits

  o  Ids that contain only digits

  o  Ids that differ only by ASCII case (for example, A vs. a)

  o  the specific sequence of three characters "NIL" (because this
     sequence can be confused with the IMAP protocol expression of the
     null value)

  A good solution to these issues is to prefix every id with a single
  alphabetical character.

1.3.  The Int and UnsignedInt Data Types

  Where "Int" is given as a data type, it means an integer in the range
  -2^53+1 <= value <= 2^53-1, the safe range for integers stored in a
  floating-point double, represented as a JSON "Number".

  Where "UnsignedInt" is given as a data type, it means an "Int" where
  the value MUST be in the range 0 <= value <= 2^53-1.










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1.4.  The Date and UTCDate Data Types

  Where "Date" is given as a type, it means a string in "date-time"
  format [RFC3339].  To ensure a normalised form, the "time-secfrac"
  MUST always be omitted if zero, and any letters in the string (e.g.,
  "T" and "Z") MUST be uppercase.  For example,
  "2014-10-30T14:12:00+08:00".

  Where "UTCDate" is given as a type, it means a "Date" where the
  "time-offset" component MUST be "Z" (i.e., it must be in UTC time).
  For example, "2014-10-30T06:12:00Z".

1.5.  JSON as the Data Encoding Format

  JSON is a text-based data interchange format as specified in
  [RFC8259].  The Internet JSON (I-JSON) format defined in [RFC7493] is
  a strict subset of this, adding restrictions to avoid potentially
  confusing scenarios (for example, it mandates that an object MUST NOT
  have two members with the same name).

  All data sent from the client to the server or from the server to the
  client (except binary file upload/download) MUST be valid I-JSON
  according to the RFC and is therefore case sensitive and encoded in
  UTF-8 [RFC3629].

1.6.  Terminology

1.6.1.  User

  A user is a person accessing data via JMAP.  A user has a set of
  permissions determining the data that they can see.

1.6.2.  Accounts

  An account is a collection of data.  A single account may contain an
  arbitrary set of data types, for example, a collection of mail,
  contacts, and calendars.  Most JMAP methods take a mandatory
  "accountId" argument that specifies on which account the operations
  are to take place.

  An account is not the same as a user, although it is common for a
  primary account to directly belong to the user.  For example, you may
  have an account that contains data for a group or business, to which
  multiple users have access.







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  A single set of credentials may provide access to multiple accounts,
  for example, if another user is sharing their work calendar with the
  authenticated user or if there is a group mailbox for a support-desk
  inbox.

  In the event of a severe internal error, a server may have to
  reallocate ids or do something else that violates standard JMAP data
  constraints for an account.  In this situation, the data on the
  server is no longer compatible with cached data the client may have
  from before.  The server MUST treat this as though the account has
  been deleted and then recreated with a new account id.  Clients will
  then be forced to throw away any data with the old account id and
  refetch all data from scratch.

1.6.3.  Data Types and Records

  JMAP provides a uniform interface for creating, retrieving, updating,
  and deleting various types of objects.  A "data type" is a collection
  of named, typed properties, just like the schema for a database
  table.  Each instance of a data type is called a "record".

  The id of a record is immutable and assigned by the server.  The id
  MUST be unique among all records of the *same type* within the *same
  account*.  Ids may clash across accounts or for two records of
  different types within the same account.

1.7.  The JMAP API Model

  JMAP uses HTTP [RFC7230] to expose API, push, upload, and download
  resources.  All HTTP requests MUST use the "https://" scheme (HTTP
  over TLS [RFC2818]).  All HTTP requests MUST be authenticated.

  An authenticated client can fetch the user's Session object with
  details about the data and capabilities the server can provide as
  shown in Section 2.  The client may then exchange data with the
  server in the following ways:

  1.  The client may make an API request to the server to get or set
      structured data.  This request consists of an ordered series of
      method calls.  These are processed by the server, which then
      returns an ordered series of responses.  This is described in
      Sections 3, 4, and 5.

  2.  The client may download or upload binary files from/to the
      server.  This is detailed in Section 6.

  3.  The client may connect to a push channel on the server, to be
      notified when data has changed.  This is explained in Section 7.



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1.8.  Vendor-Specific Extensions

  Individual services will have custom features they wish to expose
  over JMAP.  This may take the form of extra data types and/or methods
  not in the spec, extra arguments to JMAP methods, or extra properties
  on existing data types (which may also appear in arguments to methods
  that take property names).

  The server can advertise custom extensions it supports by including
  the identifiers in the capabilities object.  Identifiers for vendor
  extensions MUST be a URL belonging to a domain owned by the vendor,
  to avoid conflict.  The URL SHOULD resolve to documentation for the
  changes the extension makes.

  The client MUST opt in to use an extension by passing the appropriate
  capability identifier in the "using" array of the Request object, as
  described in Section 3.3.  The server MUST only follow the
  specifications that are opted into and behave as though it does not
  implement anything else when processing a request.  This is to ensure
  compatibility with clients that don't know about a specific custom
  extension and for compatibility with future versions of JMAP.

2.  The JMAP Session Resource

  You need two things to connect to a JMAP server:

  1.  The URL for the JMAP Session resource.  This may be requested
      directly from the user or discovered automatically based on a
      username domain (see Section 2.2 below).

  2.  Credentials to authenticate with.  How to obtain credentials is
      out of scope for this document.

  A successful authenticated GET request to the JMAP Session resource
  MUST return a JSON-encoded *Session* object, giving details about the
  data and capabilities the server can provide to the client given
  those credentials.  It has the following properties:

  o  capabilities: "String[Object]"

     An object specifying the capabilities of this server.  Each key is
     a URI for a capability supported by the server.  The value for
     each of these keys is an object with further information about the
     server's capabilities in relation to that capability.

     The client MUST ignore any properties it does not understand.





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     The capabilities object MUST include a property called
     "urn:ietf:params:jmap:core".  The value of this property is an
     object that MUST contain the following information on server
     capabilities (suggested minimum values for limits are supplied
     that allow clients to make efficient use of the network):

     *  maxSizeUpload: "UnsignedInt"

        The maximum file size, in octets, that the server will accept
        for a single file upload (for any purpose).  Suggested minimum:
        50,000,000.

     *  maxConcurrentUpload: "UnsignedInt"

        The maximum number of concurrent requests the server will
        accept to the upload endpoint.  Suggested minimum: 4.

     *  maxSizeRequest: "UnsignedInt"

        The maximum size, in octets, that the server will accept for a
        single request to the API endpoint.  Suggested minimum:
        10,000,000.

     *  maxConcurrentRequests: "UnsignedInt"

        The maximum number of concurrent requests the server will
        accept to the API endpoint.  Suggested minimum: 4.

     *  maxCallsInRequest: "UnsignedInt"

        The maximum number of method calls the server will accept in a
        single request to the API endpoint.  Suggested minimum: 16.

     *  maxObjectsInGet: "UnsignedInt"

        The maximum number of objects that the client may request in a
        single /get type method call.  Suggested minimum: 500.

     *  maxObjectsInSet: "UnsignedInt"

        The maximum number of objects the client may send to create,
        update, or destroy in a single /set type method call.  This is
        the combined total, e.g., if the maximum is 10, you could not
        create 7 objects and destroy 6, as this would be 13 actions,
        which exceeds the limit.  Suggested minimum: 500.






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     *  collationAlgorithms: "String[]"

        A list of identifiers for algorithms registered in the
        collation registry, as defined in [RFC4790], that the server
        supports for sorting when querying records.

     Specifications for future capabilities will define their own
     properties on the capabilities object.

     Servers MAY advertise vendor-specific JMAP extensions, as
     described in Section 1.8.  To avoid conflict, an identifier for a
     vendor-specific extension MUST be a URL with a domain owned by the
     vendor.  Clients MUST opt in to any capability it wishes to use
     (see Section 3.3).

  o  accounts: "Id[Account]"

     A map of an account id to an Account object for each account (see
     Section 1.6.2) the user has access to.  An *Account* object has
     the following properties:

     *  name: "String"

        A user-friendly string to show when presenting content from
        this account, e.g., the email address representing the owner of
        the account.

     *  isPersonal: "Boolean"

        This is true if the account belongs to the authenticated user
        rather than a group account or a personal account of another
        user that has been shared with them.

     *  isReadOnly: "Boolean"

        This is true if the entire account is read-only.

     *  accountCapabilities: "String[Object]"

        The set of capability URIs for the methods supported in this
        account.  Each key is a URI for a capability that has methods
        you can use with this account.  The value for each of these
        keys is an object with further information about the account's
        permissions and restrictions with respect to this capability,
        as defined in the capability's specification.

        The client MUST ignore any properties it does not understand.




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        The server advertises the full list of capabilities it supports
        in the capabilities object, as defined above.  If the
        capability defines new methods, the server MUST include it in
        the accountCapabilities object if the user may use those
        methods with this account.  It MUST NOT include it in the
        accountCapabilities object if the user cannot use those methods
        with this account.

        For example, you may have access to your own account with mail,
        calendars, and contacts data and also a shared account that
        only has contacts data (a business address book, for example).
        In this case, the accountCapabilities property on the first
        account would include something like
        "urn:ietf:params:jmap:mail", "urn:ietf:params:jmap:calendars",
        and "urn:ietf:params:jmap:contacts", while the second account
        would just have the last of these.

        Attempts to use the methods defined in a capability with one of
        the accounts that does not support that capability are rejected
        with an "accountNotSupportedByMethod" error (see "Method-Level
        Errors", Section 3.6.2).

  o  primaryAccounts: "String[Id]"

     A map of capability URIs (as found in accountCapabilities) to the
     account id that is considered to be the user's main or default
     account for data pertaining to that capability.  If no account
     being returned belongs to the user, or in any other way there is
     no appropriate way to determine a default account, there MAY be no
     entry for a particular URI, even though that capability is
     supported by the server (and in the capabilities object).
     "urn:ietf:params:jmap:core" SHOULD NOT be present.

  o  username: "String"

     The username associated with the given credentials, or the empty
     string if none.

  o  apiUrl: "String"

     The URL to use for JMAP API requests.










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  o  downloadUrl: "String"

     The URL endpoint to use when downloading files, in URI Template
     (level 1) format [RFC6570].  The URL MUST contain variables called
     "accountId", "blobId", "type", and "name".  The use of these
     variables is described in Section 6.2.  Due to potential encoding
     issues with slashes in content types, it is RECOMMENDED to put the
     "type" variable in the query section of the URL.

  o  uploadUrl: "String"

     The URL endpoint to use when uploading files, in URI Template
     (level 1) format [RFC6570].  The URL MUST contain a variable
     called "accountId".  The use of this variable is described in
     Section 6.1.

  o  eventSourceUrl: "String"

     The URL to connect to for push events, as described in
     Section 7.3, in URI Template (level 1) format [RFC6570].  The URL
     MUST contain variables called "types", "closeafter", and "ping".
     The use of these variables is described in Section 7.3.

  o  state: "String"

     A (preferably short) string representing the state of this object
     on the server.  If the value of any other property on the Session
     object changes, this string will change.  The current value is
     also returned on the API Response object (see Section 3.4),
     allowing clients to quickly determine if the session information
     has changed (e.g., an account has been added or removed), so they
     need to refetch the object.

  To ensure future compatibility, other properties MAY be included on
  the Session object.  Clients MUST ignore any properties they are not
  expecting.

  Implementors must take care to avoid inappropriate caching of the
  Session object at the HTTP layer.  Since the client should only
  refetch when it detects there is a change (via the sessionState
  property of an API response), it is RECOMMENDED to disable HTTP
  caching altogether, for example, by setting "Cache-Control: no-cache,
  no-store, must-revalidate" on the response.








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2.1.  Example

  In the following example Session object, the user has access to their
  own mail and contacts via JMAP, as well as read-only access to shared
  mail from another user.  The server is advertising a custom
  "https://example.com/apis/foobar" capability.

  {
    "capabilities": {
      "urn:ietf:params:jmap:core": {
        "maxSizeUpload": 50000000,
        "maxConcurrentUpload": 8,
        "maxSizeRequest": 10000000,
        "maxConcurrentRequest": 8,
        "maxCallsInRequest": 32,
        "maxObjectsInGet": 256,
        "maxObjectsInSet": 128,
        "collationAlgorithms": [
          "i;ascii-numeric",
          "i;ascii-casemap",
          "i;unicode-casemap"
        ]
      },
      "urn:ietf:params:jmap:mail": {}
      "urn:ietf:params:jmap:contacts": {},
      "https://example.com/apis/foobar": {
        "maxFoosFinangled": 42
      }
    },
    "accounts": {
      "A13824": {
        "name": "[email protected]",
        "isPersonal": true,
        "isReadOnly": false,
        "accountCapabilities": {
          "urn:ietf:params:jmap:mail": {
            "maxMailboxesPerEmail": null,
            "maxMailboxDepth": 10,
            ...
          },
          "urn:ietf:params:jmap:contacts": {
            ...
          }
        }
      },






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      "A97813": {
        "name": "[email protected]",
        "isPersonal": false,
        "isReadOnly": true,
        "accountCapabilities": {
          "urn:ietf:params:jmap:mail": {
            "maxMailboxesPerEmail": 1,
            "maxMailboxDepth": 10,
            ...
          }
        }
      }
    },
    "primaryAccounts": {
      "urn:ietf:params:jmap:mail": "A13824",
      "urn:ietf:params:jmap:contacts": "A13824"
    },
    "username": "[email protected]",
    "apiUrl": "https://jmap.example.com/api/",
    "downloadUrl": "https://jmap.example.com
      /download/{accountId}/{blobId}/{name}?accept={type}",
    "uploadUrl": "https://jmap.example.com/upload/{accountId}/",
    "eventSourceUrl": "https://jmap.example.com
      /eventsource/?types={types}&closeafter={closeafter}&ping={ping}",
    "state": "75128aab4b1b"
  }

2.2.  Service Autodiscovery

  There are two standardised autodiscovery methods in use for Internet
  protocols:

  o  DNS SRV (see [RFC2782], [RFC6186], and [RFC6764])

  o  .well-known/servicename (see [RFC8615])

  A JMAP-supporting host for the domain "example.com" SHOULD publish a
  SRV record "_jmap._tcp.example.com" that gives a hostname and port
  (usually port "443").  The JMAP Session resource is then
  "https://${hostname}[:${port}]/.well-known/jmap" (following any
  redirects).

  If the client has a username in the form of an email address, it MAY
  use the domain portion of this to attempt autodiscovery of the JMAP
  server.






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3.  Structured Data Exchange

  The client may make an API request to the server to get or set
  structured data.  This request consists of an ordered series of
  method calls.  These are processed by the server, which then returns
  an ordered series of responses.

3.1.  Making an API Request

  To make an API request, the client makes an authenticated POST
  request to the API resource, which is defined by the "apiUrl"
  property in the Session object (see Section 2).

  The request MUST be of type "application/json" and consist of a
  single JSON-encoded "Request" object, as defined in Section 3.3.  If
  successful, the response MUST also be of type "application/json" and
  consist of a single "Response" object, as defined in Section 3.4.

3.2.  The Invocation Data Type

  Method calls and responses are represented by the *Invocation* data
  type.  This is a tuple, represented as a JSON array containing three
  elements:

  1.  A "String" *name* of the method to call or of the response.

  2.  A "String[*]" object containing named *arguments* for that method
      or response.

  3.  A "String" *method call id*: an arbitrary string from the client
      to be echoed back with the responses emitted by that method call
      (a method may return 1 or more responses, as it may make implicit
      calls to other methods; all responses initiated by this method
      call get the same method call id in the response).

3.3.  The Request Object

  A *Request* object has the following properties:

  o  using: "String[]"

     The set of capabilities the client wishes to use.  The client MAY
     include capability identifiers even if the method calls it makes
     do not utilise those capabilities.  The server advertises the set
     of specifications it supports in the Session object (see
     Section 2), as keys on the "capabilities" property.





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  o  methodCalls: "Invocation[]"

     An array of method calls to process on the server.  The method
     calls MUST be processed sequentially, in order.

  o  createdIds: "Id[Id]" (optional)

     A map of a (client-specified) creation id to the id the server
     assigned when a record was successfully created.

     As described later in this specification, some records may have a
     property that contains the id of another record.  To allow more
     efficient network usage, you can set this property to reference a
     record created earlier in the same API request.  Since the real id
     is unknown when the request is created, the client can instead
     specify the creation id it assigned, prefixed with a "#" (see
     Section 5.3 for more details).

     As the server processes API requests, any time it successfully
     creates a new record, it adds the creation id to this map (see the
     "create" argument to /set in Section 5.3), with the server-
     assigned real id as the value.  If it comes across a reference to
     a creation id in a create/update, it looks it up in the map and
     replaces the reference with the real id, if found.

     The client can pass an initial value for this map as the
     "createdIds" property of the Request object.  This may be an empty
     object.  If given in the request, the response will also include a
     createdIds property.  This allows proxy servers to easily split a
     JMAP request into multiple JMAP requests to send to different
     servers.  For example, it could send the first two method calls to
     server A, then the third to server B, before sending the fourth to
     server A again.  By passing the createdIds of the previous
     response to the next request, it can ensure all of these still
     resolve.  See Section 5.8 for further discussion of proxy
     considerations.

  Future specifications MAY add further properties to the Request
  object to extend the semantics.  To ensure forwards compatibility, a
  server MUST ignore any other properties it does not understand on the
  JMAP Request object.










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3.3.1.  Example Request

{
 "using": [ "urn:ietf:params:jmap:core", "urn:ietf:params:jmap:mail" ],
 "methodCalls": [
   [ "method1", {
     "arg1": "arg1data",
     "arg2": "arg2data"
   }, "c1" ],
   [ "method2", {
     "arg1": "arg1data"
   }, "c2" ],
   [ "method3", {}, "c3" ]
 ]
}

3.4.  The Response Object

  A *Response* object has the following properties:

  o  methodResponses: "Invocation[]"

     An array of responses, in the same format as the "methodCalls" on
     the Request object.  The output of the methods MUST be added to
     the "methodResponses" array in the same order that the methods are
     processed.

  o  createdIds: "Id[Id]" (optional; only returned if given in the
     request)

     A map of a (client-specified) creation id to the id the server
     assigned when a record was successfully created.  This MUST
     include all creation ids passed in the original createdIds
     parameter of the Request object, as well as any additional ones
     added for newly created records.

  o  sessionState: "String"

     The current value of the "state" string on the Session object, as
     described in Section 2.  Clients may use this to detect if this
     object has changed and needs to be refetched.

  Unless otherwise specified, if the method call completed
  successfully, its response name is the same as the method name in the
  request.






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3.4.1.  Example Response

                  {
                    "methodResponses": [
                      [ "method1", {
                        "arg1": 3,
                        "arg2": "foo"
                      }, "c1" ],
                      [ "method2", {
                        "isBlah": true
                      }, "c2" ],
                      [ "anotherResponseFromMethod2", {
                        "data": 10,
                        "yetmoredata": "Hello"
                      }, "c2"],
                      [ "error", {
                        "type":"unknownMethod"
                      }, "c3" ]
                    ],
                    "sessionState": "75128aab4b1b"
                  }

3.5.  Omitting Arguments

  An argument to a method may be specified to have a default value.  If
  omitted by the client, the server MUST treat the method call the same
  as if the default value had been specified.  Similarly, the server
  MAY omit any argument in a response that has the default value.

  Unless otherwise specified in a method description, null is the
  default value for any argument in a request or response where this is
  allowed by the type signature.  Other arguments may only be omitted
  if an explicit default value is defined in the method description.

3.6.  Errors

  There are three different levels of granularity at which an error may
  be returned in JMAP.

  When an API request is made, the request as a whole may be rejected
  due to rate limiting, malformed JSON, request for an unknown
  capability, etc.  In this case, the entire request is rejected with
  an appropriate HTTP error response code and an additional JSON body
  with more detail for the client.

  Provided the request itself is syntactically valid (the JSON is valid
  and when decoded, it matches the type signature of a Request object),
  the methods within it are executed sequentially by the server.  Each



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  method may individually fail, for example, if invalid arguments are
  given or an unknown method name is called.

  Finally, methods that make changes to the server state often act upon
  a number of different records within a single call.  Each record
  change may be separately rejected with a SetError, as described in
  Section 5.3.

3.6.1.  Request-Level Errors

  When an HTTP error response is returned to the client, the server
  SHOULD return a JSON "problem details" object as the response body,
  as per [RFC7807].

  The following problem types are defined:

  o  "urn:ietf:params:jmap:error:unknownCapability"
     The client included a capability in the "using" property of the
     request that the server does not support.

  o  "urn:ietf:params:jmap:error:notJSON"
     The content type of the request was not "application/json" or the
     request did not parse as I-JSON.

  o  "urn:ietf:params:jmap:error:notRequest"
     The request parsed as JSON but did not match the type signature of
     the Request object.

  o  "urn:ietf:params:jmap:error:limit"
     The request was not processed as it would have exceeded one of the
     request limits defined on the capability object, such as
     maxSizeRequest, maxCallsInRequest, or maxConcurrentRequests.  A
     "limit" property MUST also be present on the "problem details"
     object, containing the name of the limit being applied.

3.6.1.1.  Example

      {
        "type": "urn:ietf:params:jmap:error:unknownCapability",
        "status": 400,
        "detail": "The Request object used capability
          'https://example.com/apis/foobar', which is not supported
          by this server."
      }







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  Another example:

    {
      "type": "urn:ietf:params:jmap:error:limit",
      "limit": "maxSizeRequest",
      "status": 400,
      "detail": "The request is larger than the server is willing to
                 process."
    }

3.6.2.  Method-Level Errors

  If a method encounters an error, the appropriate "error" response
  MUST be inserted at the current point in the "methodResponses" array
  and, unless otherwise specified, further processing MUST NOT happen
  within that method call.

  Any further method calls in the request MUST then be processed as
  normal.  Errors at the method level MUST NOT generate an HTTP-level
  error.

  An "error" response looks like this:

                        [ "error", {
                          "type": "unknownMethod"
                        }, "call-id" ]

  The response name is "error", and it MUST have a type property.
  Other properties may be present with further information; these are
  detailed in the error type descriptions where appropriate.

  With the exception of when the "serverPartialFail" error is returned,
  the externally visible state of the server MUST NOT have changed if
  an error is returned at the method level.

  The following error types are defined, which may be returned for any
  method call where appropriate:

  "serverUnavailable": Some internal server resource was temporarily
  unavailable.  Attempting the same operation later (perhaps after a
  backoff with a random factor) may succeed.

  "serverFail": An unexpected or unknown error occurred during the
  processing of the call.  A "description" property should provide more
  details about the error.  The method call made no changes to the
  server's state.  Attempting the same operation again is expected to
  fail again.  Contacting the service administrator is likely necessary
  to resolve this problem if it is persistent.



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  "serverPartialFail": Some, but not all, expected changes described by
  the method occurred.  The client MUST resynchronise impacted data to
  determine server state.  Use of this error is strongly discouraged.

  "unknownMethod": The server does not recognise this method name.

  "invalidArguments": One of the arguments is of the wrong type or is
  otherwise invalid, or a required argument is missing.  A
  "description" property MAY be present to help debug with an
  explanation of what the problem was.  This is a non-localised string,
  and it is not intended to be shown directly to end users.

  "invalidResultReference": The method used a result reference for one
  of its arguments (see Section 3.7), but this failed to resolve.

  "forbidden": The method and arguments are valid, but executing the
  method would violate an Access Control List (ACL) or other
  permissions policy.

  "accountNotFound": The accountId does not correspond to a valid
  account.

  "accountNotSupportedByMethod": The accountId given corresponds to a
  valid account, but the account does not support this method or data
  type.

  "accountReadOnly": This method modifies state, but the account is
  read-only (as returned on the corresponding Account object in the
  JMAP Session resource).

  Further possible errors for a particular method are specified in the
  method descriptions.

  Further general errors MAY be defined in future RFCs.  Should a
  client receive an error type it does not understand, it MUST treat it
  the same as the "serverFail" type.

3.7.  References to Previous Method Results

  To allow clients to make more efficient use of the network and avoid
  round trips, an argument to one method can be taken from the result
  of a previous method call in the same request.

  To do this, the client prefixes the argument name with "#" (an
  octothorpe).  The value is a ResultReference object as described
  below.  When processing a method call, the server MUST first check
  the arguments object for any names beginning with "#".  If found, the
  result reference should be resolved and the value used as the "real"



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  argument.  The method is then processed as normal.  If any result
  reference fails to resolve, the whole method MUST be rejected with an
  "invalidResultReference" error.  If an arguments object contains the
  same argument name in normal and referenced form (e.g., "foo" and
  "#foo"), the method MUST return an "invalidArguments" error.

  A *ResultReference* object has the following properties:

  o  resultOf: "String"

     The method call id (see Section 3.2) of a previous method call in
     the current request.

  o  name: "String"

     The required name of a response to that method call.

  o  path: "String"

     A pointer into the arguments of the response selected via the name
     and resultOf properties.  This is a JSON Pointer [RFC6901], except
     it also allows the use of "*" to map through an array (see the
     description below).

  To resolve:

  1.  Find the first response with a method call id identical to the
      "resultOf" property of the ResultReference in the
      "methodResponses" array from previously processed method calls in
      the same request.  If none, evaluation fails.

  2.  If the response name is not identical to the "name" property of
      the ResultReference, evaluation fails.

  3.  Apply the "path" to the arguments object of the response (the
      second item in the response array) following the JSON Pointer
      algorithm [RFC6901], except with the following addition in
      "Evaluation" (see Section 4):

      If the currently referenced value is a JSON array, the reference
      token may be exactly the single character "*", making the new
      referenced value the result of applying the rest of the JSON
      Pointer tokens to every item in the array and returning the
      results in the same order in a new array.  If the result of
      applying the rest of the pointer tokens to each item was itself
      an array, the contents of this array are added to the output
      rather than the array itself (i.e., the result is flattened from
      an array of arrays to a single array).  If the result of applying



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      the rest of the pointer tokens to a value was itself an array,
      its items should be included individually in the output rather
      than including the array itself (i.e., the result is flattened
      from an array of arrays to a single array).

  As a simple example, suppose we have the following API request
  "methodCalls":

                     [[ "Foo/changes", {
                         "accountId": "A1",
                         "sinceState": "abcdef"
                     }, "t0" ],
                     [ "Foo/get", {
                         "accountId": "A1",
                         "#ids": {
                             "resultOf": "t0",
                             "name": "Foo/changes",
                             "path": "/created"
                         }
                     }, "t1" ]]

  After executing the first method call, the "methodResponses" array
  is:

                     [[ "Foo/changes", {
                         "accountId": "A1",
                         "oldState": "abcdef",
                         "newState": "123456",
                         "hasMoreChanges": false,
                         "created": [ "f1", "f4" ],
                         "updated": [],
                         "destroyed": []
                     }, "t0" ]]

  To execute the "Foo/get" call, we look through the arguments and find
  there is one with a "#" prefix.  To resolve this, we apply the
  algorithm above:

  1.  Find the first response with method call id "t0".  The "Foo/
      changes" response fulfils this criterion.

  2.  Check that the response name is the same as in the result
      reference.  It is, so this is fine.

  3.  Apply the "path" as a JSON Pointer to the arguments object.  This
      simply selects the "created" property, so the result of
      evaluating is: [ "f1", "f4" ].




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  The JMAP server now continues to process the "Foo/get" call as though
  the arguments were:

                        {
                            "accountId": "A1",
                            "ids": [ "f1", "f4" ]
                        }

  Now, a more complicated example using the JMAP Mail data model: fetch
  the "from"/"date"/"subject" for every Email in the first 10 Threads
  in the inbox (sorted newest first):

     [[ "Email/query", {
       "accountId": "A1",
       "filter": { "inMailbox": "id_of_inbox" },
       "sort": [{ "property": "receivedAt", "isAscending": false }],
       "collapseThreads": true,
       "position": 0,
       "limit": 10,
       "calculateTotal": true
     }, "t0" ],
     [ "Email/get", {
       "accountId": "A1",
       "#ids": {
         "resultOf": "t0",
         "name": "Email/query",
         "path": "/ids"
       },
       "properties": [ "threadId" ]
     }, "t1" ],
     [ "Thread/get", {
       "accountId": "A1",
       "#ids": {
         "resultOf": "t1",
         "name": "Email/get",
         "path": "/list/*/threadId"
       }
     }, "t2" ],
     [ "Email/get", {
       "accountId": "A1",
       "#ids": {
         "resultOf": "t2",
         "name": "Thread/get",
         "path": "/list/*/emailIds"
       },
       "properties": [ "from", "receivedAt", "subject" ]
     }, "t3" ]]




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  After executing the first 3 method calls, the "methodResponses" array
  might be:

      [[ "Email/query", {
          "accountId": "A1",
          "queryState": "abcdefg",
          "canCalculateChanges": true,
          "position": 0,
          "total": 101,
          "ids": [ "msg1023", "msg223", "msg110", "msg93", "msg91",
              "msg38", "msg36", "msg33", "msg11", "msg1" ]
      }, "t0" ],
      [ "Email/get", {
          "accountId": "A1",
          "state": "123456",
          "list": [{
              "id": "msg1023",
              "threadId": "trd194"
          }, {
              "id": "msg223",
              "threadId": "trd114"
          },
          ...
          ],
          "notFound": []
      }, "t1" ],
      [ "Thread/get", {
          "accountId": "A1",
          "state": "123456",
          "list": [{
              "id": "trd194",
              "emailIds": [ "msg1020", "msg1021", "msg1023" ]
          }, {
              "id": "trd114",
              "emailIds": [ "msg201", "msg223" ]
          },
          ...
          ],
          "notFound": []
      }, "t2" ]]

  To execute the final "Email/get" call, we look through the arguments
  and find there is one with a "#" prefix.  To resolve this, we apply
  the algorithm:

  1.  Find the first response with method call id "t2".  The "Thread/
      get" response fulfils this criterion.




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  2.  "Thread/get" is the name specified in the result reference, so
      this is fine.

  3.  Apply the "path" as a JSON Pointer to the arguments object.
      Token by token:

      1.  "list": get the array of thread objects

      2.  "*": for each of the items in the array:

          a.  "emailIds": get the array of Email ids

          b.  Concatenate these into a single array of all the ids in
              the result.

  The JMAP server now continues to process the "Email/get" call as
  though the arguments were:

{
   "accountId": "A1",
   "ids": [ "msg1020", "msg1021", "msg1023", "msg201", "msg223", ... ],
   "properties": [ "from", "receivedAt", "subject" ]
}

  The ResultReference performs a similar role to that of the creation
  id, in that it allows a chained method call to refer to information
  not available when the request is generated.  However, they are
  different things and not interchangeable; the only commonality is the
  octothorpe used to indicate them.

3.8.  Localisation of User-Visible Strings

  If returning a custom string to be displayed to the user, for
  example, an error message, the server SHOULD use information from the
  Accept-Language header of the request (as defined in Section 5.3.5 of
  [RFC7231]) to choose the best available localisation.  The Content-
  Language header of the response (see Section 3.1.3.2 of [RFC7231])
  SHOULD indicate the language being used for user-visible strings.

  For example, suppose a request was made with the following header:

      Accept-Language: fr-CH, fr;q=0.9, de;q=0.8, en;q=0.7, *;q=0.5

  and a method generated an error to display to the user.  The server
  has translations of the error message in English and German.  Looking
  at the Accept-Language header, the user's preferred language is
  French.  Since we don't have a translation for this, we look at the




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  next most preferred, which is German.  We have a German translation,
  so the server returns this and indicates the language chosen in a
  Content-Language header like so:

                          Content-Language: de

3.9.  Security

  As always, the server must be strict about data received from the
  client.  Arguments need to be checked for validity; a malicious user
  could attempt to find an exploit through the API.  In case of invalid
  arguments (unknown/insufficient/wrong type for data, etc.), the
  method MUST return an "invalidArguments" error and terminate.

3.10.  Concurrency

  Method calls within a single request MUST be executed in order.
  However, method calls from different concurrent API requests may be
  interleaved.  This means that the data on the server may change
  between two method calls within a single API request.

4.  The Core/echo Method

  The "Core/echo" method returns exactly the same arguments as it is
  given.  It is useful for testing if you have a valid authenticated
  connection to a JMAP API endpoint.

4.1.  Example

  Request:

                            [[ "Core/echo", {
                              "hello": true,
                              "high": 5
                            }, "b3ff" ]]

  Response:

                            [[ "Core/echo", {
                              "hello": true,
                              "high": 5
                            }, "b3ff" ]]









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5.  Standard Methods and Naming Convention

  JMAP provides a uniform interface for creating, retrieving, updating,
  and deleting objects of a particular type.  For a "Foo" data type,
  records of that type would be fetched via a "Foo/get" call and
  modified via a "Foo/set" call.  Delta updates may be fetched via a
  "Foo/changes" call.  These methods all follow a standard format as
  described below.

  Some types may not have all these methods.  Specifications defining
  types MUST specify which methods are available for the type.

5.1.  /get

  Objects of type Foo are fetched via a call to "Foo/get".

  It takes the following arguments:

  o  accountId: "Id"

     The id of the account to use.

  o  ids: "Id[]|null"

     The ids of the Foo objects to return.  If null, then *all* records
     of the data type are returned, if this is supported for that data
     type and the number of records does not exceed the
     "maxObjectsInGet" limit.

  o  properties: "String[]|null"

     If supplied, only the properties listed in the array are returned
     for each Foo object.  If null, all properties of the object are
     returned.  The id property of the object is *always* returned,
     even if not explicitly requested.  If an invalid property is
     requested, the call MUST be rejected with an "invalidArguments"
     error.

  The response has the following arguments:

  o  accountId: "Id"

     The id of the account used for the call.








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  o  state: "String"

     A (preferably short) string representing the state on the server
     for *all* the data of this type in the account (not just the
     objects returned in this call).  If the data changes, this string
     MUST change.  If the Foo data is unchanged, servers SHOULD return
     the same state string on subsequent requests for this data type.
     When a client receives a response with a different state string to
     a previous call, it MUST either throw away all currently cached
     objects for the type or call "Foo/changes" to get the exact
     changes.

  o  list: "Foo[]"

     An array of the Foo objects requested.  This is the *empty array*
     if no objects were found or if the "ids" argument passed in was
     also an empty array.  The results MAY be in a different order to
     the "ids" in the request arguments.  If an identical id is
     included more than once in the request, the server MUST only
     include it once in either the "list" or the "notFound" argument of
     the response.

  o  notFound: "Id[]"

     This array contains the ids passed to the method for records that
     do not exist.  The array is empty if all requested ids were found
     or if the "ids" argument passed in was either null or an empty
     array.

  The following additional error may be returned instead of the "Foo/
  get" response:

  "requestTooLarge": The number of ids requested by the client exceeds
  the maximum number the server is willing to process in a single
  method call.

5.2.  /changes

  When the state of the set of Foo records in an account changes on the
  server (whether due to creation, updates, or deletion), the "state"
  property of the "Foo/get" response will change.  The "Foo/changes"
  method allows a client to efficiently update the state of its Foo
  cache to match the new state on the server.  It takes the following
  arguments:

  o  accountId: "Id"

     The id of the account to use.



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  o  sinceState: "String"

     The current state of the client.  This is the string that was
     returned as the "state" argument in the "Foo/get" response.  The
     server will return the changes that have occurred since this
     state.

  o  maxChanges: "UnsignedInt|null"

     The maximum number of ids to return in the response.  The server
     MAY choose to return fewer than this value but MUST NOT return
     more.  If not given by the client, the server may choose how many
     to return.  If supplied by the client, the value MUST be a
     positive integer greater than 0.  If a value outside of this range
     is given, the server MUST reject the call with an
     "invalidArguments" error.

  The response has the following arguments:

  o  accountId: "Id"

     The id of the account used for the call.

  o  oldState: "String"

     This is the "sinceState" argument echoed back; it's the state from
     which the server is returning changes.

  o  newState: "String"

     This is the state the client will be in after applying the set of
     changes to the old state.

  o  hasMoreChanges: "Boolean"

     If true, the client may call "Foo/changes" again with the
     "newState" returned to get further updates.  If false, "newState"
     is the current server state.

  o  created: "Id[]"

     An array of ids for records that have been created since the old
     state.

  o  updated: "Id[]"

     An array of ids for records that have been updated since the old
     state.



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  o  destroyed: "Id[]"

     An array of ids for records that have been destroyed since the old
     state.

  If a record has been created AND updated since the old state, the
  server SHOULD just return the id in the "created" list but MAY return
  it in the "updated" list as well.

  If a record has been updated AND destroyed since the old state, the
  server SHOULD just return the id in the "destroyed" list but MAY
  return it in the "updated" list as well.

  If a record has been created AND destroyed since the old state, the
  server SHOULD remove the id from the response entirely.  However, it
  MAY include it in just the "destroyed" list or in both the
  "destroyed" and "created" lists.

  If a "maxChanges" is supplied, or set automatically by the server,
  the server MUST ensure the number of ids returned across "created",
  "updated", and "destroyed" does not exceed this limit.  If there are
  more changes than this between the client's state and the current
  server state, the server SHOULD generate an update to take the client
  to an intermediate state, from which the client can continue to call
  "Foo/changes" until it is fully up to date.  If it is unable to
  calculate an intermediate state, it MUST return a
  "cannotCalculateChanges" error response instead.

  When generating intermediate states, the server may choose how to
  divide up the changes.  For many types, it will provide a better user
  experience to return the more recent changes first, as this is more
  likely to be what the user is most interested in.  The client can
  then continue to page in the older changes while the user is viewing
  the newer data.  For example, suppose a server went through the
  following states:

                          A -> B -> C -> D -> E

  And a client asks for changes from state "B".  The server might first
  get the ids of records created, updated, or destroyed between states
  D and E, returning them with:

                          state: "B-D-E"
                          hasMoreChanges: true







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  The client will then ask for the change from state "B-D-E", and the
  server can return the changes between states C and D, returning:

                          state: "B-C-E"
                          hasMoreChanges: true

  Finally, the client will request the changes from "B-C-E", and the
  server can return the changes between states B and C, returning:

                          state: "E"
                          hasMoreChanges: false

  Should the state on the server be modified in the middle of all this
  (to "F"), the server still does the same, but now when the update to
  state "E" is returned, it would indicate that it still has more
  changes for the client to fetch.

  Where multiple changes to a record are split across different
  intermediate states, the server MUST NOT return a record as created
  after a response that deems it as updated or destroyed, and it MUST
  NOT return a record as destroyed before a response that deems it as
  created or updated.  The server may have to coalesce multiple changes
  to a record to satisfy this requirement.

  The following additional errors may be returned instead of the "Foo/
  changes" response:

  "cannotCalculateChanges": The server cannot calculate the changes
  from the state string given by the client.  Usually, this is due to
  the client's state being too old or the server being unable to
  produce an update to an intermediate state when there are too many
  updates.  The client MUST invalidate its Foo cache.

  Maintaining state to allow calculation of "Foo/changes" can be
  expensive for the server, but always returning
  "cannotCalculateChanges" severely increases network traffic and
  resource usage for the client.  To allow efficient sync, servers
  SHOULD be able to calculate changes from any state string that was
  given to a client within the last 30 days (but of course may support
  calculating updates from states older than this).











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5.3.  /set

  Modifying the state of Foo objects on the server is done via the
  "Foo/set" method.  This encompasses creating, updating, and
  destroying Foo records.  This allows the server to sort out ordering
  and dependencies that may exist if doing multiple operations at once
  (for example, to ensure there is always a minimum number of a certain
  record type).

  The "Foo/set" method takes the following arguments:

  o  accountId: "Id"

     The id of the account to use.

  o  ifInState: "String|null"

     This is a state string as returned by the "Foo/get" method
     (representing the state of all objects of this type in the
     account).  If supplied, the string must match the current state;
     otherwise, the method will be aborted and a "stateMismatch" error
     returned.  If null, any changes will be applied to the current
     state.

  o  create: "Id[Foo]|null"

     A map of a *creation id* (a temporary id set by the client) to Foo
     objects, or null if no objects are to be created.

     The Foo object type definition may define default values for
     properties.  Any such property may be omitted by the client.

     The client MUST omit any properties that may only be set by the
     server (for example, the "id" property on most object types).

  o  update: "Id[PatchObject]|null"

     A map of an id to a Patch object to apply to the current Foo
     object with that id, or null if no objects are to be updated.

     A *PatchObject* is of type "String[*]" and represents an unordered
     set of patches.  The keys are a path in JSON Pointer format
     [RFC6901], with an implicit leading "/" (i.e., prefix each key
     with "/" before applying the JSON Pointer evaluation algorithm).

     All paths MUST also conform to the following restrictions; if
     there is any violation, the update MUST be rejected with an
     "invalidPatch" error:



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     *  The pointer MUST NOT reference inside an array (i.e., you MUST
        NOT insert/delete from an array; the array MUST be replaced in
        its entirety instead).

     *  All parts prior to the last (i.e., the value after the final
        slash) MUST already exist on the object being patched.

     *  There MUST NOT be two patches in the PatchObject where the
        pointer of one is the prefix of the pointer of the other, e.g.,
        "alerts/1/offset" and "alerts".

     The value associated with each pointer determines how to apply
     that patch:

     *  If null, set to the default value if specified for this
        property; otherwise, remove the property from the patched
        object.  If the key is not present in the parent, this a no-op.

     *  Anything else: The value to set for this property (this may be
        a replacement or addition to the object being patched).

     Any server-set properties MAY be included in the patch if their
     value is identical to the current server value (before applying
     the patches to the object).  Otherwise, the update MUST be
     rejected with an "invalidProperties" SetError.

     This patch definition is designed such that an entire Foo object
     is also a valid PatchObject.  The client may choose to optimise
     network usage by just sending the diff or may send the whole
     object; the server processes it the same either way.

  o  destroy: "Id[]|null"

     A list of ids for Foo objects to permanently delete, or null if no
     objects are to be destroyed.

  Each creation, modification, or destruction of an object is
  considered an atomic unit.  It is permissible for the server to
  commit changes to some objects but not others; however, it MUST NOT
  only commit part of an update to a single record (e.g., update a
  "name" property but not a "count" property, if both are supplied in
  the update object).

  The final state MUST be valid after the "Foo/set" is finished;
  however, the server may have to transition through invalid
  intermediate states (not exposed to the client) while processing the
  individual create/update/destroy requests.  For example, suppose
  there is a "name" property that must be unique.  A single method call



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  could rename an object A => B and simultaneously rename another
  object B => A.  If the final state is valid, this is allowed.
  Otherwise, each creation, modification, or destruction of an object
  should be processed sequentially and accepted/rejected based on the
  current server state.

  If a create, update, or destroy is rejected, the appropriate error
  MUST be added to the notCreated/notUpdated/notDestroyed property of
  the response, and the server MUST continue to the next create/update/
  destroy.  It does not terminate the method.

  If an id given cannot be found, the update or destroy MUST be
  rejected with a "notFound" set error.

  The server MAY skip an update (rejecting it with a "willDestroy"
  SetError) if that object is destroyed in the same /set request.

  Some records may hold references to other records (foreign keys).
  That reference may be set (via create or update) in the same request
  as the referenced record is created.  To do this, the client refers
  to the new record using its creation id prefixed with a "#".  The
  order of the method calls in the request by the client MUST be such
  that the record being referenced is created in the same or an earlier
  call.  Thus, the server never has to look ahead.  Instead, while
  processing a request, the server MUST keep a simple map for the
  duration of the request of creation id to record id for each newly
  created record, so it can substitute in the correct value if
  necessary in later method calls.  In the case of records with
  references to the same type, the server MUST order the creates and
  updates within a single method call so that creates happen before
  their creation ids are referenced by another create/update/destroy in
  the same call.

  Creation ids are not scoped by type but are a single map for all
  types.  A client SHOULD NOT reuse a creation id anywhere in the same
  API request.  If a creation id is reused, the server MUST map the
  creation id to the most recently created item with that id.  To allow
  easy proxying of API requests, an initial set of creation id to real
  id values may be passed with a request (see "The Request Object",
  Section 3.3) and the final state of the map passed out with the
  response (see "The Response Object", Section 3.4).

  The response has the following arguments:

  o  accountId: "Id"

     The id of the account used for the call.




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  o  oldState: "String|null"

     The state string that would have been returned by "Foo/get" before
     making the requested changes, or null if the server doesn't know
     what the previous state string was.

  o  newState: "String"

     The state string that will now be returned by "Foo/get".

  o  created: "Id[Foo]|null"

     A map of the creation id to an object containing any properties of
     the created Foo object that were not sent by the client.  This
     includes all server-set properties (such as the "id" in most
     object types) and any properties that were omitted by the client
     and thus set to a default by the server.

     This argument is null if no Foo objects were successfully created.

  o  updated: "Id[Foo|null]|null"

     The keys in this map are the ids of all Foos that were
     successfully updated.

     The value for each id is a Foo object containing any property that
     changed in a way *not* explicitly requested by the PatchObject
     sent to the server, or null if none.  This lets the client know of
     any changes to server-set or computed properties.

     This argument is null if no Foo objects were successfully updated.

  o  destroyed: "Id[]|null"

     A list of Foo ids for records that were successfully destroyed, or
     null if none.

  o  notCreated: "Id[SetError]|null"

     A map of the creation id to a SetError object for each record that
     failed to be created, or null if all successful.

  o  notUpdated: "Id[SetError]|null"

     A map of the Foo id to a SetError object for each record that
     failed to be updated, or null if all successful.





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  o  notDestroyed: "Id[SetError]|null"

     A map of the Foo id to a SetError object for each record that
     failed to be destroyed, or null if all successful.

  A *SetError* object has the following properties:

  o  type: "String"

     The type of error.

  o  description: "String|null"

     A description of the error to help with debugging that includes an
     explanation of what the problem was.  This is a non-localised
     string and is not intended to be shown directly to end users.

  The following SetError types are defined and may be returned for set
  operations on any record type where appropriate:

  o  "forbidden": (create; update; destroy).  The create/update/destroy
     would violate an ACL or other permissions policy.

  o  "overQuota": (create; update).  The create would exceed a server-
     defined limit on the number or total size of objects of this type.

  o  "tooLarge": (create; update).  The create/update would result in
     an object that exceeds a server-defined limit for the maximum size
     of a single object of this type.

  o  "rateLimit": (create).  Too many objects of this type have been
     created recently, and a server-defined rate limit has been
     reached.  It may work if tried again later.

  o  "notFound": (update; destroy).  The id given to update/destroy
     cannot be found.

  o  "invalidPatch": (update).  The PatchObject given to update the
     record was not a valid patch (see the patch description).

  o  "willDestroy": (update).  The client requested that an object be
     both updated and destroyed in the same /set request, and the
     server has decided to therefore ignore the update.








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  o  "invalidProperties": (create; update).  The record given is
     invalid in some way.  For example:

     *  It contains properties that are invalid according to the type
        specification of this record type.

     *  It contains a property that may only be set by the server
        (e.g., "id") and is different to the current value.  Note, to
        allow clients to pass whole objects back, it is not an error to
        include a server-set property in an update as long as the value
        is identical to the current value on the server.

     *  There is a reference to another record (foreign key), and the
        given id does not correspond to a valid record.

     The SetError object SHOULD also have a property called
     "properties" of type "String[]" that lists *all* the properties
     that were invalid.

     Individual methods MAY specify more specific errors for certain
     conditions that would otherwise result in an invalidProperties
     error.  If the condition of one of these is met, it MUST be
     returned instead of the invalidProperties error.

  o  "singleton": (create; destroy).  This is a singleton type, so you
     cannot create another one or destroy the existing one.

  Other possible SetError types MAY be given in specific method
  descriptions.  Other properties MAY also be present on the SetError
  object, as described in the relevant methods.

  The following additional errors may be returned instead of the "Foo/
  set" response:

  "requestTooLarge": The total number of objects to create, update, or
  destroy exceeds the maximum number the server is willing to process
  in a single method call.

  "stateMismatch": An "ifInState" argument was supplied, and it does
  not match the current state.











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5.4.  /copy

  The only way to move Foo records *between* two different accounts is
  to copy them using the "Foo/copy" method; once the copy has
  succeeded, delete the original.  The "onSuccessDestroyOriginal"
  argument allows you to try to do this in one method call; however,
  note that the two different actions are not atomic, so it is possible
  for the copy to succeed but the original not to be destroyed for some
  reason.

  The copy is conceptually in three phases:

  1.  Reading the current values from the "from" account.

  2.  Writing the new copies to the other account.

  3.  Destroying the originals in the "from" account, if requested.

  Data may change in between phases due to concurrent requests.

  The "Foo/copy" method takes the following arguments:

  o  fromAccountId: "Id"

     The id of the account to copy records from.

  o  ifFromInState: "String|null"

     This is a state string as returned by the "Foo/get" method.  If
     supplied, the string must match the current state of the account
     referenced by the fromAccountId when reading the data to be
     copied; otherwise, the method will be aborted and a
     "stateMismatch" error returned.  If null, the data will be read
     from the current state.

  o  accountId: "Id"

     The id of the account to copy records to.  This MUST be different
     to the "fromAccountId".

  o  ifInState: "String|null"

     This is a state string as returned by the "Foo/get" method.  If
     supplied, the string must match the current state of the account
     referenced by the accountId; otherwise, the method will be aborted
     and a "stateMismatch" error returned.  If null, any changes will
     be applied to the current state.




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  o  create: "Id[Foo]"

     A map of the *creation id* to a Foo object.  The Foo object MUST
     contain an "id" property, which is the id (in the fromAccount) of
     the record to be copied.  When creating the copy, any other
     properties included are used instead of the current value for that
     property on the original.

  o  onSuccessDestroyOriginal: "Boolean" (default: false)

     If true, an attempt will be made to destroy the original records
     that were successfully copied: after emitting the "Foo/copy"
     response, but before processing the next method, the server MUST
     make a single call to "Foo/set" to destroy the original of each
     successfully copied record; the output of this is added to the
     responses as normal, to be returned to the client.

  o  destroyFromIfInState: "String|null"

     This argument is passed on as the "ifInState" argument to the
     implicit "Foo/set" call, if made at the end of this request to
     destroy the originals that were successfully copied.

  Each record copy is considered an atomic unit that may succeed or
  fail individually.

  The response has the following arguments:

  o  fromAccountId: "Id"

     The id of the account records were copied from.

  o  accountId: "Id"

     The id of the account records were copied to.

  o  oldState: "String|null"

     The state string that would have been returned by "Foo/get" on the
     account records that were copied to before making the requested
     changes, or null if the server doesn't know what the previous
     state string was.

  o  newState: "String"

     The state string that will now be returned by "Foo/get" on the
     account records were copied to.




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  o  created: "Id[Foo]|null"

     A map of the creation id to an object containing any properties of
     the copied Foo object that are set by the server (such as the "id"
     in most object types; note, the id is likely to be different to
     the id of the object in the account it was copied from).

     This argument is null if no Foo objects were successfully copied.

  o  notCreated: "Id[SetError]|null"

     A map of the creation id to a SetError object for each record that
     failed to be copied, or null if none.

  The SetError may be any of the standard set errors returned for a
  create or update.  In addition, the following SetError is defined:

  "alreadyExists": The server forbids duplicates, and the record
  already exists in the target account.  An "existingId" property of
  type "Id" MUST be included on the SetError object with the id of the
  existing record.

  The following additional errors may be returned instead of the "Foo/
  copy" response:

  "fromAccountNotFound": The "fromAccountId" does not correspond to a
  valid account.

  "fromAccountNotSupportedByMethod": The "fromAccountId" given
  corresponds to a valid account, but the account does not support this
  data type.

  "stateMismatch": An "ifInState" argument was supplied and it does not
  match the current state, or an "ifFromInState" argument was supplied
  and it does not match the current state in the from account.

5.5.  /query

  For data sets where the total amount of data is expected to be very
  small, clients can just fetch the complete set of data and then do
  any sorting/filtering locally.  However, for large data sets (e.g.,
  multi-gigabyte mailboxes), the client needs to be able to
  search/sort/window the data type on the server.

  A query on the set of Foos in an account is made by calling "Foo/
  query".  This takes a number of arguments to determine which records
  to include, how they should be sorted, and which part of the result




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  should be returned (the full list may be *very* long).  The result is
  returned as a list of Foo ids.

  A call to "Foo/query" takes the following arguments:

  o  accountId: "Id"

     The id of the account to use.

  o  filter: "FilterOperator|FilterCondition|null"

     Determines the set of Foos returned in the results.  If null, all
     objects in the account of this type are included in the results.
     A *FilterOperator* object has the following properties:

     *  operator: "String"

        This MUST be one of the following strings:

        +  "AND": All of the conditions must match for the filter to
           match.

        +  "OR": At least one of the conditions must match for the
           filter to match.

        +  "NOT": None of the conditions must match for the filter to
           match.

     *  conditions: "(FilterOperator|FilterCondition)[]"

        The conditions to evaluate against each record.

     A *FilterCondition* is an "object" whose allowed properties and
     semantics depend on the data type and is defined in the /query
     method specification for that type.  It MUST NOT have an
     "operator" property.

  o  sort: "Comparator[]|null"

     Lists the names of properties to compare between two Foo records,
     and how to compare them, to determine which comes first in the
     sort.  If two Foo records have an identical value for the first
     comparator, the next comparator will be considered, and so on.  If
     all comparators are the same (this includes the case where an
     empty array or null is given as the "sort" argument), the sort
     order is server dependent, but it MUST be stable between calls to
     "Foo/query".  A *Comparator* has the following properties:




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     *  property: "String"

        The name of the property on the Foo objects to compare.

     *  isAscending: "Boolean" (optional; default: true)

        If true, sort in ascending order.  If false, reverse the
        comparator's results to sort in descending order.

     *  collation: "String" (optional; default is server-dependent)

        The identifier, as registered in the collation registry defined
        in [RFC4790], for the algorithm to use when comparing the order
        of strings.  The algorithms the server supports are advertised
        in the capabilities object returned with the Session object
        (see Section 2).

        If omitted, the default algorithm is server dependent, but:

        1.  It MUST be unicode-aware.

        2.  It MAY be selected based on an Accept-Language header in
            the request (as defined in [RFC7231], Section 5.3.5) or
            out-of-band information about the user's language/locale.

        3.  It SHOULD be case insensitive where such a concept makes
            sense for a language/locale.  Where the user's language is
            unknown, it is RECOMMENDED to follow the advice in
            Section 5.2.3 of [RFC8264].

        The "i;unicode-casemap" collation [RFC5051] and the Unicode
        Collation Algorithm (<http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr10/>)
        are two examples that fulfil these criterion and provide
        reasonable behaviour for a large number of languages.

        When the property being compared is not a string, the
        "collation" property is ignored, and the following comparison
        rules apply based on the type.  In ascending order:

        +  "Boolean": false comes before true.

        +  "Number": A lower number comes before a higher number.

        +  "Date"/"UTCDate": The earlier date comes first.

     The Comparator object may also have additional properties as
     required for specific sort operations defined in a type's /query
     method.



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  o  position: "Int" (default: 0)

     The zero-based index of the first id in the full list of results
     to return.

     If a negative value is given, it is an offset from the end of the
     list.  Specifically, the negative value MUST be added to the total
     number of results given the filter, and if still negative, it's
     clamped to "0".  This is now the zero-based index of the first id
     to return.

     If the index is greater than or equal to the total number of
     objects in the results list, then the "ids" array in the response
     will be empty, but this is not an error.

  o  anchor: "Id|null"

     A Foo id.  If supplied, the "position" argument is ignored.  The
     index of this id in the results will be used in combination with
     the "anchorOffset" argument to determine the index of the first
     result to return (see below for more details).

  o  anchorOffset: "Int" (default: 0)

     The index of the first result to return relative to the index of
     the anchor, if an anchor is given.  This MAY be negative.  For
     example, "-1" means the Foo immediately preceding the anchor is
     the first result in the list returned (see below for more
     details).

  o  limit: "UnsignedInt|null"

     The maximum number of results to return.  If null, no limit
     presumed.  The server MAY choose to enforce a maximum "limit"
     argument.  In this case, if a greater value is given (or if it is
     null), the limit is clamped to the maximum; the new limit is
     returned with the response so the client is aware.  If a negative
     value is given, the call MUST be rejected with an
     "invalidArguments" error.

  o  calculateTotal: "Boolean" (default: false)

     Does the client wish to know the total number of results in the
     query?  This may be slow and expensive for servers to calculate,
     particularly with complex filters, so clients should take care to
     only request the total when needed.





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  If an "anchor" argument is given, the anchor is looked for in the
  results after filtering and sorting.  If found, the "anchorOffset" is
  then added to its index.  If the resulting index is now negative, it
  is clamped to 0.  This index is now used exactly as though it were
  supplied as the "position" argument.  If the anchor is not found, the
  call is rejected with an "anchorNotFound" error.

  If an "anchor" is specified, any position argument supplied by the
  client MUST be ignored.  If no "anchor" is supplied, any
  "anchorOffset" argument MUST be ignored.

  A client can use "anchor" instead of "position" to find the index of
  an id within a large set of results.

  The response has the following arguments:

  o  accountId: "Id"

     The id of the account used for the call.

  o  queryState: "String"

     A string encoding the current state of the query on the server.
     This string MUST change if the results of the query (i.e., the
     matching ids and their sort order) have changed.  The queryState
     string MAY change if something has changed on the server, which
     means the results may have changed but the server doesn't know for
     sure.

     The queryState string only represents the ordered list of ids that
     match the particular query (including its sort/filter).  There is
     no requirement for it to change if a property on an object
     matching the query changes but the query results are unaffected
     (indeed, it is more efficient if the queryState string does not
     change in this case).  The queryState string only has meaning when
     compared to future responses to a query with the same type/sort/
     filter or when used with /queryChanges to fetch changes.

     Should a client receive back a response with a different
     queryState string to a previous call, it MUST either throw away
     the currently cached query and fetch it again (note, this does not
     require fetching the records again, just the list of ids) or call
     "Foo/queryChanges" to get the difference.








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  o  canCalculateChanges: "Boolean"

     This is true if the server supports calling "Foo/queryChanges"
     with these "filter"/"sort" parameters.  Note, this does not
     guarantee that the "Foo/queryChanges" call will succeed, as it may
     only be possible for a limited time afterwards due to server
     internal implementation details.

  o  position: "UnsignedInt"

     The zero-based index of the first result in the "ids" array within
     the complete list of query results.

  o  ids: "Id[]"

     The list of ids for each Foo in the query results, starting at the
     index given by the "position" argument of this response and
     continuing until it hits the end of the results or reaches the
     "limit" number of ids.  If "position" is >= "total", this MUST be
     the empty list.

  o  total: "UnsignedInt" (only if requested)

     The total number of Foos in the results (given the "filter").
     This argument MUST be omitted if the "calculateTotal" request
     argument is not true.

  o  limit: "UnsignedInt" (if set by the server)

     The limit enforced by the server on the maximum number of results
     to return.  This is only returned if the server set a limit or
     used a different limit than that given in the request.

  The following additional errors may be returned instead of the "Foo/
  query" response:

  "anchorNotFound": An anchor argument was supplied, but it cannot be
  found in the results of the query.

  "unsupportedSort": The "sort" is syntactically valid, but it includes
  a property the server does not support sorting on or a collation
  method it does not recognise.

  "unsupportedFilter": The "filter" is syntactically valid, but the
  server cannot process it.  If the filter was the result of a user's
  search input, the client SHOULD suggest that the user simplify their
  search.




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5.6.  /queryChanges

  The "Foo/queryChanges" method allows a client to efficiently update
  the state of a cached query to match the new state on the server.  It
  takes the following arguments:

  o  accountId: "Id"

     The id of the account to use.

  o  filter: "FilterOperator|FilterCondition|null"

     The filter argument that was used with "Foo/query".

  o  sort: "Comparator[]|null"

     The sort argument that was used with "Foo/query".

  o  sinceQueryState: "String"

     The current state of the query in the client.  This is the string
     that was returned as the "queryState" argument in the "Foo/query"
     response with the same sort/filter.  The server will return the
     changes made to the query since this state.

  o  maxChanges: "UnsignedInt|null"

     The maximum number of changes to return in the response.  See
     error descriptions below for more details.

  o  upToId: "Id|null"

     The last (highest-index) id the client currently has cached from
     the query results.  When there are a large number of results, in a
     common case, the client may have only downloaded and cached a
     small subset from the beginning of the results.  If the sort and
     filter are both only on immutable properties, this allows the
     server to omit changes after this point in the results, which can
     significantly increase efficiency.  If they are not immutable,
     this argument is ignored.

  o  calculateTotal: "Boolean" (default: false)

     Does the client wish to know the total number of results now in
     the query?  This may be slow and expensive for servers to
     calculate, particularly with complex filters, so clients should
     take care to only request the total when needed.




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  The response has the following arguments:

  o  accountId: "Id"

     The id of the account used for the call.

  o  oldQueryState: "String"

     This is the "sinceQueryState" argument echoed back; that is, the
     state from which the server is returning changes.

  o  newQueryState: "String"

     This is the state the query will be in after applying the set of
     changes to the old state.

  o  total: "UnsignedInt" (only if requested)

     The total number of Foos in the results (given the "filter").
     This argument MUST be omitted if the "calculateTotal" request
     argument is not true.

  o  removed: "Id[]"

     The "id" for every Foo that was in the query results in the old
     state and that is not in the results in the new state.

     If the server cannot calculate this exactly, the server MAY return
     the ids of extra Foos in addition that may have been in the old
     results but are not in the new results.

     If the sort and filter are both only on immutable properties and
     an "upToId" is supplied and exists in the results, any ids that
     were removed but have a higher index than "upToId" SHOULD be
     omitted.

     If the "filter" or "sort" includes a mutable property, the server
     MUST include all Foos in the current results for which this
     property may have changed.  The position of these may have moved
     in the results, so they must be reinserted by the client to ensure
     its query cache is correct.










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RFC 8620                          JMAP                         July 2019


  o  added: "AddedItem[]"

     The id and index in the query results (in the new state) for every
     Foo that has been added to the results since the old state AND
     every Foo in the current results that was included in the
     "removed" array (due to a filter or sort based upon a mutable
     property).

     If the sort and filter are both only on immutable properties and
     an "upToId" is supplied and exists in the results, any ids that
     were added but have a higher index than "upToId" SHOULD be
     omitted.

     The array MUST be sorted in order of index, with the lowest index
     first.

     An *AddedItem* object has the following properties:

     *  id: "Id"

     *  index: "UnsignedInt"

  The result of this is that if the client has a cached sparse array of
  Foo ids corresponding to the results in the old state, then:

  fooIds = [ "id1", "id2", null, null, "id3", "id4", null, null, null ]

  If it *splices out* all ids in the removed array that it has in its
  cached results, then:

     removed = [ "id2", "id31", ... ];
     fooIds => [ "id1", null, null, "id3", "id4", null, null, null ]

  and *splices in* (one by one in order, starting with the lowest
  index) all of the ids in the added array:

 added = [{ id: "id5", index: 0, ... }];
 fooIds => [ "id5", "id1", null, null, "id3", "id4", null, null, null ]

  and *truncates* or *extends* to the new total length, then the
  results will now be in the new state.

  Note: splicing in adds the item at the given index, incrementing the
  index of all items previously at that or a higher index.  Splicing
  out is the inverse, removing the item and decrementing the index of
  every item after it in the array.





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  The following additional errors may be returned instead of the "Foo/
  queryChanges" response:

  "tooManyChanges": There are more changes than the client's
  "maxChanges" argument.  Each item in the removed or added array is
  considered to be one change.  The client may retry with higher max
  changes or invalidate its cache of the query results.

  "cannotCalculateChanges": The server cannot calculate the changes
  from the queryState string given by the client, usually due to the
  client's state being too old.  The client MUST invalidate its cache
  of the query results.

5.7.  Examples

  Suppose we have a type *Todo* with the following properties:

  o  id: "Id" (immutable; server-set)

     The id of the object.

  o  title: "String"

     A brief summary of what is to be done.

  o  keywords: "String[Boolean]" (default: {})

     A set of keywords that apply to the Todo.  The set is represented
     as an object, with the keys being the "keywords".  The value for
     each key in the object MUST be true.  (This format allows you to
     update an individual key using patch syntax rather than having to
     update the whole set of keywords as one, which a "String[]"
     representation would require.)

  o  neuralNetworkTimeEstimation: "Number" (server-set)

     The title and keywords are fed into the server's state-of-the-art
     neural network to get an estimation of how long this Todo will
     take, in seconds.

  o  subTodoIds: "Id[]|null"

     The ids of a list of other Todos to complete as part of this Todo.

  Suppose also that all the standard methods are defined for this type
  and the FilterCondition object supports a "hasKeyword" property to
  match Todos with the given keyword.




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  A client might want to display the list of Todos with either a
  "music" keyword or a "video" keyword, so it makes the following
  method call:

                  [[ "Todo/query", {
                    "accountId": "x",
                    "filter": {
                      "operator": "OR",
                      "conditions": [
                        { "hasKeyword": "music" },
                        { "hasKeyword": "video" }
                      ]
                    },
                    "sort": [{ "property": "title" }],
                    "position": 0,
                    "limit": 10
                  }, "0" ],
                  [ "Todo/get", {
                    "accountId": "x",
                    "#ids": {
                      "resultOf": "0",
                      "name": "Todo/query",
                      "path": "/ids"
                    }
                  }, "1" ]]


























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  This would query the server for the set of Todos with a keyword of
  either "music" or "video", sorted by title, and limited to the first
  10 results.  It fetches the full object for each of these Todos using
  back-references to reference the result of the query.  The response
  might look something like:

      [[ "Todo/query", {
        "accountId": "x",
        "queryState": "y13213",
        "canCalculateChanges": true,
        "position": 0,
        "ids": [ "a", "b", "c", "d", "e", "f", "g", "h", "i", "j" ]
      }, "0" ],
      [ "Todo/get", {
        "accountId": "x",
        "state": "10324",
        "list": [{
          "id": "a",
          "title": "Practise Piano",
          "keywords": {
            "music": true,
            "beethoven": true,
            "mozart": true,
            "liszt": true,
            "rachmaninov": true
          },
          "neuralNetworkTimeEstimation": 3600
        }, {
          "id": "b",
          "title": "Watch Daft Punk music video",
          "keywords": {
            "music": true,
            "video": true,
            "trance": true
          },
          "neuralNetworkTimeEstimation": 18000
        },
        ...
        ]
      }, "1" ]]











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RFC 8620                          JMAP                         July 2019


  Now, suppose the user adds a keyword "chopin" and removes the keyword
  "mozart" from the "Practise Piano" task.  The client may send the
  whole object to the server, as this is a valid PatchObject:

                [[ "Todo/set", {
                  "accountId": "x",
                  "ifInState": "10324",
                  "update": {
                    "a": {
                      "id": "a",
                      "title": "Practise Piano",
                      "keywords": {
                        "music": true,
                        "beethoven": true,
                        "chopin": true,
                        "liszt": true,
                        "rachmaninov": true
                      },
                      "neuralNetworkTimeEstimation": 360
                    }
                  }
                }, "0" ]]

  or it may send a minimal patch:

                     [[ "Todo/set", {
                       "accountId": "x",
                       "ifInState": "10324",
                       "update": {
                         "a": {
                           "keywords/chopin": true,
                           "keywords/mozart": null
                         }
                       }
                     }, "0" ]]
















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  The effect is exactly the same on the server in either case, and
  presuming the server is still in state "10324", it will probably
  return success:

                [[ "Todo/set", {
                  "accountId": "x",
                  "oldState": "10324",
                  "newState": "10329",
                  "updated": {
                    "a": {
                      "neuralNetworkTimeEstimation": 5400
                    }
                  }
                }, "0" ]]

  The server changed the "neuralNetworkTimeEstimation" property on the
  object as part of this change; as this changed in a way *not*
  explicitly requested by the PatchObject sent to the server, it is
  returned with the "updated" confirmation.

  Let us now add a sub-Todo to our new "Practise Piano" Todo.  In this
  example, we can see the use of a reference to a creation id to allow
  us to set a foreign key reference to a record created in the same
  request:

                  [[ "Todo/set", {
                    "accountId": "x",
                    "create": {
                      "k15": {
                        "title": "Warm up with scales"
                      }
                    },
                    "update": {
                      "a": {
                        "subTodoIds": [ "#k15" ]
                      }
                    }
                  }, "0" ]]













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  Now, suppose another user deleted the "Listen to Daft Punk" Todo.
  The first user will receive a push notification (see Section 7) with
  the changed state string for the "Todo" type.  Since the new string
  does not match its current state, it knows it needs to check for
  updates.  It may make a request like:

                  [[ "Todo/changes", {
                    "accountId": "x",
                    "sinceState": "10324",
                    "maxChanges": 50
                  }, "0" ],
                  [ "Todo/queryChanges", {
                    "accountId": "x",
                    "filter": {
                      "operator": "OR",
                      "conditions": [
                        { "hasKeyword": "music" },
                        { "hasKeyword": "video" }
                      ]
                    },
                    "sort": [{ "property": "title" }],
                    "sinceQueryState": "y13213",
                    "maxChanges": 50
                  }, "1" ]]

  and receive in response:

                      [[ "Todo/changes", {
                        "accountId": "x",
                        "oldState": "10324",
                        "newState": "871903",
                        "hasMoreChanges": false,
                        "created": [],
                        "updated": [],
                        "destroyed": ["b"]
                      }, "0" ],
                      [ "Todo/queryChanges", {
                        "accountId": "x",
                        "oldQueryState": "y13213",
                        "newQueryState": "y13218",
                        "removed": ["b"],
                        "added": null
                      }, "1" ]]








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  Suppose the user has access to another account "y", for example, a
  team account shared between multiple users.  To move an existing Todo
  from account "x", the client would call:

                   [[ "Todo/copy", {
                     "fromAccountId": "x",
                     "accountId": "y",
                     "create": {
                       "k5122": {
                         "id": "a"
                       }
                     },
                     "onSuccessDestroyOriginal": true
                   }, "0" ]]

  The server successfully copies the Todo to a new account (where it
  receives a new id) and deletes the original.  Due to the implicit
  call to "Todo/set", there are two responses to the single method
  call, both with the same method call id:

                      [[ "Todo/copy", {
                        "fromAccountId": "x",
                        "accountId": "y",
                        "created": {
                          "k5122": {
                            "id": "DAf97"
                          }
                        },
                        "oldState": "c1d64ecb038c",
                        "newState": "33844835152b"
                      }, "0" ],
                      [ "Todo/set", {
                        "accountId": "x",
                        "oldState": "871903",
                        "newState": "871909",
                        "destroyed": [ "a" ],
                        ...
                      }, "0" ]]













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RFC 8620                          JMAP                         July 2019


5.8.  Proxy Considerations

  JMAP has been designed to allow an API endpoint to easily proxy
  through to one or more JMAP servers.  This may be useful for load
  balancing, augmenting capabilities, or presenting a single endpoint
  to accounts hosted on different JMAP servers (splitting the request
  based on each method's "accountId" argument).  The proxy need only
  understand the general structure of a JMAP Request object; it does
  not need to know anything specifically about the methods and
  arguments it will pass through to other servers.

  If splitting up the methods in a request to call them on different
  backend servers, the proxy must do two things to ensure back-
  references and creation-id references resolve the same as if the
  entire request were processed on a single server:

  1.  It must pass a "createdIds" property with each subrequest.  If
      this is not given by the client, an empty object should be used
      for the first subrequest.  The "createdIds" property of each
      subresponse should be passed on in the next subrequest.

  2.  It must resolve back-references to previous method results that
      were processed on a different server.  This is a relatively
      simple syntactic substitution, described in Section 3.7.

  When splitting a request based on accountId, proxy implementors do
  need to be aware of "/copy" methods that copy between accounts.  If
  the accounts are on different servers, the proxy will have to
  implement this functionality directly.

6.  Binary Data

  Binary data is referenced by a *blobId* in JMAP and uploaded/
  downloaded separately to the core API.  The blobId solely represents
  the raw bytes of data, not any associated metadata such as a file
  name or content type.  Such metadata is stored alongside the blobId
  in the object referencing it.  The data represented by a blobId is
  immutable.

  Any blobId that exists within an account may be used when creating/
  updating another object in that account.  For example, an Email type
  may have a blobId that represents the object in Internet Message
  Format [RFC5322].  A client could create a new Email object with an
  attachment and use this blobId, in effect attaching the old message
  to the new one.  Similarly, it could attach any existing attachment
  of an old message without having to download and upload it again.





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  When the client uses a blobId in a create/update, the server MAY
  assign a new blobId to refer to the same binary data within the new/
  updated object.  If it does so, it MUST return any properties that
  contain a changed blobId in the created/updated response, so the
  client gets the new ids.

  A blob that is not referenced by a JMAP object (e.g., as a message
  attachment) MAY be deleted by the server to free up resources.
  Uploads (see below) are initially unreferenced blobs.  To ensure
  interoperability:

  o  The server SHOULD use a separate quota for unreferenced blobs to
     the account's usual quota.  In the case of shared accounts, this
     quota SHOULD be separate per user.

  o  This quota SHOULD be at least the maximum total size that a single
     object can reference on this server.  For example, if supporting
     JMAP Mail, this should be at least the maximum total attachments
     size for a message.

  o  When an upload would take the user over quota, the server MUST
     delete unreferenced blobs in date order, oldest first, until there
     is room for the new blob.

  o  Except where quota restrictions force early deletion, an
     unreferenced blob MUST NOT be deleted for at least 1 hour from the
     time of upload; if reuploaded, the same blobId MAY be returned,
     but this SHOULD reset the expiry time.

  o  A blob MUST NOT be deleted during the method call that removed the
     last reference, so that a client can issue a create and a destroy
     that both reference the blob within the same method call.

6.1.  Uploading Binary Data

  There is a single endpoint that handles all file uploads for an
  account, regardless of what they are to be used for.  The Session
  object (see Section 2) has an "uploadUrl" property in URI Template
  (level 1) format [RFC6570], which MUST contain a variable called
  "accountId".  The client may use this template in combination with an
  "accountId" to get the URL of the file upload resource.

  To upload a file, the client submits an authenticated POST request to
  the file upload resource.







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RFC 8620                          JMAP                         July 2019


  A successful request MUST return a single JSON object with the
  following properties as the response:

  o  accountId: "Id"

     The id of the account used for the call.

  o  blobId: "Id"

     The id representing the binary data uploaded.  The data for this
     id is immutable.  The id *only* refers to the binary data, not any
     metadata.

  o  type: "String"

     The media type of the file (as specified in [RFC6838],
     Section 4.2) as set in the Content-Type header of the upload HTTP
     request.

  o  size: "UnsignedInt"

     The size of the file in octets.

  If identical binary content to an existing blob in the account is
  uploaded, the existing blobId MAY be returned.

  Clients should use the blobId returned in a timely manner.  Under
  rare circumstances, the server may have deleted the blob before the
  client uses it; the client should keep a reference to the local file
  so it can upload it again in such a situation.

  When an HTTP error response is returned to the client, the server
  SHOULD return a JSON "problem details" object as the response body,
  as per [RFC7807].

  As access controls are often determined by the object holding the
  reference to a blob, unreferenced blobs MUST only be accessible to
  the uploader, even in shared accounts.

6.2.  Downloading Binary Data

  The Session object (see Section 2) has a "downloadUrl" property,
  which is in URI Template (level 1) format [RFC6570].  The URL MUST
  contain variables called "accountId", "blobId", "type", and "name".







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  To download a file, the client makes an authenticated GET request to
  the download URL with the appropriate variables substituted in:

  o  "accountId": The id of the account to which the record with the
     blobId belongs.

  o  "blobId": The blobId representing the data of the file to
     download.

  o  "type": The type for the server to set in the "Content-Type"
     header of the response; the blobId only represents the binary data
     and does not have a content-type innately associated with it.

  o  "name": The name for the file; the server MUST return this as the
     filename if it sets a "Content-Disposition" header.

  As the data for a particular blobId is immutable, and thus the
  response in the generated download URL is too, implementors are
  recommended to set long cache times and use the "immutable" Cache-
  Control extension [RFC8246] for successful responses, for example,
  "Cache-Control: private, immutable, max-age=31536000".

  When an HTTP error response is returned to the client, the server
  SHOULD return a JSON "problem details" object as the response body,
  as per [RFC7807].

6.3.  Blob/copy

  Binary data may be copied *between* two different accounts using the
  "Blob/copy" method rather than having to download and then reupload
  on the client.

  The "Blob/copy" method takes the following arguments:

  o  fromAccountId: "Id"

     The id of the account to copy blobs from.

  o  accountId: "Id"

     The id of the account to copy blobs to.

  o  blobIds: "Id[]"

     A list of ids of blobs to copy to the other account.






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  The response has the following arguments:

  o  fromAccountId: "Id"

     The id of the account blobs were copied from.

  o  accountId: "Id"

     The id of the account blobs were copied to.

  o  copied: "Id[Id]|null"

     A map of the blobId in the fromAccount to the id for the blob in
     the account it was copied to, or null if none were successfully
     copied.

  o  notCopied: "Id[SetError]|null"

     A map of blobId to a SetError object for each blob that failed to
     be copied, or null if none.

  The SetError may be any of the standard set errors that may be
  returned for a create, as defined in Section 5.3.  In addition, the
  "notFound" SetError error may be returned if the blobId to be copied
  cannot be found.

  The following additional method-level error may be returned instead
  of the "Blob/copy" response:

  "fromAccountNotFound": The "fromAccountId" included with the request
  does not correspond to a valid account.

7.  Push

  Push notifications allow clients to efficiently update (almost)
  instantly to stay in sync with data changes on the server.  The
  general model for push is simple and sends minimal data over the push
  channel: just enough for the client to know whether it needs to
  resync.  The format allows multiple changes to be coalesced into a
  single push update and the frequency of pushes to be rate limited by
  the server.  It doesn't matter if some push events are dropped before
  they reach the client; the next time it gets/sets any records of a
  changed type, it will discover the data has changed and still sync
  all changes.







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  There are two different mechanisms by which a client can receive push
  notifications, to allow for the different environments in which a
  client may exist.  An event source resource (see Section 7.3) allows
  clients that can hold transport connections open to receive push
  notifications directly from the JMAP server.  This is simple and
  avoids third parties, but it is often not feasible on constrained
  platforms such as mobile devices.  Alternatively, clients can make
  use of any push service supported by their environment.  A URL for
  the push service is registered with the JMAP server (see
  Section 7.2); the server then POSTs each notification to that URL.
  The push service is then responsible for routing these to the client.

7.1.  The StateChange Object

  When something changes on the server, the server pushes a StateChange
  object to the client.  A *StateChange* object has the following
  properties:

  o  @type: "String"

     This MUST be the string "StateChange".

  o  changed: "Id[TypeState]"

     A map of an "account id" to an object encoding the state of data
     types that have changed for that account since the last
     StateChange object was pushed, for each of the accounts to which
     the user has access and for which something has changed.

     A *TypeState* object is a map.  The keys are the type name "Foo"
     (e.g., "Mailbox" or "Email"), and the value is the "state"
     property that would currently be returned by a call to "Foo/get".

     The client can compare the new state strings with its current
     values to see whether it has the current data for these types.  If
     not, the changes can then be efficiently fetched in a single
     standard API request (using the /changes type methods).














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7.1.1.  Example

  In this example, the server has amalgamated a few changes together
  across two different accounts the user has access to, before pushing
  the following StateChange object to the client:

                 {
                   "@type": "StateChange",
                   "changed": {
                     "a3123": {
                       "Email": "d35ecb040aab",
                       "EmailDelivery": "428d565f2440",
                       "CalendarEvent": "87accfac587a"
                     },
                     "a43461d": {
                       "Mailbox": "0af7a512ce70",
                       "CalendarEvent": "7a4297cecd76"
                     }
                   }
                 }

  The client can compare the state strings with its current state for
  the Email, CalendarEvent, etc., object types in the appropriate
  accounts to see if it needs to fetch changes.

  If the client is itself making changes, it may receive a StateChange
  object while the /set API call is in flight.  It can wait until the
  call completes and then compare if the new state string after the
  /set is the same as was pushed in the StateChange object; if so, and
  the old state of the /set response matches the client's previous
  state, it does not need to waste a request asking for changes it
  already knows.

7.2.  PushSubscription

  Clients may create a PushSubscription to register a URL with the JMAP
  server.  The JMAP server will then make an HTTP POST request to this
  URL for each push notification it wishes to send to the client.

  As a push subscription causes the JMAP server to make a number of
  requests to a previously unknown endpoint, it can be used as a vector
  for launching a denial-of-service attack.  To prevent this, when a
  subscription is created, the JMAP server immediately sends a
  PushVerification object to that URL (see Section 7.2.2).  The JMAP
  server MUST NOT make any further requests to the URL until the client
  receives the push and updates the subscription with the correct
  verification code.




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  A *PushSubscription* object has the following properties:

  o  id: "Id" (immutable; server-set)

     The id of the push subscription.

  o  deviceClientId: "String" (immutable)

     An id that uniquely identifies the client + device it is running
     on.  The purpose of this is to allow clients to identify which
     PushSubscription objects they created even if they lose their
     local state, so they can revoke or update them.  This string MUST
     be different on different devices and be different from apps from
     other vendors.  It SHOULD be easy to regenerate and not depend on
     persisted state.  It is RECOMMENDED to use a secure hash of a
     string that contains:

     1.  A unique identifier associated with the device where the JMAP
         client is running, normally supplied by the device's operating
         system.

     2.  A custom vendor/app id, including a domain controlled by the
         vendor of the JMAP client.

     To protect the privacy of the user, the deviceClientId id MUST NOT
     contain an unobfuscated device id.

  o  url: "String" (immutable)

     An absolute URL where the JMAP server will POST the data for the
     push message.  This MUST begin with "https://".

  o  keys: "Object|null" (immutable)

     Client-generated encryption keys.  If supplied, the server MUST
     use them as specified in [RFC8291] to encrypt all data sent to the
     push subscription.  The object MUST have the following properties:

     *  p256dh: "String"

        The P-256 Elliptic Curve Diffie-Hellman (ECDH) public key as
        described in [RFC8291], encoded in URL-safe base64
        representation as defined in [RFC4648].

     *  auth: "String"

        The authentication secret as described in [RFC8291], encoded in
        URL-safe base64 representation as defined in [RFC4648].



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  o  verificationCode: "String|null"

     This MUST be null (or omitted) when the subscription is created.
     The JMAP server then generates a verification code and sends it in
     a push message, and the client updates the PushSubscription object
     with the code; see Section 7.2.2 for details.

  o  expires: "UTCDate|null"

     The time this push subscription expires.  If specified, the JMAP
     server MUST NOT make further requests to this resource after this
     time.  It MAY automatically destroy the push subscription at or
     after this time.

     The server MAY choose to set an expiry if none is given by the
     client or modify the expiry time given by the client to a shorter
     duration.

  o  types: "String[]|null"

     A list of types the client is interested in (using the same names
     as the keys in the TypeState object defined in the previous
     section).  A StateChange notification will only be sent if the
     data for one of these types changes.  Other types are omitted from
     the TypeState object.  If null, changes will be pushed for all
     types.

  The POST request MUST have a content type of "application/json" and
  contain the UTF-8 JSON-encoded object as the body.  The request MUST
  have a "TTL" header and MAY have "Urgency" and/or "Topic" headers, as
  specified in Section 5 of [RFC8030].  The JMAP server is expected to
  understand and handle HTTP status responses in a reasonable manner.
  A "429" (Too Many Requests) response MUST cause the JMAP server to
  reduce the frequency of pushes; the JMAP push structure allows
  multiple changes to be coalesced into a single minimal StateChange
  object.  See the security considerations in Section 8.6 for a
  discussion of the risks in connecting to unknown servers.

  The JMAP server acts as an application server as defined in
  [RFC8030].  A client MAY use the rest of [RFC8030] in combination
  with its own push service to form a complete end-to-end solution, or
  it MAY rely on alternative mechanisms to ensure the delivery of the
  pushed data after it leaves the JMAP server.

  The push subscription is tied to the credentials used to authenticate
  the API request that created it.  Should these credentials expire or
  be revoked, the push subscription MUST be destroyed by the JMAP




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  server.  Only subscriptions created by these credentials are returned
  when the client fetches existing subscriptions.

  When these credentials have their own expiry (i.e., it is a session
  with a timeout), the server SHOULD NOT set or bound the expiry time
  for the push subscription given by the client but MUST expire it when
  the session expires.

  When these credentials are not time bounded (e.g., Basic
  authentication [RFC7617]), the server SHOULD set an expiry time for
  the push subscription if none is given and limit the expiry time if
  set too far in the future.  This maximum expiry time MUST be at least
  48 hours in the future and SHOULD be at least 7 days in the future.
  An app running on a mobile device may only be able to refresh the
  push subscription lifetime when it is in the foreground, so this
  gives a reasonable time frame to allow this to happen.

  In the case of separate access and refresh credentials, as in Oauth
  2.0 [RFC6749], the server SHOULD tie the push subscription to the
  validity of the refresh token rather than the access token and behave
  according to whether this is time-limited or not.

  When a push subscription is destroyed, the server MUST securely erase
  the URL and encryption keys from memory and storage as soon as
  possible.

7.2.1.  PushSubscription/get

  Standard /get method as described in Section 5.1, except it does
  *not* take or return an "accountId" argument, as push subscriptions
  are not tied to specific accounts.  It also does *not* return a
  "state" argument.  The "ids" argument may be null to fetch all at
  once.

  The server MUST only return push subscriptions that were created
  using the same authentication credentials as for this
  "PushSubscription/get" request.

  As the "url" and "keys" properties may contain data that is private
  to a particular device, the values for these properties MUST NOT be
  returned.  If the "properties" argument is null or omitted, the
  server MUST default to all properties excluding these two.  If one of
  them is explicitly requested, the method call MUST be rejected with a
  "forbidden" error.







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7.2.2.  PushSubscription/set

  Standard /set method as described in Section 5.3, except it does
  *not* take or return an "accountId" argument, as push subscriptions
  are not tied to specific accounts.  It also does *not* take an
  "ifInState" argument or return "oldState" or "newState" arguments.

  The "url" and "keys" properties are immutable; if the client wishes
  to change these, it must destroy the current push subscription and
  create a new one.

  When a PushSubscription is created, the server MUST immediately push
  a *PushVerification* object to the URL.  It has the following
  properties:

  o  @type: "String"

     This MUST be the string "PushVerification".

  o  pushSubscriptionId: "String"

     The id of the push subscription that was created.

  o  verificationCode: "String"

     The verification code to add to the push subscription.  This MUST
     contain sufficient entropy to avoid the client being able to guess
     the code via brute force.

  The client MUST update the push subscription with the correct
  verification code before the server makes any further requests to the
  subscription's URL.  Attempts to update the subscription with an
  invalid verification code MUST be rejected by the server with an
  "invalidProperties" SetError.

  The client may update the "expires" property to extend (or, less
  commonly, shorten) the lifetime of a push subscription.  The server
  MAY modify the proposed new expiry time to enforce server-defined
  limits.  Extending the lifetime does not require the subscription to
  be verified again.

  Clients SHOULD NOT update or destroy a push subscription that they
  did not create (i.e., has a "deviceClientId" that they do not
  recognise).







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7.2.3.  Example

  At "2018-07-06T02:14:29Z", a client with deviceClientId "a889-ffea-
  910" fetches the set of push subscriptions currently on the server,
  making an API request with:

                      [[ "PushSubscription/get", {
                        "ids": null
                      }, "0" ]]

  Which returns:

      [[ "PushSubscription/get", {
        "list": [{
            "id": "e50b2c1d-9553-41a3-b0a7-a7d26b599ee1",
            "deviceClientId": "b37ff8001ca0",
            "verificationCode": "b210ef734fe5f439c1ca386421359f7b",
            "expires": "2018-07-31T00:13:21Z",
            "types": [ "Todo" ]
        }, {
            "id": "f2d0aab5-e976-4e8b-ad4b-b380a5b987e4",
            "deviceClientId": "X8980fc",
            "verificationCode": "f3d4618a9ae15c8b7f5582533786d531",
            "expires": "2018-07-12T05:55:00Z",
            "types": [ "Mailbox", "Email", "EmailDelivery" ]
        }],
        "notFound": []
      }, "0" ]]

  Since neither of the returned push subscription objects have the
  client's deviceClientId, it knows it does not have a current push
  subscription active on the server.  So it creates one, sending this
  request:

[[ "PushSubscription/set", {
 "create": {
   "4f29": {
     "deviceClientId": "a889-ffea-910",
     "url": "https://example.com/push/?device=X8980fc&client=12c6d086",
     "types": null
   }
 }
}, "0" ]]








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  The server creates the push subscription but limits the expiry time
  to 7 days in the future, returning this response:

           [[ "PushSubscription/set", {
             "created": {
               "4f29": {
                 "id": "P43dcfa4-1dd4-41ef-9156-2c89b3b19c60",
                 "keys": null,
                 "expires": "2018-07-13T02:14:29Z"
               }
             }
           }, "0" ]]

  The server also immediately makes a POST request to
  "https://example.com/push/?device=X8980fc&client=12c6d086" with the
  data:

     {
       "@type": "PushVerification",
       "pushSubscriptionId": "P43dcfa4-1dd4-41ef-9156-2c89b3b19c60",
       "verificationCode": "da1f097b11ca17f06424e30bf02bfa67"
     }

  The client receives this and updates the subscription with the
  verification code (note there is a potential race condition here; the
  client MUST be able to handle receiving the push while the request
  creating the subscription is still in progress):

      [[ "PushSubscription/set", {
        "update": {
          "P43dcfa4-1dd4-41ef-9156-2c89b3b19c60": {
            "verificationCode": "da1f097b11ca17f06424e30bf02bfa67"
          }
        }
      }, "0" ]]

  The server confirms the update was successful and will now make
  requests to the registered URL when the state changes.













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  Two days later, the client updates the subscription to extend its
  lifetime, sending this request:

              [[ "PushSubscription/set", {
                "update": {
                  "P43dcfa4-1dd4-41ef-9156-2c89b3b19c60": {
                    "expires": "2018-08-13T00:00:00Z"
                  }
                }
              }, "0" ]]

  The server extends the expiry time, but only again to its maximum
  limit of 7 days in the future, returning this response:

              [[ "PushSubscription/set", {
                "updated": {
                  "P43dcfa4-1dd4-41ef-9156-2c89b3b19c60": {
                    "expires": "2018-07-15T02:22:50Z"
                  }
                }
              }, "0" ]]

7.3.  Event Source

  Clients that can hold transport connections open can connect directly
  to the JMAP server to receive push notifications via a "text/event-
  stream" resource, as described in [EventSource].  This is a long
  running HTTP request, where the server can push data to the client by
  appending data without ending the response.

  When a change occurs in the data on the server, it pushes an event
  called "state" to any connected clients, with the StateChange object
  as the data.

  The server SHOULD also send a new event id that encodes the entire
  server state visible to the user immediately after sending a "state"
  event.  When a new connection is made to the event-source endpoint, a
  client following the server-sent events specification will send a
  Last-Event-ID HTTP header field with the last id it saw, which the
  server can use to work out whether the client has missed some
  changes.  If so, it SHOULD send these changes immediately on
  connection.

  The Session object (see Section 2) has an "eventSourceUrl" property,
  which is in URI Template (level 1) format [RFC6570].  The URL MUST
  contain variables called "types", "closeafter", and "ping".





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  To connect to the resource, the client makes an authenticated GET
  request to the event-source URL with the appropriate variables
  substituted in:

  o  "types": This MUST be either:

     *  A comma-separated list of type names, e.g.,
        "Email,CalendarEvent".  The server MUST only push changes for
        the types in this list.

     *  The single character: "*".  Changes to all types are pushed.

  o  "closeafter": This MUST be one of the following values:

     *  "state": The server MUST end the HTTP response after pushing a
        state event.  This can be used by clients in environments where
        buffering proxies prevent the pushed data from arriving
        immediately, or indeed at all, when operating in the usual
        mode.

     *  "no": The connection is persisted by the server as a standard
        event-source resource.

  o  "ping": A positive integer value representing a length of time in
     seconds, e.g., "300".  If non-zero, the server MUST send an event
     called "ping" whenever this time elapses since the previous event
     was sent.  This MUST NOT set a new event id.  If the value is "0",
     the server MUST NOT send ping events.

     The server MAY modify a requested ping interval to be subject to a
     minimum and/or maximum value.  For interoperability, servers MUST
     NOT have a minimum allowed value higher than 30 or a maximum
     allowed value less than 300.

     The data for the ping event MUST be a JSON object containing an
     "interval" property, the value (type "UnsignedInt") being the
     interval in seconds the server is using to send pings (this may be
     different to the requested value if the server clamped it to be
     within a min/max value).

     Clients can monitor for the ping event to help determine when the
     closeafter mode may be required.

  A client MAY hold open multiple connections to the event-source
  resource, although it SHOULD try to use a single connection for
  efficiency.





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8.  Security Considerations

8.1.  Transport Confidentiality

  To ensure the confidentiality and integrity of data sent and received
  via JMAP, all requests MUST use TLS 1.2 [RFC5246] [RFC8446] or later,
  following the recommendations in [RFC7525].  Servers SHOULD support
  TLS 1.3 [RFC8446] or later.

  Clients MUST validate TLS certificate chains to protect against
  man-in-the-middle attacks [RFC5280].

8.2.  Authentication Scheme

  A number of HTTP authentication schemes have been standardised (see
  <https://www.iana.org/assignments/http-authschemes/>).  Servers
  should take care to assess the security characteristics of different
  schemes in relation to their needs when deciding what to implement.

  Use of the Basic authentication scheme is NOT RECOMMENDED.  Services
  that choose to use it are strongly recommended to require generation
  of a unique "app password" via some external mechanism for each
  client they wish to connect.  This allows connections from different
  devices to be differentiated by the server and access to be
  individually revoked.

8.3.  Service Autodiscovery

  Unless secured by something like DNSSEC, autodiscovery of server
  details using SRV DNS records is vulnerable to a DNS poisoning
  attack, which can lead to the client talking to an attacker's server
  instead of the real JMAP server.  The attacker may then intercept
  requests to execute man-in-the-middle attacks and, depending on the
  authentication scheme, steal credentials to generate its own
  requests.

  Clients that do not support SRV lookups are likely to try just using
  the "/.well-known/jmap" path directly against the domain of the
  username over HTTPS.  Servers SHOULD ensure this path resolves or
  redirects to the correct JMAP Session resource to allow this to work.
  If this is not feasible, servers MUST ensure this path cannot be
  controlled by an attacker, as again it may be used to steal
  credentials.








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8.4.  JSON Parsing

  The Security Considerations of [RFC8259] apply to the use of JSON as
  the data interchange format.

  As for any serialization format, parsers need to thoroughly check the
  syntax of the supplied data.  JSON uses opening and closing tags for
  several types and structures, and it is possible that the end of the
  supplied data will be reached when scanning for a matching closing
  tag; this is an error condition, and implementations need to stop
  scanning at the end of the supplied data.

  JSON also uses a string encoding with some escape sequences to encode
  special characters within a string.  Care is needed when processing
  these escape sequences to ensure that they are fully formed before
  the special processing is triggered, with special care taken when the
  escape sequences appear adjacent to other (non-escaped) special
  characters or adjacent to the end of data (as in the previous
  paragraph).

  If parsing JSON into a non-textual structured data format,
  implementations may need to allocate storage to hold JSON string
  elements.  Since JSON does not use explicit string lengths, the risk
  of denial of service due to resource exhaustion is small, but
  implementations may still wish to place limits on the size of
  allocations they are willing to make in any given context, to avoid
  untrusted data causing excessive memory allocation.

8.5.  Denial of Service

  A small request may result in a very large response and require
  considerable work on the server if resource limits are not enforced.
  JMAP provides mechanisms for advertising and enforcing a wide variety
  of limits for mitigating this threat, including limits on the number
  of objects fetched in a single method call, number of methods in a
  single request, number of concurrent requests, etc.

  JMAP servers MUST implement sensible limits to mitigate against
  resource exhaustion attacks.

8.6.  Connection to Unknown Push Server

  When a push subscription is registered, the application server will
  make POST requests to the given URL.  There are a number of security
  considerations that MUST be considered when implementing this.






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  The server MUST ensure the URL is externally resolvable to avoid
  server-side request forgery, where the server makes a request to a
  resource on its internal network.

  A malicious client may use the push subscription to attempt to flood
  a third party server with requests, creating a denial-of-service
  attack and masking the attacker's true identity.  There is no
  guarantee that the URL given to the JMAP server is actually a valid
  push server.  Upon creation of a push subscription, the JMAP server
  sends a PushVerification object to the URL and MUST NOT send any
  further requests until the client verifies it has received the
  initial push.  The verification code MUST contain sufficient entropy
  to prevent the client from being able to verify the subscription via
  brute force.

  The verification code does not guarantee the URL is a valid push
  server, only that the client is able to access the data submitted to
  it.  While the verification step significantly reduces the set of
  potential targets, there is still a risk that the server is unrelated
  to the client and being targeted for a denial-of-service attack.

  The server MUST limit the number of push subscriptions any one user
  may have to ensure the user cannot cause the server to send a large
  number of push notifications at once, which could again be used as
  part of a denial-of-service attack.  The rate of creation MUST also
  be limited to minimise the ability to abuse the verification request
  as an attack vector.

8.7.  Push Encryption

  When data changes, a small object is pushed with the new state
  strings for the types that have changed.  While the data here is
  minimal, a passive man-in-the-middle attacker may be able to gain
  useful information.  To ensure confidentiality and integrity, if the
  push is sent via a third party outside of the control of the client
  and JMAP server, the client MUST specify encryption keys when
  establishing the PushSubscription and ignore any push notification
  received that is not encrypted with those keys.

  The privacy and security considerations of [RFC8030] and [RFC8291]
  also apply to the use of the PushSubscription mechanism.

  As there is no crypto algorithm agility in Web Push Encryption
  [RFC8291], a new specification will be needed to provide this if new
  algorithms are required in the future.






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8.8.  Traffic Analysis

  While the data is encrypted, a passive observer with the ability to
  monitor network traffic may be able to glean information from the
  timing of API requests and push notifications.  For example, suppose
  an email or calendar invitation is sent from User A (hosted on Server
  X) to User B (hosted on Server Y).  If Server X hosts data for many
  users, a passive observer can see that the two servers connected but
  does not know who the data was for.  However, if a push notification
  is immediately sent to User B and the attacker can observe this as
  well, they may reasonably conclude that someone on Server X is
  connecting to User B.

9.  IANA Considerations

9.1.  Assignment of jmap Service Name

  IANA has assigned the 'jmap' service name in the "Service Name and
  Transport Protocol Port Number Registry" [RFC6335].

  Service Name: jmap

  Transport Protocol(s): tcp

  Assignee: IESG

  Contact: IETF Chair

  Description: JSON Meta Application Protocol

  Reference: RFC 8620

  Assignment Notes: This service name was previously assigned under the
  name "JSON Mail Access Protocol".  This has been de-assigned and
  re-assigned with the approval of the previous assignee.

9.2.  Registration of Well-Known URI Suffix for JMAP

  IANA has registered the following suffix in the "Well-Known URIs"
  registry for JMAP, as described in [RFC8615]:

  URI Suffix: jmap

  Change Controller: IETF

  Specification Document: RFC 8620, Section 2.2.





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9.3.  Registration of the jmap URN Sub-namespace

  IANA has registered the following URN sub-namespace in the "IETF URN
  Sub-namespace for Registered Protocol Parameter Identifiers" registry
  within the "Uniform Resource Name (URN) Namespace for IETF Use"
  registry as described in [RFC3553].

  Registered Parameter Identifier: jmap

  Reference: RFC 8620, Section 9.4

  IANA Registry Reference: http://www.iana.org/assignments/jmap

9.4.  Creation of "JMAP Capabilities" Registry

  IANA has created the "JMAP Capabilities" registry as described in
  Section 2.  JMAP capabilities are advertised in the "capabilities"
  property of the JMAP Session resource.  They are used to extend the
  functionality of a JMAP server.  A capability is referenced by a URI.
  The JMAP capability URI can be a URN starting with
  "urn:ietf:params:jmap:" plus a unique suffix that is the index value
  in the jmap URN sub-namespace.  Registration of a JMAP capability
  with another form of URI has no impact on the jmap URN sub-namespace.

  This registry follows the expert review process unless the "intended
  use" field is "common" or "placeholder", in which case registration
  follows the specification required process.

  A JMAP capability registration can have an intended use of "common",
  "placeholder", "limited", or "obsolete".  IANA will list common-use
  registrations prominently and separately from those with other
  intended use values.

  The JMAP capability registration procedure is not a formal standards
  process but rather an administrative procedure intended to allow
  community comment and sanity checking without excessive time delay.

  A "placeholder" registration reserves part of the jmap URN namespace
  for another purpose but is typically not included in the
  "capabilities" property of the JMAP Session resource.

9.4.1.  Preliminary Community Review

  Notice of a potential JMAP common-use registration SHOULD be sent to
  the JMAP mailing list <[email protected]> for review.  This mailing list
  is appropriate to solicit community feedback on a proposed JMAP





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  capability.  Registrations that are not intended for common use MAY
  be sent to the list for review as well; doing so is entirely
  OPTIONAL, but is encouraged.

  The intent of the public posting to this list is to solicit comments
  and feedback on the choice of the capability name, the unambiguity of
  the specification document, and a review of any interoperability or
  security considerations.  The submitter may submit a revised
  registration proposal or abandon the registration completely at any
  time.

9.4.2.  Submit Request to IANA

  Registration requests can be sent to <[email protected]>.

9.4.3.  Designated Expert Review

  For a limited-use registration, the primary concern of the designated
  expert (DE) is preventing name collisions and encouraging the
  submitter to document security and privacy considerations; a
  published specification is not required.  For a common-use
  registration, the DE is expected to confirm that suitable
  documentation, as described in Section 4.6 of [RFC8126], is
  available.  The DE should also verify that the capability does not
  conflict with work that is active or already published within the
  IETF.

  Before a period of 30 days has passed, the DE will either approve or
  deny the registration request and publish a notice of the decision to
  the JMAP WG mailing list or its successor, as well as inform IANA.  A
  denial notice must be justified by an explanation, and, in the cases
  where it is possible, concrete suggestions on how the request can be
  modified so as to become acceptable should be provided.

  If the DE does not respond within 30 days, the registrant may request
  the IESG take action to process the request in a timely manner.

9.4.4.  Change Procedures

  Once a JMAP capability has been published by the IANA, the change
  controller may request a change to its definition.  The same
  procedure that would be appropriate for the original registration
  request is used to process a change request.

  JMAP capability registrations may not be deleted; capabilities that
  are no longer believed appropriate for use can be declared obsolete
  by a change to their "intended use" field; such capabilities will be
  clearly marked in the lists published by the IANA.



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  Significant changes to a capability's definition should be requested
  only when there are serious omissions or errors in the published
  specification.  When review is required, a change request may be
  denied if it renders entities that were valid under the previous
  definition invalid under the new definition.

  The owner of a JMAP capability may pass responsibility to another
  person or agency by informing the IANA; this can be done without
  discussion or review.

  The IESG may reassign responsibility for a JMAP capability.  The most
  common case of this will be to enable changes to be made to
  capabilities where the author of the registration has died, moved out
  of contact, or is otherwise unable to make changes that are important
  to the community.

9.4.5.  JMAP Capabilities Registry Template

  Capability name: (see capability property in Section 2)

  Specification document:

  Intended use: (one of common, limited, placeholder, or obsolete)

  Change controller: ("IETF" for Standards Track / BCP RFCs)

  Security and privacy considerations:

9.4.6.  Initial Registration for JMAP Core

  Capability Name: "urn:ietf:params:jmap:core"

  Specification document: RFC 8620, Section 2

  Intended use: common

  Change Controller: IETF

  Security and privacy considerations: RFC 8620, Section 8.












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9.4.7.  Registration for JMAP Error Placeholder in JMAP Capabilities
       Registry

  Capability Name: "urn:ietf:params:jmap:error:"

  Specification document: RFC 8620, Section 9.5

  Intended use: placeholder

  Change Controller: IETF

  Security and privacy considerations: RFC 8620, Section 8.

9.5.  Creation of "JMAP Error Codes" Registry

  IANA has created the "JMAP Error Codes" registry.  JMAP error codes
  appear in the "type" member of a JSON problem details object (as
  described in Section 3.6.1), the "type" member in a JMAP error object
  (as described in Section 3.6.2), or the "type" member of a JMAP
  method-specific error object (such as SetError in Section 5.3).  When
  used in a problem details object, the prefix
  "urn:ietf:params:jmap:error:" is always included; when used in JMAP
  objects, the prefix is always omitted.

  This registry follows the expert review process.  Preliminary
  community review for this registry follows the same procedures as the
  "JMAP Capabilities" registry, but it is optional.  The change
  procedures for this registry are the same as the change procedures
  for the "JMAP Capabilities" registry.

9.5.1.  Expert Review

  The designated expert should review the following aspects of the
  registration:

  1.  Verify the error code does not conflict with existing names.

  2.  Verify the error code follows the syntax limitations (does not
      require URI encoding).

  3.  Encourage the submitter to follow the naming convention of
      previously registered errors.

  4.  Encourage the submitter to describe client behaviours that are
      recommended in response to the error code.  These may distinguish
      the error code from other error codes.





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  5.  Encourage the submitter to describe when the server should issue
      the error as opposed to some other error code.

  6.  Encourage the submitter to note any security considerations
      associated with the error, if any (e.g., an error code that might
      disclose existence of data the authenticated user does not have
      permission to know about).

  Steps 3-6 are meant to promote a higher-quality registry.  However,
  the expert is encouraged to approve any registration that would not
  actively harm JMAP interoperability to make this a relatively
  lightweight process.

9.5.2.  JMAP Error Codes Registry Template

  JMAP Error Code:

  Intended use: (one of "common", "limited", "obsolete")

  Change Controller: ("IETF" for Standards Track / BCP RFCs)

  Reference: (Optional.  Only required if defined in an RFC.)

  Description:

9.5.3.  Initial Contents for the JMAP Error Codes Registry

  o  JMAP Error Code: accountNotFound
     Intended Use: Common
     Change Controller: IETF
     Reference: RFC 8620, Section 3.6.2
     Description: The accountId does not correspond to a valid account.

  o  JMAP Error Code: accountNotSupportedByMethod
     Intended Use: Common
     Change Controller: IETF
     Reference: RFC 8620, Section 3.6.2
     Description: The accountId given corresponds to a valid account,
     but the account does not support this method or data type.

  o  JMAP Error Code: accountReadOnly
     Intended Use: Common
     Change Controller: IETF
     Reference: RFC 8620, Section 3.6.2
     Description: This method modifies state, but the account is read-
     only (as returned on the corresponding Account object in the JMAP
     Session resource).




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  o  JMAP Error Code: anchorNotFound
     Intended Use: Common
     Change Controller: IETF
     Reference: RFC 8620, Section 5.5
     Description: An anchor argument was supplied, but it cannot be
     found in the results of the query.

  o  JMAP Error Code: alreadyExists
     Intended Use: Common
     Change Controller: IETF
     Reference: RFC 8620, Section 5.4
     Description: The server forbids duplicates, and the record already
     exists in the target account.  An existingId property of type Id
     MUST be included on the SetError object with the id of the
     existing record.

  o  JMAP Error Code: cannotCalculateChanges
     Intended Use: Common
     Change Controller: IETF
     Reference: RFC 8620, Sections 5.2 and 5.6
     Description: The server cannot calculate the changes from the
     state string given by the client.

  o  JMAP Error Code: forbidden
     Intended Use: Common
     Change Controller: IETF
     Reference: RFC 8620, Sections 3.6.2, 5.3, and 7.2.1
     Description: The action would violate an ACL or other permissions
     policy.

  o  JMAP Error Code: fromAccountNotFound
     Intended Use: Common
     Change Controller: IETF
     Reference: RFC 8620, Sections 5.4 and 6.3
     Description: The fromAccountId does not correspond to a valid
     account.

  o  JMAP Error Code: fromAccountNotSupportedByMethod
     Intended Use: Common
     Change Controller: IETF
     Reference: RFC 8620, Section 5.4
     Description: The fromAccountId given corresponds to a valid
     account, but the account does not support this data type.








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  o  JMAP Error Code: invalidArguments
     Intended Use: Common
     Change Controller: IETF
     Reference: RFC 8620, Section 3.6.2
     Description: One of the arguments is of the wrong type or
     otherwise invalid, or a required argument is missing.

  o  JMAP Error Code: invalidPatch
     Intended Use: Common
     Change Controller: IETF
     Reference: RFC 8620, Section 5.3
     Description: The PatchObject given to update the record was not a
     valid patch.

  o  JMAP Error Code: invalidProperties
     Intended Use: Common
     Change Controller: IETF
     Reference: RFC 8620, Section 5.3
     Description: The record given is invalid.

  o  JMAP Error Code: notFound
     Intended Use: Common
     Change Controller: IETF
     Reference: RFC 8620, Section 5.3
     Description: The id given cannot be found.

  o  JMAP Error Code: notJSON
     Intended Use: Common
     Change Controller: IETF
     Reference: RFC 8620, Section 3.6.1
     Description: The content type of the request was not application/
     json, or the request did not parse as I-JSON.

  o  JMAP Error Code: notRequest
     Intended Use: Common
     Change Controller: IETF
     Reference: RFC 8620, Section 3.6.1
     Description: The request parsed as JSON but did not match the type
     signature of the Request object.

  o  JMAP Error Code: overQuota
     Intended Use: Common
     Change Controller: IETF
     Reference: RFC 8620, Section 5.3
     Description: The create would exceed a server-defined limit on the
     number or total size of objects of this type.





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  o  JMAP Error Code: rateLimit
     Intended Use: Common
     Change Controller: IETF
     Reference: RFC 8620, Section 5.3
     Description: Too many objects of this type have been created
     recently, and a server-defined rate limit has been reached.  It
     may work if tried again later.

  o  JMAP Error Code: requestTooLarge
     Intended Use: Common
     Change Controller: IETF
     Reference: RFC 8620, Sections 5.1 and 5.3
     Description: The total number of actions exceeds the maximum
     number the server is willing to process in a single method call.

  o  JMAP Error Code: invalidResultReference
     Intended Use: Common
     Change Controller: IETF
     Reference: RFC 8620, Section 3.6.2
     Description: The method used a result reference for one of its
     arguments, but this failed to resolve.

  o  JMAP Error Code: serverFail
     Intended Use: Common
     Change Controller: IETF
     Reference: RFC 8620, Section 3.6.2
     Description: An unexpected or unknown error occurred during the
     processing of the call.  The method call made no changes to the
     server's state.

  o  JMAP Error Code: serverPartialFail
     Intended Use: Limited
     Change Controller: IETF
     Reference: RFC 8620, Section 3.6.2
     Description: Some, but not all, expected changes described by the
     method occurred.  The client MUST resynchronise impacted data to
     determine the server state.  Use of this error is strongly
     discouraged.

  o  JMAP Error Code: serverUnavailable
     Intended Use: Common
     Change Controller: IETF
     Reference: RFC 8620, Section 3.6.2
     Description: Some internal server resource was temporarily
     unavailable.  Attempting the same operation later (perhaps after a
     backoff with a random factor) may succeed.





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  o  JMAP Error Code: singleton
     Intended Use: Common
     Change Controller: IETF
     Reference: RFC 8620, Section 5.3
     Description: This is a singleton type, so you cannot create
     another one or destroy the existing one.

  o  JMAP Error Code: stateMismatch
     Intended Use: Common
     Change Controller: IETF
     Reference: RFC 8620, Section 5.3
     Description: An ifInState argument was supplied, and it does not
     match the current state.

  o  JMAP Error Code: tooLarge
     Intended Use: Common
     Change Controller: IETF
     Reference: RFC 8620, Section 5.3
     Description: The action would result in an object that exceeds a
     server-defined limit for the maximum size of a single object of
     this type.

  o  JMAP Error Code: tooManyChanges
     Intended Use: Common
     Change Controller: IETF
     Reference: RFC 8620, Section 5.6
     Description: There are more changes than the client's maxChanges
     argument.

  o  JMAP Error Code: unknownCapability
     Intended Use: Common
     Change Controller: IETF
     Reference: RFC 8620, Section 3.6.1
     Description: The client included a capability in the "using"
     property of the request that the server does not support.

  o  JMAP Error Code: unknownMethod
     Intended Use: Common
     Change Controller: IETF
     Reference: RFC 8620, Section 3.6.2
     Description: The server does not recognise this method name.

  o  JMAP Error Code: unsupportedFilter
     Intended Use: Common
     Change Controller: IETF
     Reference: RFC 8620, Section 5.5
     Description: The filter is syntactically valid, but the server
     cannot process it.



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  o  JMAP Error Code: unsupportedSort
     Intended Use: Common
     Change Controller: IETF
     Reference: RFC 8620, Section 5.5
     Description: The sort is syntactically valid but includes a
     property the server does not support sorting on or a collation
     method it does not recognise.

  o  JMAP Error Code: willDestroy
     Intended Use: Common
     Change Controller: IETF
     Reference: RFC 8620, Section 5.3
     Description: The client requested an object be both updated and
     destroyed in the same /set request, and the server has decided to
     therefore ignore the update.

10.  References

10.1.  Normative References

  [EventSource]
             Hickson, I., "Server-Sent Events", World Wide Web
             Consortium Recommendation REC-eventsource-20150203,
             February 2015, <https://www.w3.org/TR/eventsource/>.

  [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
             Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.

  [RFC2782]  Gulbrandsen, A., Vixie, P., and L. Esibov, "A DNS RR for
             specifying the location of services (DNS SRV)", RFC 2782,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC2782, February 2000,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2782>.

  [RFC2818]  Rescorla, E., "HTTP Over TLS", RFC 2818,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC2818, May 2000,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2818>.

  [RFC3339]  Klyne, G. and C. Newman, "Date and Time on the Internet:
             Timestamps", RFC 3339, DOI 10.17487/RFC3339, July 2002,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3339>.

  [RFC3553]  Mealling, M., Masinter, L., Hardie, T., and G. Klyne, "An
             IETF URN Sub-namespace for Registered Protocol
             Parameters", BCP 73, RFC 3553, DOI 10.17487/RFC3553, June
             2003, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3553>.




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  [RFC3629]  Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO
             10646", STD 63, RFC 3629, DOI 10.17487/RFC3629, November
             2003, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3629>.

  [RFC4648]  Josefsson, S., "The Base16, Base32, and Base64 Data
             Encodings", RFC 4648, DOI 10.17487/RFC4648, October 2006,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4648>.

  [RFC4790]  Newman, C., Duerst, M., and A. Gulbrandsen, "Internet
             Application Protocol Collation Registry", RFC 4790,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC4790, March 2007,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4790>.

  [RFC5051]  Crispin, M., "i;unicode-casemap - Simple Unicode Collation
             Algorithm", RFC 5051, DOI 10.17487/RFC5051, October 2007,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5051>.

  [RFC5246]  Dierks, T. and E. Rescorla, "The Transport Layer Security
             (TLS) Protocol Version 1.2", RFC 5246,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC5246, August 2008,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5246>.

  [RFC5280]  Cooper, D., Santesson, S., Farrell, S., Boeyen, S.,
             Housley, R., and W. Polk, "Internet X.509 Public Key
             Infrastructure Certificate and Certificate Revocation List
             (CRL) Profile", RFC 5280, DOI 10.17487/RFC5280, May 2008,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5280>.

  [RFC5322]  Resnick, P., Ed., "Internet Message Format", RFC 5322,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC5322, October 2008,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5322>.

  [RFC6186]  Daboo, C., "Use of SRV Records for Locating Email
             Submission/Access Services", RFC 6186,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC6186, March 2011,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6186>.

  [RFC6335]  Cotton, M., Eggert, L., Touch, J., Westerlund, M., and S.
             Cheshire, "Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA)
             Procedures for the Management of the Service Name and
             Transport Protocol Port Number Registry", BCP 165,
             RFC 6335, DOI 10.17487/RFC6335, August 2011,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6335>.

  [RFC6570]  Gregorio, J., Fielding, R., Hadley, M., Nottingham, M.,
             and D. Orchard, "URI Template", RFC 6570,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC6570, March 2012,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6570>.



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  [RFC6749]  Hardt, D., Ed., "The OAuth 2.0 Authorization Framework",
             RFC 6749, DOI 10.17487/RFC6749, October 2012,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6749>.

  [RFC6764]  Daboo, C., "Locating Services for Calendaring Extensions
             to WebDAV (CalDAV) and vCard Extensions to WebDAV
             (CardDAV)", RFC 6764, DOI 10.17487/RFC6764, February 2013,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6764>.

  [RFC6838]  Freed, N., Klensin, J., and T. Hansen, "Media Type
             Specifications and Registration Procedures", BCP 13,
             RFC 6838, DOI 10.17487/RFC6838, January 2013,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6838>.

  [RFC6901]  Bryan, P., Ed., Zyp, K., and M. Nottingham, Ed.,
             "JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) Pointer", RFC 6901,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC6901, April 2013,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6901>.

  [RFC7230]  Fielding, R., Ed. and J. Reschke, Ed., "Hypertext Transfer
             Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Message Syntax and Routing",
             RFC 7230, DOI 10.17487/RFC7230, June 2014,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7230>.

  [RFC7231]  Fielding, R., Ed. and J. Reschke, Ed., "Hypertext Transfer
             Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Semantics and Content", RFC 7231,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC7231, June 2014,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7231>.

  [RFC7493]  Bray, T., Ed., "The I-JSON Message Format", RFC 7493,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC7493, March 2015,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7493>.

  [RFC7525]  Sheffer, Y., Holz, R., and P. Saint-Andre,
             "Recommendations for Secure Use of Transport Layer
             Security (TLS) and Datagram Transport Layer Security
             (DTLS)", BCP 195, RFC 7525, DOI 10.17487/RFC7525, May
             2015, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7525>.

  [RFC7617]  Reschke, J., "The 'Basic' HTTP Authentication Scheme",
             RFC 7617, DOI 10.17487/RFC7617, September 2015,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7617>.

  [RFC7807]  Nottingham, M. and E. Wilde, "Problem Details for HTTP
             APIs", RFC 7807, DOI 10.17487/RFC7807, March 2016,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7807>.





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  [RFC8030]  Thomson, M., Damaggio, E., and B. Raymor, Ed., "Generic
             Event Delivery Using HTTP Push", RFC 8030,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC8030, December 2016,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8030>.

  [RFC8126]  Cotton, M., Leiba, B., and T. Narten, "Guidelines for
             Writing an IANA Considerations Section in RFCs", BCP 26,
             RFC 8126, DOI 10.17487/RFC8126, June 2017,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8126>.

  [RFC8174]  Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC
             2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174,
             May 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174>.

  [RFC8259]  Bray, T., Ed., "The JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) Data
             Interchange Format", STD 90, RFC 8259,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC8259, December 2017,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8259>.

  [RFC8264]  Saint-Andre, P. and M. Blanchet, "PRECIS Framework:
             Preparation, Enforcement, and Comparison of
             Internationalized Strings in Application Protocols",
             RFC 8264, DOI 10.17487/RFC8264, October 2017,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8264>.

  [RFC8291]  Thomson, M., "Message Encryption for Web Push", RFC 8291,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC8291, November 2017,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8291>.

  [RFC8446]  Rescorla, E., "The Transport Layer Security (TLS) Protocol
             Version 1.3", RFC 8446, DOI 10.17487/RFC8446, August 2018,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8446>.

  [RFC8615]  Nottingham, M., "Well-Known Uniform Resource Identifiers
             (URIs)", RFC 8615, DOI 10.17487/RFC8615, May 2019,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8615>.

10.2.  Informative References

  [RFC8246]  McManus, P., "HTTP Immutable Responses", RFC 8246,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC8246, September 2017,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8246>.









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Authors' Addresses

  Neil Jenkins
  Fastmail
  PO Box 234, Collins St. West
  Melbourne, VIC  8007
  Australia

  Email: [email protected]
  URI:   https://www.fastmail.com


  Chris Newman
  Oracle
  440 E. Huntington Dr., Suite 400
  Arcadia, CA  91006
  United States of America

  Email: [email protected]
































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