Compare commits

...

3 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
fiatjaf_
82a31d69de
Merge 5d155b4ac8 into a1ca7a194b 2024-12-11 19:05:06 -03:00
Jon Staab
a1ca7a194b Change strategy for naming groups 2024-12-10 19:25:28 -03:00
fiatjaf
5d155b4ac8 REPLACE verb. 2024-12-08 10:01:28 -03:00
3 changed files with 22 additions and 3 deletions

4
29.md
View File

@ -30,8 +30,6 @@ When encountering just the `<host>` without the `'<group-id>`, clients MAY infer
Events sent by users to groups (chat messages, text notes, moderation events etc) MUST have an `h` tag with the value set to the group _id_.
`h` tags MAY include the group's name as the second argument. This allows `unmanaged` groups to be assigned human-readable names without relay support.
## Timeline references
In order to not be used out of context, events sent to these groups may contain references to previous events seen from the same relay in the `previous` tag. The choice of which previous events to pick belongs to the clients. The references are to be made using the first 8 characters (4 bytes) of any event in the last 50 events seen by the user in the relay, excluding events by themselves. There can be any number of references (including zero), but it's recommended that clients include at least 3 and that relays enforce this.
@ -242,3 +240,5 @@ A definition for `kind:10009` was included in [NIP-51](51.md) that allows client
### Using `unmanaged` relays
To prevent event leakage, when using `unmanaged` relays, clients should include the [NIP-70](70.md) `-` tag, as just the `previous` tag won't be checked by other `unmanaged` relays.
Groups MAY be named without relay support by adding a `name` to the corresponding tag in a user's `kind 10009` group list.

2
51.md
View File

@ -29,7 +29,7 @@ For example, _mute list_ can contain the public keys of spammers and bad actors
| Public chats | 10005 | [NIP-28](28.md) chat channels the user is in | `"e"` (kind:40 channel definitions) |
| Blocked relays | 10006 | relays clients should never connect to | `"relay"` (relay URLs) |
| Search relays | 10007 | relays clients should use when performing search queries | `"relay"` (relay URLs) |
| Simple groups | 10009 | [NIP-29](29.md) groups the user is in | `"group"` ([NIP-29](29.md) group id + relay URL), `"r"` for each relay in use |
| Simple groups | 10009 | [NIP-29](29.md) groups the user is in | `"group"` ([NIP-29](29.md) group id + relay URL + optional group name), `"r"` for each relay in use |
| Interests | 10015 | topics a user may be interested in and pointers | `"t"` (hashtags) and `"a"` (kind:30015 interest set) |
| Emojis | 10030 | user preferred emojis and pointers to emoji sets | `"emoji"` (see [NIP-30](30.md)) and `"a"` (kind:30030 emoji set) |
| DM relays | 10050 | Where to receive [NIP-17](17.md) direct messages | `"relay"` (see [NIP-17](17.md)) |

19
76.md Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,19 @@
NIP-76
======
`REPLACE` command for updating replaceables
-------------------------------------------
`draft` `optional`
This NIP defines a new message, `REPLACE`, that clients can use to publish _replaceable_ and _addressable_ events to relays.
It works like `EVENT`, but together with the event JSON, the client also sends the id of the event they are replacing.
```jsonc
["REPLACE", "<id-of-event-being-replaced>", "<new-event>"]
```
Upon receiving this message, relays should check if the `<id-of-event-being-replaced>` corresponds to the latest event id they have stored locally that corresponds to the new replaceable event being received.
If it does correspond, it responds with an `OK` normally; otherwise it responds with something I'm not sure but that allows the client to fix its stuff.