RFC 9670 | JMAP Sharing | November 2024 |
Jenkins | Standards Track | [Page] |
This document specifies a data model for sharing data between users using the JSON Meta Application Protocol (JMAP). Future documents can reference this document when defining data types to support a consistent model of sharing.¶
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/rfc9670.¶
Copyright (c) 2024 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 Revised BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as described in the Revised BSD License.¶
The JSON Meta Application Protocol (JMAP) [RFC8620] is a generic protocol for synchronizing data, such as mail, calendars, or contacts, between a client and a server. It is optimized for mobile and web environments and provides a consistent interface to query, read, and modify different data types, including comprehensive error handling.¶
This specification defines a data model to represent entities in a collaborative environment and a framework for sharing data between them that can be used to provide a consistent sharing model for different data types. It does not define what may be shared or the granularity of permissions, as this will depend on the data in question.¶
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.¶
Type signatures, examples, and property descriptions in this document follow the conventions established in Section 1.1 of [RFC8620]. Data types defined in the core specification are also used in this document.¶
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.¶
The same terminology is used in this document as in the core JMAP specification. See [RFC8620], Section 1.6.¶
The terms "Principal" and "ShareNotification" (with this specific capitalization) are used to refer to the data types defined in this document and instances of those data types.¶
A Principal (see Section 2) represents an individual, team, or resource (e.g., a room or projector). The object contains information about the entity being represented, such as a name, description, and time zone. It may also hold domain-specific information. A Principal may be associated with zero or more Accounts (see [RFC8620], Section 1.6.2) containing data belonging to the Principal. Managing the set of Principals within a system is out of scope for this specification, as it is highly domain specific. It is likely to map directly from a directory service or other user management system.¶
Data types may allow users to share data with others by assigning permissions to Principals. When a user's permissions are changed, a ShareNotification object is created for them so a client can inform the user of the changes.¶
Permissions determine whether a user may access data but not whether they want to. Some shared data is of equal importance as the user's own, while other data is just there should the user wish to explicitly go find it. Clients will often want to differentiate the two. For example, a company may share mailing list archives for all departments with all employees, but a user may only generally be interested in the few they belong to. They would have permission to access many mailboxes but can subscribe to just the ones they care about. The client would provide separate interfaces for reading mail in subscribed mailboxes and browsing all mailboxes they have permission to access in order to manage those that they are subscribed to.¶
The JMAP Session object (see [RFC8620], Section 2) is defined to include an object in the "accounts" property for every Account that the user has access to. Collaborative systems may share data between a very large number of Principals, most of which the user does not care about day to day. For servers implementing this specification, the Session object MUST only include Accounts where either the user is subscribed to at least one record (see [RFC8620], Section 1.6.3) in the Account or the Account belongs to the user. StateChange events ([RFC8620], Section 7.1) for changes to data SHOULD only be sent for data the user has subscribed to and MUST NOT be sent for any Account where the user is not subscribed to any records in the Account, except where that Account belongs to the user.¶
The server MAY reject the user's attempt to subscribe to some resources even if they have permission to access them (e.g., a calendar representing a location).¶
A user can query the set of Principals they have access to with "Principal/query" (see Section 2.4). The Principal object will contain an Account object for all Accounts where the user has permission to access data for that Principal, even if they are not yet subscribed.¶
The capabilities object is returned as part of the JMAP Session object; see [RFC8620], Section 2. This document defines two additional capability URIs.¶
The urn:ietf:params:jmap:principals
capability represents support for the Principal and ShareNotification data types and associated API methods.¶
The value of this property in the JMAP Session "capabilities" property is an empty object.¶
The value of this property in an Account's "accountCapabilities" property is an object that MUST contain the following information on server capabilities and permissions for that Account:¶
Id|null
The URI urn:ietf:params:jmap:principals:owner
is solely used as a key in an Account's "accountCapabilities" property. It does not appear in the JMAP Session capabilities -- support is indicated by the urn:ietf:params:jmap:principals
URI being present in the session capabilities.¶
If urn:ietf:params:jmap:principals:owner
is a key in an Account's "accountCapabilities" property, that Account (and the data therein) is owned by a Principal. Some Accounts may not be owned by a Principal (e.g., the Account that contains the data for the Principals themselves), in which case this property is omitted.¶
The value of this property is an object with the following properties:¶
A Principal represents an individual, a group, a location (e.g., a room), a resource (e.g., a projector), or another entity in a collaborative environment. Sharing in JMAP is generally configured by assigning rights to certain data within an Account to other Principals. For example, a user may assign permission to read their calendar to a Principal representing another user or their team.¶
In a shared environment, such as a workplace, a user may have access to a large number of Principals.¶
In most systems, the user will have access to a single Account containing Principal objects. In some situations, for example, when aggregating data from different places, there may be multiple Accounts containing Principal objects.¶
A Principal object has the following properties:¶
Id
(immutable; server-set)String
This MUST be one of the following values:¶
String
String|null
String|null
null
if no email is available. If given, the value MUST conform to the "addr-spec" syntax, as defined in [RFC5322], Section 3.4.1.¶
String|null
null
, the value MUST be a time zone name from the IANA Time Zone Database [IANA-TZDB].¶
String[Object]
(server-set)Id[Account]|null
(server-set)null
if none.¶
This is a standard "/get" method as described in [RFC8620], Section 5.1.¶
This is a standard "/changes" method as described in [RFC8620], Section 5.2.¶
This is a standard "/set" method as described in [RFC8620], Section 5.3.¶
Managing Principals is likely tied to a directory service or some other vendor-specific solution. This management may occur out of band or via an additional capability defined elsewhere. Allowing direct user modification of properties has security considerations, as noted in Section 6. A server MUST reject any change it doesn't allow with a "forbidden" SetError.¶
Where a server does support changes via this API, it SHOULD allow an update to the "name", "description", and "timeZone" properties of the Principal with the same id as the "currentUserPrincipalId" in the Account capabilities. This allows the user to update their own details.¶
This is a standard "/query" method as described in [RFC8620], Section 5.5.¶
A FilterCondition object has the following properties, all of which are optional:¶
String[]
String
String
String
String
String
All given conditions in the FilterCondition object must match for the Principal to match.¶
Text matches for "contains" SHOULD be simple substring matches.¶
This is a standard "/queryChanges" method as described in [RFC8620], Section 5.6.¶
Experience has shown that unrestricted use of Unicode can lead to problems such as inconsistent rendering, users reading text and interpreting it differently than intended, and unexpected results when copying text from one location to another. Servers MAY choose to mitigate this by restricting the set of characters allowed in otherwise unconstrained String
fields. The FreeformClass, as documented in [RFC8264], Section 4.3, might be a good starting point for this.¶
Attempts to set a value containing code points outside of the permissible set can be handled in a few ways by the server. The first option is to simply strip the forbidden characters and store the resulting string. This is likely to be appropriate for control characters, for example, where they can end up in data accidentally due to copy-and-paste issues and are probably invisible to the end user. JMAP allows the server to transform data on create/update, as long as any changed properties are returned to the client in the "/set" response so it knows what has changed, as per [RFC8620], Section 5.3. Alternatively, the server MAY just reject the create/update with an "invalidProperties" SetError.¶
All security considerations of JMAP [RFC8620] apply to this specification. Additional considerations are detailed below.¶
Allowing users to edit their own Principal's name (and, to a lesser extent, email, description, or type) could allow a user to change their Principal to look like another user in the system, potentially tricking others into sharing private data with them. Servers may choose to forbid this and SHOULD keep logs of such changes to provide an audit trail.¶
Note that simply forbidding the use of a name already in the system is insufficient protection, as a malicious user could still change their name to something easily confused with the existing name by using trivial misspellings or visually similar Unicode characters.¶
Sharing data with another user allows someone to turn a transitory account compromise (e.g., brief access to an unlocked or logged-in client) into a persistent compromise (by setting up sharing with a user that is controlled by the attacker). This can be mitigated by requiring further authorization for configuring sharing or sending notifications to the sharer via another channel whenever a new permission is added.¶
By creating many changes to the sharing status of objects, a user can cause many ShareNotifications to be generated, which could lead to resource exhaustion. Servers can mitigate this by coalescing multiple changes to the same object into a single notification, limiting the maximum number of notifications it stores per user and/or rate-limiting the changes to sharing permissions in the first place. Automatically deleting older notifications after reaching a limit can mean the user is not made aware of a sharing change, which can itself be a security issue. For this reason, it is better to coalesce changes and use other mitigation strategies.¶
IANA has registered "principals" in the "JMAP Capabilities" registry as follows:¶
IANA has registered "principals:owner" in the "JMAP Capabilities" registry as follows:¶