honk spec -- references See security.txt for some notes on security. See ping.txt for a proposed Ping extension to ActivityPub. -- retries If a message can't be delivered, we backoff and retry. 1 - five minutes later in case the servce restarted 2 - one hour later in case the server rebooted 3 - 12 more hours later in case the server was upgraded 4 - 24 more hours later in case there was a catastrophe 5 - it's dead. A random drift of up to 10% is added to each delay to avoid swarming. -- federating Messages are transformed for federation and display. Some transformations occur send side and some occur receive side because it's more exciting that way. @mentions and *markdown* are converted to HTML before transmission. Message :emoji: are converted to inline images after receiving. Up to four parents of a reply will be fetched. Attachments for received messages are rescaled before saving. -- schema Some notes on the database schema. Mostly for development, but maybe useful for administration as well. The config table contains settings, some of which may not be editable via the normal interface. For development purposes, adding a config value ('debug', 1) to the database will disable caching and hot reload the templates. It's not meant to be harmful in production, just less efficient. We don't use null, only empty strings. This is easier to work with on the go side. The main table is honks. This stores both locally created honks and incoming ActivityPub notes converted to honks. It is important to differentiate the two cases so that we don't accidentally publish external honks in the public web view. The whofore column value of 2 indiciates a public honk. The what column further refines the type of honk. Attachments are physically saved as files, and logically joined to honks via the donks table. Emus are saved as donks as well. The honkers table is used to manage follows and followers. The flavor column describes what. 'sub' is a follow. We have subscribed to their newsletter. 'dub' is a follower. They get dubbed whenever we honk. The xonkers table stores info about external accounts that we may interact with. Their keys, their inboxes, etc. Not user visible. The zonkers table stores things we do not wish to see, per the wherefore column. zonkers are bad people, zurls are bad hosts, zonvoys are bad threads. The xid column generally corresponds to ActivityPub id. Note that some logical seeming joins won't work. The honker column of honks may not have a corresponding entry in the honkers table, since we frequently receive messages from people we don't follow. Should we track everybody whose identity crosses our path? This seems unnecessary. The honkers table is more like a mapping of active relationships, not a directory of all peoples. Some deduping of honks is performed. This may not be perfect.