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initial version The XMPP way is to have "disposable", or at least easily substituted, clients, maintaining long-term state on the server, and allowing it to be synchronized between clients. In particular, this can be seen on how the roster and presence fan-out operate - clients defer the operation of such things to the server, which manages the shared state and allows servers to access and manipulate it. Historically, however, we have not done this for some more recently services, including Multi User Chat and PubSub. In both cases, different clients may be unaware of what chatrooms (etc) are joined (etc) by which other clients. This causes practical difficulty in seamlessly switching between devices and/or clients.
Clients need to include a capability in Disco. Probably.
Servers need to advertise capability against account.
Clients use a modified XEP-0060 Subscribe with a newly added "jid" attribute? Presumably this may need to be in a distinct namespace.
It is tempted to suggest that all pubsub operations might be contained within a new namespace with the additional jid attribute, as they can be forwarded verbatim as required.
Servers use traditional XEP-0060 subscribes, but sent from the bare jid of the account.
Servers MUST send a Thing to indicate the new subscription to all clients capable of this protocol.
As above.
XEP-0237 FTW. Needs a new construct, since the subscriptions element in XEP-0060ยง5.6 will only list the user's local subscriptions (ie, to their PEP nodes). Maybe just the new namespace defaults to everything instead? But we'd still need the XEP-0237 model.
Servers need to subscribe to remote PEP services explicitly those nodes which are of interest. Interest needs to be detirmined by the client issuing a request; but this implies that servers would gradually acrue any node type which the user has had a capable client at any time.
Perhaps timing out node types which have not been requested for over a certain period?
Clients can use +notify to handle auto-subscriptions between clients and their server.
Servers receiving +notify from accounts known to support this protocol ignore them.
Clients filter subscriptions using a specific stanza (iq, probably), containing a list of node names. This can be used instead of the odler +notify (which is broadcast).
We probably want to say that events are now archived by MAM, but this may imply that clients need to filter out such events (or explicitly include them). Maybe the mask above affects MAM queries?
I have literally no idea. I don't think anything new is introduced that couldn't be discovered by traffic monitoring, although it collects and collates information that previously would not have been so readily available.
On publication of this specification, the XMPP Registrar will dance a little jig to the tune of the traditional hornpipe with a tea-cosy upon his or her head.
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