Related to the ForumWG topic of resolvable context collections, there are four FEPs that are currently in consideration:
- FEP-7888: Demystifying the context property
- FEP-400e: Publicly-appendable ActivityPub collections
- Draft FEP-171b: Conversation Containers, an evolution of Conversation Containers
- FEP-76ea: Conversation Threads
@[email protected] made a suggestion last month to hopefully reduce the number of moving parts:
- Both FEP-400e and FEP-1b12 implementations: support FEP-7888 (context collection)
- FEP-400e implementations: upgrade to Conversation Containers
- FEP-1b12 implementations: add target property to Announce activity that points to context collection.
This takes FEP 400e out of the running (potentially). But the day after that last meeting, @[email protected] put together FEP 76ea, and now we’re back to three.
My concern is that all three FEPs (7888, 171b, and 76ea) all share these distinct qualities:
- They establish a conversational context for a given object
- They federate out an
Add
on collection addition. (76ea also sendsRemove
) - They contain some concept of a context owner (
attributedTo
)
They differ on the following qualities:
- 7888/171b use
context
whereas 76ea uses a new propertythr:thread
- 171b specifies a new object type
Context
- Collection items:
- 7888 sends objects in chronological order
- 171b sends activities in chronological order
- 76ea sends objects in reverse chronological order
In the lead up to the November WG meeting I’d like to address those differences. All three FEPs are in pre-draft or draft stages, and so I am hoping we can find some common ground and compromise.
Pinging interested parties (who were not already mentioned above) for comment:
@[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected]
@[email protected] said in FEP Convergence (400e, 7888, 171b/Conversation Containers, 76ea):
We do the same. We don’t actually handle
Add
s right now, but ourUpdate
handler has aswitch..case
based ontype
.Adding a separate type would be easier, yes. Otherwise you’re looking at additional logic to tease apart different variants that share the same base object type. For example, the logic for
Update(Note)
has further logic paths depending on whether the note is publicly addressed or not.So then yes, a
Add{target: Collectionish}
might be vague, but that’s only the case if other implementations use the same.@julian This pattern can also be used in Accept and Undo activities:
{ "type": "Undo", "id": "https://social.example/activities/undo/1" "object": { "type": "Like", # or "Follow" "id": "https://social.example/activities/like/1" } }