Internet-Draft | JMAP Blob | November 2020 |
Gondwana | Expires 20 May 2021 | [Page] |
The JMAP base protocol (RFC8620) provides the ability to upload and download arbitrary binary data via HTTP PUT and GET on defined endpoint. This binary data is called a "Blob".¶
This extension adds additional ways to handle Blobs, by making inline method calls within a standard JMAP request.¶
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Sometimes JMAP ([RFC8620]) interactions require creating a Blob and then referencing it. In the same way that IMAP Literals ([RFC7888]) were extended to reduce roundtrips for simple data, embedding simple small blobs into the JMAP method stream can reduce roundtrips.¶
Likewise, when fetching an object, it can be useful to also fetch the raw content of that object without a separate roundtrip.¶
Where JMAP is being proxied through a system which is providing additional access restrictions, it can be useful to be able to see where a blob is referenced in order to decide whether to allow it to be downloaded.¶
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.¶
A blob is a sequence of zero or more octets.¶
The JMAP base spec [RFC8210] defines the Blob/copy
method, which
is unchanged by this specfication.¶
This is a standard JMAP set
method.¶
Properties:¶
Any one of:¶
Also:¶
Result is:¶
Any other properties identical to those that would be returned in the JSON response of the RFC8620 upload endpoint.¶
SetObject:¶
Any one of¶
OR a blobId source:¶
It is not possible to update a Blob, so any update will result in a notUpdated
response.¶
If an uploaded Blob is not referenced by any persistent object, the server SHOULD destroy the object.
Some systems use a content-based ID for blobs, so the server MAY respond destroyed
and yet that
blobId still exist with the same content.¶
Example:¶
Method Call: [ "Blob/set", { "accountId" : "account1", "create" : { "1": { "data:asBase64": "iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAAAEAAAABAQMAAAAl21bKA AAAA1BMVEX/AAAZ4gk3AAAAAXRSTlN/gFy0ywAAAApJRE FUeJxjYgAAAAYAAzY3fKgAAAAASUVORK5CYII=", "type" : "image/png" }, }, }, "R1" ] Response: [ "Blob/set", { "accountId" : "account1", "created" : { "1": { "id" : "G4c6751edf9dd6903ff54b792e432fba781271beb", "type" : "image/png", "size" : 95 }, }, }, "R1" ]¶
A standard JMAP get.¶
Properties:¶
Any of¶
If not given, returns data
and size
.¶
QUESTION: do we want to add range operators?¶
Returns that range of bytes (not characters!) from the blob¶
A reverse lookup!¶
Work to be done here, but something like this.¶
Map from blobId to object type:¶
e.g.¶
[ "Blob/lookup", { "objects": ["Mailbox", "Thread", "Email"], "ids": ["Gd2f81008cf07d2425418f7f02a3ca63a8bc82003", "G6f954bcb620f7f50fc8f21426bde3669da3d9067"] }, "R1" ]¶
Response:¶
[ "Blob/lookup", { "list": [ { "id": "Gd2f81008cf07d2425418f7f02a3ca63a8bc82003", "Mailbox": ["M54e97373", Mcbe6b662"], "Thread": ["T1530616e"], "Email": ["E16e70a73eb4", "E84b0930cf16"] }, ], "notFound": ["G6f954bcb620f7f50fc8f21426bde3669da3d9067"] }, "R1"]¶
This tells which objects of each type "contain" a reference to that blobId. "Contain" is defined somewhat losely here, so for example "the Mailbox contains an Email which references this blobId" is the standard in the response above, likewise for Thread.¶
TO BE IMPROVED:¶
JSON parsers are not all consistent in handling non-UTF-8 data. JMAP requires
that all JSON data be UTF-8 encoded, so servers MUST either return
data:asBase64
or isEncodingProblem: true
and modify the data to be UTF-8
safe.¶
TBD¶