Appealing a Ban and CollabVM 1.2 Protocol Reference: Difference between pages

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This is the protocol reference for CollabVM 1.2, detailing how the protocol works and how to do different things.
So, you've been banned from CollabVM. Site Bans are made by VM staff according to our [https://computernewb.com/collab-vm/rules/ Rules], and Discord bans are made according to the [[CollabVM_Discord#Rules|Discord Rules]]. If you feel your ban was made in error, or you recognize your wrongdoing and wish to have another chance, you can appeal your ban via the instructions below.


The CollabVM protocol is the mutilated corpse of what used to be Guacamole 0.9.5. It maintains the same instruction format and opcodes for getting the VM display and controlling it, but that's about it.
== Site Bans ==


= Wire Protocol =
After reviewing the [https://computernewb.com/collab-vm/rules/ CollabVM Rules], you may fill out the [https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSeHGqzr-3OuaNODTXr4i5sV3g13lBSFgohdoeLVMKVz8Y4CxQ/viewform?usp=sf%20link CollabVM Ban Appeal Form] to request an unban.


The connection starts with the client making a WebSocket connection to the CollabVM endpoint. This can be anything, for example <code>wss://computernewb.com/collab-vm/vm0</code> for VM0b0t.
== Discord Bans ==


The client '''MUST''' use <code>guacamole</code> as the WebSocket subprotocol and servers '''MUST''' reject any connections not using this subprotocol.
If you've been banned from the Discord server, review the [[CollabVM_Discord#Rules|Discord Rules]] and then fill out the [https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSdcLHWjfT5XH0jpAX2TzyU-r18LlN8AdQLLeqOQXHOoqP6u4w/viewform?usp=sf%20link Discord Ban Appeal Form]

The CollabVM protocol supports multiple VMs, however current server implementations only support one per instance. This is not a requirement and new servers are welcome to support multiple VMs.

Each VM has its own ID. This ID is arbitrary however '''MUST''' be unique against all other VMs on the server, and all VMs that will be used on the same webapp.

Each client has their own username. The client must set a username or request that the server assign it one before connecting to a VM.

Assigned usernames are, by convention, <code>guest</code> followed by five random digits. However, the server may use whatever format it pleases.

== Message Format ==

All messages on the CollabVM protocol are UTF-8 string arrays encoded in Guacamole Format, detailed in the Design section of the [https://guacamole.apache.org/doc/0.9.5/gug/guacamole-protocol.html Guacamole 0.9.5 Manual, Chapter 9]. Servers '''SHOULD''' drop the connection if the client sends a message not conforming to this.

== nop ==

This is a keepalive signal sent through the duration of the session used to verify that the client is still connected.

The server '''MUST''' send a <code>3.nop;</code> periodically and the client '''MUST''' respond with the same.

The server '''MAY''' omit sending NOPs if there is other activity by the client.

Servers '''MUST''' drop any client which does not respond to the NOP in a timely manner.

Clients '''MUST NOT''' send a NOP until prompted by the server.

Clients '''MAY''' drop the connection if the server does not send '''any''' messages over a period of time. However this should not be limited strictly to NOPs as these may not be consistently sent if there is other activity on the connection.

== Handshake ==

Upon making a WebSocket connection, the server will immediately begin sending NOPs, which will continue for the duration of the connection. The client is immediately in the handshaking phase of the connection.

The handshake is as follows:

=== Authentication announcement ===

A server that uses CollabVM Account Authentication will send a message with the <code>auth</code> opcode to announce this. This indicates a few changes in behavior:

* Clients may login using the <code>login</code> opcode.
* Clients may not change username except by logging in or having a guest username assigned.
* Depending on server configuration, clients may not be able to chat, take turns, or vote without logging in
* Staff-password authentication is disabled

==== Parameters ====

<table class="wikitable">
<tr><td>Opcode</td><td><code>auth</code></td></tr>
<tr><td>Parameter 1</td><td>The base URL of the authentication server used by this instance. Ex: <code>https://auth.collabvm.org</code></td></tr>
</table>

=== Obtain a list of VMs ===

The first thing the client may want to do is obtain a list of VMs available on this server. If the client already knows exactly what node ID it wants to connect to (common for bots) this may be skipped.

==== Request ====

<table class="wikitable">
<tr><td>Opcode</td><td><code>list</code></td></tr>
</table>

==== Response ====

Parameters 1 through 3 are repeated for every available VM.

<table class="wikitable">
<tr><td>Opcode</td><td><code>list</code></td></tr>
<tr><td>Parameter 1</td><td>The ID of the node, that should be passed to the <code>connect</code> opcode.</td></tr>
<tr><td>Parameter 2</td><td>A display name for the VM. May contain HTML.</td></tr>
<tr><td>Parameter 3</td><td>A Base64-encoded thumbnail for the VM. Will be either PNG or JPEG depending on the server implementation. This can be determined through magic numbers.</td></tr>
</table>

=== Request a username ===

Before connecting, the client must now obtain a username.

==== Request ====

<table class="wikitable">
<tr><td>Opcode</td><td><code>rename</code></td></tr>
<tr><td>Parameter 1</td><td><b>(OPTIONAL)</b> The username requested by the client. May be omitted if the client has no preference. The server is under no obligation to respect this and may provide a guest username for a multitude of reasons</td></tr>
</table>

==== Response ====

The server will respond with a [[#Client Renamed|Client Renamed]] event, however with one key difference: The status will always be <code>0</code> (success), even if the requested username was not available for whatever reason. In this case, a guest username is assigned.

=== Connect to a VM ===

The client may now connect to a VM as follows:

==== Request ====

<table class="wikitable">
<tr><td>Opcode</td><td><code>connect</code></td></tr>
<tr><td>Parameter 1</td><td>The ID of the VM to connect to. Can be retrieved with the list opcode.</td></tr>
</table>

==== Response ====

<table class="wikitable">
<tr><td>Opcode</td><td><code>connect</code></td></tr>
<tr><td>Parameter 1</td><td>The status of the connection. See below</td></tr>
</table>

Possible statuses:

'''1''': The connection was successful and the client is now connected to the VM.

'''0''': The connection failed. This is usually due to an invalid VM ID but depending on the server implementation and protocol extensions could mean something else.

After successfully connecting to a VM, the client will begin to recieve messages as normal, and may send messages.

== Server-to-Client Opcodes ==

These messages may be sent by the server at any time after completing the handshake and must be handled by the client.

=== New User(s) ===

Sent to indicate that one or more users have joined the VM. This may also be sent during the handshake.

This may be resent for an already-joined user to announce that they have changed ranks after logging in. Make sure to check for duplicates.

Parameters 1 and 2 are repeated for each user added.

<table class="wikitable">
<tr><td>Opcode</td><td><code>adduser</code></td></tr>
<tr><td>Parameter 1</td><td>The username of the added user.</td></tr>
<tr><td>Parameter 2</td><td>The [[#Rank|Rank]] of the added user as an integer.</td></tr>
</table>

=== Removed User(s) ===

Sent when one or more users disconnect from the VM.

Parameter 2 is repeated for each user removed.

<table class="wikitable">
<tr><td>Opcode</td><td><code>remuser</code></td></tr>
<tr><td>Parameter 1</td><td>The number of users that have left</td></tr>
<tr><td>Parameter 2</td><td>The username that has left the VM.</td></tr>
</table>

=== Client Renamed ===

Sent when the current client (you) is renamed, either by you or the server.

<table class="wikitable">
<tr><td>Opcode</td><td><code>rename</code></td></tr>
<tr><td>Parameter 1</td><td><code>0</code></td></tr>
<tr><td>Parameter 2</td><td>The status of the rename. See below for available values.</td></tr>
<tr><td>Parameter 3</td><td>The client's new username. This may not necessarily be the username requested by the client, as the server can refuse this request for a variety of reasons and may instead assign a guest name.</td></tr>
</table>

Possible rename statuses:

<table class="wikitable">
<tr><th>Value</th><th>Status</th></tr>
<tr><td>0</td><td>The client got their requested username. If the renaming is sent by a staff member this must always be used even if the requested username was not available.</td></tr>
<tr><td>1</td><td>The username was already taken.</td></tr>
<tr><td>2</td><td>The username was invalid. See requirements above.</td></tr>
<tr><td>3</td><td>The username is not allowed by the server.</td></tr>
</table>

=== User Renamed ===

Sent when another user in the list is renamed.

<table class="wikitable">
<tr><td>Opcode</td><td><code>rename</code></td></tr>
<tr><td>Parameter 1</td><td><code>1</code></td></tr>
<tr><td>Parameter 2</td><td>The user's old username</td></tr>
<tr><td>Parameter 3</td><td>The user's new username</td></tr>
</table>

=== Chat message ===

Sent when one or more chat messages are received.

Parameters 1 and 2 may be repeated for multiple chat messages, and this should be checked for. In current server implementations, this will only happen immediately after connection to send the chat history.

<table class="wikitable">
<tr><td>Opcode</td><td><code>chat</code></td></tr>
<tr><td>Parameter 1</td><td>The user who sent the chat message. This may be an empty string to indicate a system message sent by the server, such as the Message of the Day, or a vote notification.</td></tr>
<tr><td>Parameter 2</td><td>The chat message</td></tr>
</table>

=== Screen Size ===

Sent to announce the screen size of the VM. This will be sent after connecting and after any resolution change on the VM.

<table class="wikitable">
<tr><td>Opcode</td><td><code>size</code></td></tr>
<tr><td>Parameter 1</td><td><code>0</code></td></tr>
<tr><td>Parameter 2</td><td>Screen width</td></tr>
<tr><td>Parameter 3</td><td>Screen height</td></tr>
</table>

=== Framebuffer Update ===

Sent to update the VM screen. The server will send one initial message containing the entire screen on connection, and after that will send a dirty rect for each update

<table class="wikitable">
<tr><td>Opcode</td><td><code>png</code></td></tr>
<tr><td>Parameter 1</td><td><code>0</code></td></tr>
<tr><td>Parameter 2</td><td><code>0</code></td></tr>
<tr><td>Parameter 3</td><td>X-axis position of the rectangle</td></tr>
<tr><td>Parameter 4</td><td>Y-axis position of the rectangle</td></tr>
<tr><td>Parameter 5</td><td>The base64-encoded rectangle. Despite the name of the opcode, this may be either PNG or JPEG and can be determined through magic numbers or headers.</td></tr>
</table>

=== Vote-for-reset notification ===

Sent when a Vote-for-reset on the VM updates

<table class="wikitable">
<tr><td>Opcode</td><td><code>vote</code></td></tr>
<tr><td>Parameter 1</td><td>The status of the vote. See below for values</td></tr>
<tr><td>Parameter 2</td><td>Amount of time left on the vote in milliseconds. If the above status was 3 (cooldown), this is the amount of time before the client can start a vote.</td></tr>
<tr><td>Parameter 3</td><td>The number of users who have voted in favor of resetting the VM</td></tr>
<tr><td>Parameter 4</td><td>The number of users who have voted against resetting the VM</td></tr>
</table>

Possible vote statuses:

<table class="wikitable">
<tr><th>Value</th><th>Status</th></tr>
<tr><td>0</td><td>The vote has started. The yes and no parameters may not be specified, and in such case should be assumed to be zero.</td></tr>
<tr><td>1</td><td>The vote count has updated.</td></tr>
<tr><td>2</td><td>The vote has ended. No other parameters will be given.</td></tr>
<tr><td>3</td><td>Sent if the client tried to start a vote, however there is an active cooldown. Only the time parameter is given.</td></tr>
</table>
=== Turn queue update ===

Indicates an update of the VM's turn queue

<table class="wikitable">
<tr><td>Opcode</td><td><code>turn</code></td></tr>
<tr><td>Parameter 1</td><td>How much time is left on the current user's turn in milliseconds.</td></tr>
<tr><td>Parameter 2</td><td>The amount of users in the queue.</td></tr>
<tr><td>Parameter 3-?</td><td>Each username in the queue given as separate parameters</td></tr>
<tr><td>End parameter</td><td>How much longer until the client will get a turn in milliseconds. Only sent if the client is waiting.</td></tr>
</table>

== Client-to-Server Opcodes ==

TODO

== Rank ==

CollabVM has four ranks:

<table class="wikitable">
<tr><th>ID</th><th>Name</th><th>Description</th></tr>
<tr><td>0</td><td>Unregistered</td><td>The default rank with no permissions that all users have prior to logging in.</td></tr>
<tr><td>1</td><td>Registered</td><td>A logged in user. This is only used by servers that use CollabVM Account Authentication.</td></tr>
<tr><td>2</td><td>Admin</td><td>Has all permissions on the VM.</td></tr>
<tr><td>3</td><td>Moderator</td><td>Permissions vary depending on server configuration. Even with all permissions granted moderators can still not use the QEMU monitor.</td></tr>
</table>

Revision as of 19:04, 30 April 2024

This is the protocol reference for CollabVM 1.2, detailing how the protocol works and how to do different things.

The CollabVM protocol is the mutilated corpse of what used to be Guacamole 0.9.5. It maintains the same instruction format and opcodes for getting the VM display and controlling it, but that's about it.

Wire Protocol

The connection starts with the client making a WebSocket connection to the CollabVM endpoint. This can be anything, for example wss://computernewb.com/collab-vm/vm0 for VM0b0t.

The client MUST use guacamole as the WebSocket subprotocol and servers MUST reject any connections not using this subprotocol.

The CollabVM protocol supports multiple VMs, however current server implementations only support one per instance. This is not a requirement and new servers are welcome to support multiple VMs.

Each VM has its own ID. This ID is arbitrary however MUST be unique against all other VMs on the server, and all VMs that will be used on the same webapp.

Each client has their own username. The client must set a username or request that the server assign it one before connecting to a VM.

Assigned usernames are, by convention, guest followed by five random digits. However, the server may use whatever format it pleases.

Message Format

All messages on the CollabVM protocol are UTF-8 string arrays encoded in Guacamole Format, detailed in the Design section of the Guacamole 0.9.5 Manual, Chapter 9. Servers SHOULD drop the connection if the client sends a message not conforming to this.

nop

This is a keepalive signal sent through the duration of the session used to verify that the client is still connected.

The server MUST send a 3.nop; periodically and the client MUST respond with the same.

The server MAY omit sending NOPs if there is other activity by the client.

Servers MUST drop any client which does not respond to the NOP in a timely manner.

Clients MUST NOT send a NOP until prompted by the server.

Clients MAY drop the connection if the server does not send any messages over a period of time. However this should not be limited strictly to NOPs as these may not be consistently sent if there is other activity on the connection.

Handshake

Upon making a WebSocket connection, the server will immediately begin sending NOPs, which will continue for the duration of the connection. The client is immediately in the handshaking phase of the connection.

The handshake is as follows:

Authentication announcement

A server that uses CollabVM Account Authentication will send a message with the auth opcode to announce this. This indicates a few changes in behavior:

  • Clients may login using the login opcode.
  • Clients may not change username except by logging in or having a guest username assigned.
  • Depending on server configuration, clients may not be able to chat, take turns, or vote without logging in
  • Staff-password authentication is disabled

Parameters

Opcodeauth
Parameter 1The base URL of the authentication server used by this instance. Ex: https://auth.collabvm.org

Obtain a list of VMs

The first thing the client may want to do is obtain a list of VMs available on this server. If the client already knows exactly what node ID it wants to connect to (common for bots) this may be skipped.

Request

Opcodelist

Response

Parameters 1 through 3 are repeated for every available VM.

Opcodelist
Parameter 1The ID of the node, that should be passed to the connect opcode.
Parameter 2A display name for the VM. May contain HTML.
Parameter 3A Base64-encoded thumbnail for the VM. Will be either PNG or JPEG depending on the server implementation. This can be determined through magic numbers.

Request a username

Before connecting, the client must now obtain a username.

Request

Opcoderename
Parameter 1(OPTIONAL) The username requested by the client. May be omitted if the client has no preference. The server is under no obligation to respect this and may provide a guest username for a multitude of reasons

Response

The server will respond with a Client Renamed event, however with one key difference: The status will always be 0 (success), even if the requested username was not available for whatever reason. In this case, a guest username is assigned.

Connect to a VM

The client may now connect to a VM as follows:

Request

Opcodeconnect
Parameter 1The ID of the VM to connect to. Can be retrieved with the list opcode.

Response

Opcodeconnect
Parameter 1The status of the connection. See below

Possible statuses:

1: The connection was successful and the client is now connected to the VM.

0: The connection failed. This is usually due to an invalid VM ID but depending on the server implementation and protocol extensions could mean something else.

After successfully connecting to a VM, the client will begin to recieve messages as normal, and may send messages.

Server-to-Client Opcodes

These messages may be sent by the server at any time after completing the handshake and must be handled by the client.

New User(s)

Sent to indicate that one or more users have joined the VM. This may also be sent during the handshake.

This may be resent for an already-joined user to announce that they have changed ranks after logging in. Make sure to check for duplicates.

Parameters 1 and 2 are repeated for each user added.

Opcodeadduser
Parameter 1The username of the added user.
Parameter 2The Rank of the added user as an integer.

Removed User(s)

Sent when one or more users disconnect from the VM.

Parameter 2 is repeated for each user removed.

Opcoderemuser
Parameter 1The number of users that have left
Parameter 2The username that has left the VM.

Client Renamed

Sent when the current client (you) is renamed, either by you or the server.

Opcoderename
Parameter 10
Parameter 2The status of the rename. See below for available values.
Parameter 3The client's new username. This may not necessarily be the username requested by the client, as the server can refuse this request for a variety of reasons and may instead assign a guest name.

Possible rename statuses:

ValueStatus
0The client got their requested username. If the renaming is sent by a staff member this must always be used even if the requested username was not available.
1The username was already taken.
2The username was invalid. See requirements above.
3The username is not allowed by the server.

User Renamed

Sent when another user in the list is renamed.

Opcoderename
Parameter 11
Parameter 2The user's old username
Parameter 3The user's new username

Chat message

Sent when one or more chat messages are received.

Parameters 1 and 2 may be repeated for multiple chat messages, and this should be checked for. In current server implementations, this will only happen immediately after connection to send the chat history.

Opcodechat
Parameter 1The user who sent the chat message. This may be an empty string to indicate a system message sent by the server, such as the Message of the Day, or a vote notification.
Parameter 2The chat message

Screen Size

Sent to announce the screen size of the VM. This will be sent after connecting and after any resolution change on the VM.

Opcodesize
Parameter 10
Parameter 2Screen width
Parameter 3Screen height

Framebuffer Update

Sent to update the VM screen. The server will send one initial message containing the entire screen on connection, and after that will send a dirty rect for each update

Opcodepng
Parameter 10
Parameter 20
Parameter 3X-axis position of the rectangle
Parameter 4Y-axis position of the rectangle
Parameter 5The base64-encoded rectangle. Despite the name of the opcode, this may be either PNG or JPEG and can be determined through magic numbers or headers.

Vote-for-reset notification

Sent when a Vote-for-reset on the VM updates

Opcodevote
Parameter 1The status of the vote. See below for values
Parameter 2Amount of time left on the vote in milliseconds. If the above status was 3 (cooldown), this is the amount of time before the client can start a vote.
Parameter 3The number of users who have voted in favor of resetting the VM
Parameter 4The number of users who have voted against resetting the VM

Possible vote statuses:

ValueStatus
0The vote has started. The yes and no parameters may not be specified, and in such case should be assumed to be zero.
1The vote count has updated.
2The vote has ended. No other parameters will be given.
3Sent if the client tried to start a vote, however there is an active cooldown. Only the time parameter is given.

Turn queue update

Indicates an update of the VM's turn queue

Opcodeturn
Parameter 1How much time is left on the current user's turn in milliseconds.
Parameter 2The amount of users in the queue.
Parameter 3-?Each username in the queue given as separate parameters
End parameterHow much longer until the client will get a turn in milliseconds. Only sent if the client is waiting.

Client-to-Server Opcodes

TODO

Rank

CollabVM has four ranks:

IDNameDescription
0UnregisteredThe default rank with no permissions that all users have prior to logging in.
1RegisteredA logged in user. This is only used by servers that use CollabVM Account Authentication.
2AdminHas all permissions on the VM.
3ModeratorPermissions vary depending on server configuration. Even with all permissions granted moderators can still not use the QEMU monitor.