mirror of https://github.com/zulip/zulip.git
182 lines
7.4 KiB
Markdown
182 lines
7.4 KiB
Markdown
# Typing indicators
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Zulip supports a feature called "typing indicators."
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Typing indicators are status messages (or visual indicators) that
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tell you when another user is writing a message to you. Zulip's
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typing UI is similar to what you see in other chat/text systems.
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This document describes how we have implemented the feature in
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the Zulip web app, and our main audience is developers who want to
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understand the system and possibly improve it. Any client should
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be able follow the protocol documented here.
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Right now typing indicators are only implemented for direct
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message conversations in the web app.
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There are two major roles for users in this system:
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- The "writing user" is composing a message.
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- The "receiving user" is waiting to receive a message (or possibly
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ready to shift their attention elsewhere).
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Any Zulip user can play either one of these roles, and sometimes
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they can be playing both roles at once. Having said that, you
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can generally understand the system in terms of a single message
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being composed by the "writing user."
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On a high level the typing indicators system works like this:
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- The client for the "writing user" sends requests to the server.
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- The server broadcasts events to other users.
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- The clients for "receiving users" receive events and conditionally
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show typing indicators, depending on where the clients are narrowed.
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## Privacy settings
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Note that there is a user-level privacy setting to disable sending
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typing notifications that a client should check when implementing
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the "writing user" protocol below. See `send_private_typing_notifications`
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in the `UserBaseSettings` model in `zerver/models.py` and in the
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`user_settings` object in the `POST /register` response.
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## Writing user
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When a "writing user" starts to compose a message, the client
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sends a request to `POST /typing` with an `op` of `start` and
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a list of potential message recipients. The web app function
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that facilitates this is called `send_typing_notification_ajax`.
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If the "writing user" is composing a long message, we want to send
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repeated updates to the server so that downstream clients know the
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user is still typing. Zulip messages tend to be longer than
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messages in other chat/text clients, so this detail is important.
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We have a small state machine in `web/shared/src/typing_status.ts`
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that makes sure subsequent "start" requests get sent out. The
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frequency of these requests is determined by
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`server_typing_started_wait_period_milliseconds` in the
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`POST /register` response.
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If the "writing user" goes for a while without any text input,
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then we send a request to `POST /typing` with an `op` of `stop`.
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The time period a client should wait before sending the request
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is determined by `server_typing_stopped_wait_period_milliseconds`
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in the `POST /register` response. We also immediately send "stop"
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notification when the user explicitly aborts composing a message
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by closing the compose box (or other actions).
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A common scenario is that a user is just pausing to think for a few
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seconds, but they still intend to finish the message. Of course,
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that's hard to distinguish from the scenario of the user got pulled
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away from their desk. For the former case, where the "writing user"
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completes the message with lots of pauses for thinking, a series of
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"start" and "stop" messages may be sent over time. Timeout values
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reflect tradeoffs, where we have to guess how quickly people type,
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how long they pause to think, and how frequently they get interrupted.
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## Server
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The server piece of typing notifications is currently pretty
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straightforward, since we take advantage of Zulip's
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[events system](events-system.md).
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We deliberately designed the server piece to be stateless,
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which minimizes the possibility of backend bugs and gives clients
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more control over the user experience.
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As such, the server piece here is basically a single Django view
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function with a small bit of library support to send out events
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to clients.
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Requests come in to `send_notification_backend`, which is in
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`zerver/views/typing.py`. For direct message typing notifications,
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the call to `check_send_typing_notification` does the heavy lifting.
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One of the main things that the server does is to validate that
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the user IDs in the `to` parameter are for valid, active users in
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the realm.
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Once the request has been validated, the server sends events to
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potential recipients of the message. The event type for that
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payload is `typing`. See the function `do_send_typing_notification`
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in `zerver/actions/typing.py` for more details.
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## Receiving user
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When a user plays the role of a "receiving user," the client handles
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incoming "typing" events from the server, and the client will
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display a typing indicator only when both of these conditions are
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true:
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- The "writing user" is still likely typing.
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- The "receiving user" is in a view where they'd see the eventual
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message.
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The client code starts by processing events, and it maintains data
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structures, and then it eventually shows or hides status messages.
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We'll describe the flow of data through the web app
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as a concrete example.
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The events will come in to `web/src/server_events_dispatch.js`.
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The `stop` and `start` operations get further handled by
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`web/src/typing_events.js`.
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The main goal is then to triage which events should lead to
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display changes.
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The web app client maintains a list of incoming "typists" using
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code in `web/src/typing_data.ts`. The API here has functions
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like the following:
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- `add_typist`
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- `remove_typist`
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- `get_group_typists`
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- `get_all_typists`
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One subtle thing that the client has to do here is to maintain
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timers for typing notifications. The value of
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`server_typing_started_expiry_period_milliseconds` in the
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`POST /register` response is used to determine when the
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"writing user" has abandoned the message. Of course, the
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"writing user" will also explicitly send us `stop` notifications
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at certain times.
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When it finally comes to displaying the notification, the web
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app eventually calls `render_notifications_for_narrow`.
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## Ecosystem
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Even though the server is stateless, any developer working on
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a client needs to be mindful of timing/network considerations
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that affect the overall system.
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In general, client developers should agree on timeout parameters
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for how frequently we "kickstart" typing notifications for users
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sending long messages. This means standardizing the "writing
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user" piece of the system. It's possible that certain clients
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will have slightly different mechanisms for detecting that users
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have abandoned messages, but the re-transmit frequency should be
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similar.
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When implementing the "receiving user" piece, it's important to
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realize how clients behave on the other end of the protocol. It's
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possible, for example, to never receive a "stop" notification
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from a client that was shut down abruptly. You should allow
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reasonable amounts of time for the other side to send notifications,
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allowing for network delays and server delays, but you should
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not let the notifications become too "sticky" either.
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## Roadmap
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The most likely big change to typing indicators is that we will
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add them for stream conversations. This will require some thought
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for large streams, in terms of both usability and performance.
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Another area for refinement is to tune the timing values a bit.
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Right now, we are possibly too aggressive about sending `stop`
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messages when users are just pausing to think. It's possible
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to better account for typing speed or other heuristic things
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like how much of the message has already been typed.
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