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This document aims to describe how Element android displays notifications to the end user. It also clarifies notifications and background settings in the app.
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# Table of Contents
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1. [Prerequisites Knowledge](#prerequisites-knowledge)
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* [How does a matrix client get a message from a homeserver?](#how-does-a-matrix-client-get-a-message-from-a-homeserver)
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* [How does a mobile app receives push notification?](#how-does-a-mobile-app-receives-push-notification)
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* [Push VS Notification](#push-vs-notification)
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* [Push in the matrix federated world](#push-in-the-matrix-federated-world)
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* [How does the homeserver know when to notify a client?](#how-does-the-homeserver-know-when-to-notify-a-client)
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* [Push vs privacy, and mitigation](#push-vs-privacy-and-mitigation)
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* [Background processing limitations](#background-processing-limitations)
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2. [Element Notification implementations](#element-notification-implementations)
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* [Requirements](#requirements)
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* [Foreground sync mode (Gplay & F-Droid)](#foreground-sync-mode-gplay--f-droid)
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* [Push (FCM) received in background](#push-fcm-received-in-background)
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* [FCM Fallback mode](#fcm-fallback-mode)
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* [F-Droid background Mode](#f-droid-background-mode)
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3. [Application Settings](#application-settings)
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<!--- TOC -->
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<!--- END -->
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First let's start with some prerequisite knowledge
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# Prerequisites Knowledge
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## Prerequisites Knowledge
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## How does a matrix client get a message from a homeserver?
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### How does a matrix client get a message from a homeserver?
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In order to get messages from a homeserver, a matrix client need to perform a ``sync`` operation.
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When the Element Android app is open (i.e in foreground state), the default timeout is 30 seconds, and delay is 0.
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## How does a mobile app receives push notification
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### How does a mobile app receives push notification
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Push notification is used as a way to wake up a mobile application when some important information is available and should be processed.
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There some cases when devices with google services cannot use FCM (network infrastructure limitations -firewalls-,
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privacy and or independence requirement, source code licence)
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## Push VS Notification
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### Push VS Notification
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This need some disambiguation, because it is the source of common confusion:
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Notifications are not always triggered by a push (One can display a notification locally triggered by an alarm)
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## Push in the matrix federated world
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### Push in the matrix federated world
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In order to send a push to a mobile, App developers need to have a server that will use the FCM APIs, and these APIs requires authentication!
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This server is called a **Push Gateway** in the matrix world
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* https://matrix.org/docs/spec/client_server/r0.4.0.html#id128
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## How does the homeserver know when to notify a client?
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### How does the homeserver know when to notify a client?
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This is defined by [**push rules**](https://matrix.org/docs/spec/client_server/r0.4.0.html#push-rules-).
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That is why clients are able to **process the push rules client side** to decide what kind of notification should be presented for a given event.
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## Push vs privacy, and mitigation
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### Push vs privacy, and mitigation
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As seen previously, App developers don't directly send a push to the end user's device, they use a Push Provider as intermediary. So technically this intermediary is able to read the content of what is sent.
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App developers usually mitigate this by sending a `silent notification`, that is a notification with no identifiable data, or with an encrypted payload. When the push is received the app can then synchronise to it's server in order to generate a local notification.
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## Background processing limitations
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### Background processing limitations
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A mobile applications process live in a managed word, meaning that its process can be limited (e.g no network access), stopped or killed at almost anytime by the Operating System.
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It is getting more and more complex to have reliable notifications when FCM is not used.
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# Element Notification implementations
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## Element Notification implementations
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## Requirements
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### Requirements
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Element Android must work with and without FCM.
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* The Element android app published on F-Droid do not rely on FCM (all related dependencies are not present)
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* The Element android app published on google play rely on FCM, with a fallback mode when FCM registration has failed (e.g outdated or missing Google Play Services)
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## Foreground sync mode (Gplay & F-Droid)
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### Foreground sync mode (Gplay & F-Droid)
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When in foreground, Element performs sync continuously with a timeout value set to 10 seconds (see HttpPooling).
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In background, and depending on whether push is available or not, Element will use different methods to perform the syncs (Workers / Alarms / Service)
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## Push (FCM) received in background
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### Push (FCM) received in background
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In order to enable Push, Element must first get a push token from the firebase SDK, then register a pusher with this token on the homeserver.
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Element implements several strategies in these cases (TODO document)
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## FCM Fallback mode
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### FCM Fallback mode
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It is possible that Element is not able to get a FCM push token.
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Common errors (among several others) that can cause that:
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The fallback mode is supposed to be a temporary state waiting for the user to fix issues for FCM, or for App Developers that has done a fork to correctly configure their FCM settings.
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## F-Droid background Mode
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### F-Droid background Mode
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The F-Droid Element flavor has no dependencies to FCM, therefore cannot relies on Push.
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Note that foreground services require to put a notification informing the user that the app is doing something even if not launched).
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# Application Settings
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## Application Settings
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**Notifications > Enable notifications for this account**
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