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54 lines
4.1 KiB
Markdown
54 lines
4.1 KiB
Markdown
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## About chat signing
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Starting in Minecraft 1.19, client messages sent to the server are signed and then broadcasted to other players.
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Other clients receiving a signed message can verify that a message was written by a particular player as opposed
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to being modified by the server. The way this is achieved is by the client asking Mojang's servers for signing keys,
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and the server responding with a private key that can be used to sign messages, and a public key that can be used to
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verify the messages.
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When a client connects to the server, it sends its public key to the server, which then sends that to other players
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that are on the server. The server also does some checks during the login procedure to authenticate the validity of
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the public key, to ensure it came from Mojang. This is achieved by the client sending along a signature from Mojang's
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servers in the login step which is the output of concatenating and signing the public key, player UUID and timestamp
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with a special Mojang private key specifically for signature validation. The public key used to verify this
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signature is public and is stored statically inside node-minecraft-protocol (src/server/constants.js).
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Back to the client, when other players join the server they also get a copy of the players' public key for chat verification.
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The clients can then verify that a message came from a client as well as do secondary checks like verifying timestamps.
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This feature is designed to allow players to report chat messages from other players to Mojang. When the client reports a
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message the contents, the sender UUID, timestamp, and signature are all sent so the Mojang server can verify the message
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and send it for moderator review.
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Note: Since the server sends the public key, it's possible that the server can spoof the key and return a fake one, so
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only Mojang can truly know if a message came from a client (as it stores its own copy of the clients' chat key pair).
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## 1.19.1
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Starting with 1.19.1, instead of signing the message itself, a SHA256 hash of the message and last seen messages are
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signed instead. In addition, the payload of the hash is prepended with the signature of the previous message sent by the same client,
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creating a signed chain of chat messages. See publicly available documentation for more detailed information on this.
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Since chat verification happens on the client-side (as well as server side), all clients need to be kept up to date
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on messages from other users. Since not all messages are public (for example, a player may send a signed private message),
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the server can send a `chat_header` packet containing the aforementioned SHA256 hash of the message which the client
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can generate a signature from, and store as the last signature for that player (maintaining chain integrity).
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In the client, inbound player chat history is now stored in chat logs (in a 1000 length array). This allows players
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to search through last seen messages when reporting messages.
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When reporting chat messages, the chained chat functionality and chat history also securely lets Mojang get
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authentic message context before and after a reported message.
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## Extra details
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### 1.19.1
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When a server sends a player a message from another player, the server saves the outbound message and expects
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that the client will acknowledge that message, either in a outbound `chat_message` packet's lastSeen field,
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or in a `message_acknowledgement` packet. (If the client doesn't seen any chat_message's to the server and
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lots of messages pending ACK queue up, a serverbound `message_acknowledgement` packet will be sent to flush the queue.)
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In the server, upon reviewal of the ACK, those messages removed from the servers' pending array. If too many
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pending messages pile up, the client will get kicked.
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In nmp server, you must call `client.logSentMessageFromPeer(packet)` when the server receives a message from a player and that message gets broadcast to other players in player_chat packets. This function stores these packets so the server can then verify a player's lastSeenMessages field in inbound chat packets to ensure chain integrity (as described above).
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