Commit Graph

11 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
ddidderr e8e7d7a93e feat: store launcher state outside game dirs
Move launcher-owned metadata from game roots into the configured peer state
area. Peer identity, the local library index, install intent logs, and setup
markers now live under app/CLI state instead of being written beside games.
The Tauri shell passes its app data directory into the peer, and the peer CLI
runs the same path through its explicit --state-dir.

Add a dedicated pre-start migration phase for legacy files. It migrates the
old global library index, per-game install intents, and the old first-start
marker into app state, then deletes legacy files only after the replacement
write succeeds. Normal scan, install, recovery, and transfer paths no longer
read legacy state files.

Rename the old first-start meaning to setup_done and only set it after
launching game_setup.cmd. Start/setup scripts keep the shared argument shape,
while server_start.cmd now uses cmd /k and a visible window so server logs stay
open for inspection.

While validating the Docker scenario matrix, make download terminal events
come from the handler after local state refresh and operation cleanup. This
makes download-finished/download-failed safe points for immediate follow-up CLI
commands. Also update the multi-peer chunking scenario to use a sparse archive
large enough to actually span multiple production chunks.

Test Plan:
- just fmt
- just test
- just frontend-test
- just build
- just clippy
- git diff --check
- python3 crates/lanspread-peer-cli/scripts/run_extended_scenarios.py

Refs: local app-state migration discussion
2026-05-21 17:04:00 +02:00
ddidderr 62ceb063ac feat(peer): remove downloaded game files safely
Downloaded but uninstalled games can still occupy significant disk space. Add a
separate removal path for that state instead of overloading uninstall, which is
reserved for deleting only `local/` installs.

The peer runtime now exposes `RemoveDownloadedGame` with matching lifecycle
and active-operation events. The filesystem delete is intentionally strict: the
id must be a catalog game and a single path component, the target must be a
direct child of the configured game directory, the root must not be a symlink,
it must have a regular root-level `version.ini`, and it must not contain
`local/`, `.local.installing/`, or `.local.backup/`. Only then do we recursively
remove the game root.

The Tauri bridge exposes this as `remove_downloaded_game`, the frontend shows a
matching danger action only for downloaded-but-uninstalled games, and a
confirmation dialog warns that re-downloading can take a long time.

Test Plan:
- git diff --check
- just fmt
- RUSTC_WRAPPER= CARGO_BUILD_RUSTC_WRAPPER= just test
- RUSTC_WRAPPER= CARGO_BUILD_RUSTC_WRAPPER= just clippy
- RUSTC_WRAPPER= CARGO_BUILD_RUSTC_WRAPPER= just build

Refs: user redesign nitpick about removing downloaded uninstalled games
2026-05-19 21:00:44 +02:00
ddidderr 41e9a0efc1 refactor(peer): split local library and operation UI events
Replace the `a9f9845` local-update dedup cache with explicit peer event
semantics. Local scans now emit `LocalLibraryChanged` when the library changes,
while operation mutations emit `ActiveOperationsChanged` from the mutation
path. Tauri keeps joining those facts into the existing `games-list-updated`
payload, so the frontend contract stays stable.

This removes the cache/invalidation coupling between scan emission and
operation state. The remaining forced local snapshot is explicit: accepted game
directory changes can refresh the UI for an equivalent new path without sending
a peer library delta.

Operation guard cleanup and liveness cancellation now publish the same active
operation snapshot as normal command-handler transitions. The peer CLI JSONL
events follow the same split with `local-library-changed` and
`active-operations-changed`.

Test Plan:
- `just fmt`
- `CARGO_BUILD_RUSTC_WRAPPER= just test`
- `CARGO_BUILD_RUSTC_WRAPPER= just clippy`
- `git diff --check`

Refs: CLEAN_CODE_PLAN_1.md
2026-05-18 21:25:20 +02:00
ddidderr 754afd5621 refactor(peer): drop --no-mdns toggle, mDNS is always on
The peer runtime previously accepted an `enable_mdns: bool` flag, plumbed
through `PeerStartOptions`, `spawn_peer_runtime`, `run_peer`, `Ctx`, and
`PeerCtx`. The lanspread-peer-cli harness exposed the toggle as
`--no-mdns` so test scenarios could fall back to explicit `connect`
commands when mDNS could not be relied on, in particular when multiple
peers ran inside `--network host` containers and could not advertise
independently.

That host-networking workaround no longer exists: the previous commit
moves harness containers onto a macvlan network, where each peer is a
real LAN device and mDNS just works between them. There is no scenario
left in the codebase where disabling mDNS is desirable. Per the project's
protocol policy in CLAUDE.md ("there is only one wire version, no
compatibility shims, no fallback paths"), an opt-out path with no current
caller is exactly the kind of dead code we should not carry.

Remove the flag and every plumbing point that exists only to support it:

- `PeerStartOptions::enable_mdns` and the custom `Default` impl that set
  it to `true`; the struct now derives `Default` and just carries
  `state_dir`.
- The `enable_mdns` parameter on `start_peer_with_options`,
  `spawn_peer_runtime`, `run_peer`, and `Ctx::new`.
- The `enable_mdns` fields on `Ctx` and `PeerCtx` and the propagation
  through `to_peer_ctx`.
- The `if ctx.enable_mdns` guard in `spawn_startup_services`;
  `spawn_peer_discovery_service` is now always spawned.
- The `if ctx.enable_mdns { ... } else { ... }` branch in
  `run_server_component`: the mDNS advertiser and event monitor are now
  unconditionally started, and the no-mDNS-fallback log line that read
  "mDNS disabled; direct peer address is ..." is gone. The
  `direct_connect_addr` helper is kept because the mDNS-on branch still
  uses it as a fallback when `local_peer_addr` has not yet been
  populated.
- The internal test helpers in `handlers.rs`, `services/local_monitor.rs`,
  and `services/stream.rs` that passed `true` as the trailing
  `enable_mdns` arg to `Ctx::new`.
- In `lanspread-peer-cli`: the `--no-mdns` arg parsing, the
  `Args::enable_mdns` field, the `mdns` key on the `cli-started` event
  payload, and the `--no-mdns` mention in the help text and the crate
  README.

The `Args::name` field is wired to the harness identity but is otherwise
untouched. The macvlan network created by `just peer-cli-net` is the
runtime prerequisite for this change to be observable across containers;
on a single workstation, two harness binaries on `127.0.0.1` discover
each other through mDNS on the loopback interface as before.

Test Plan:
- `just fmt`
- `just clippy`
- `just test`
- `just peer-cli-build`
- Two peers on macvlan: `just peer-cli-run alpha` and
  `just peer-cli-run beta`; check that each emits `peer-discovered` and
  `peer-connected` events without an explicit `connect` JSONL command.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-16 18:51:54 +02:00
ddidderr e711cf3454 fix(peer): settle current-protocol local state cleanup
The follow-up backlog had drifted into three settled peer/runtime issues: the
legacy game-list fallback contradicted the one-wire-version policy, the Tauri
shell still re-derived local install state from disk after peer snapshots, and
`Availability::Downloading` existed even though active operations are already
reported through a separate operation table.

Remove the legacy `AnnounceGames` request and fallback service. Discovery now
ignores peers that do not advertise the current protocol and a peer id, and
library changes are sent through the current delta path only. This keeps the
runtime aligned with the documented current-build-only interoperability model.

Make peer `LocalGamesUpdated` snapshots authoritative for local fields in the
Tauri database. The GUI-side catalog still owns static metadata such as names,
sizes, and descriptions, but downloaded, installed, local version, and
availability now come from the peer runtime instead of a second whole-library
filesystem scan. Snapshot reconciliation also pins the missing-begin and
missing-finish lifecycle cases in tests.

Collapse availability back to the settled `Ready` and `LocalOnly` states.
Aggregation now counts only `Ready` peers as download sources, and the frontend
no longer carries a dead `Downloading` enum value.

The core peer also exposes the small non-GUI hooks needed by scripted callers:
startup options for state and mDNS, a local-ready event, direct connection, peer
snapshots, and an explicit post-download install policy. Those hooks reuse the
same current protocol path and do not add compatibility shims.

Test Plan:
- `git diff --check`
- `just fmt`
- `just clippy`
- `just test`

Refs: BACKLOG.md, FINDINGS.md, IMPL_DECISIONS.md
2026-05-16 18:32:24 +02:00
ddidderr 6242d64583 fix(peer): repair update lifecycle regressions
FINDINGS.md identified three merge blockers in the post-plan install/update
flow.

Updates now use FetchLatestFromPeers so the Tauri update command bypasses
local manifest serving and asks peers that advertise the latest version for
fresh file metadata. PeerGameDB now aggregates and validates file descriptions
from latest-version peers, keeping stale cached metadata for older versions
from poisoning chunk planning when filenames stay the same but sizes change.

Download-to-install handoff now performs explicit async state transitions.
The download task mutates Downloading to Installing or Updating under the
active-operation write lock, clears the cancellation token, and then runs the
install transaction. OperationGuard remains armed only as crash or abort
cleanup and is disarmed after normal explicit cleanup, so final refreshes no
longer race a deferred Drop cleanup.

Local library index writers now serialize the load/mutate/save window with one
async mutex. The index fingerprint also includes the root version.ini contents
so a same-length version rewrite in the same mtime second still updates the
reported local version.

The tradeoff is that local index mutations are serialized in-process instead
of moved into a dedicated actor. That keeps the fix small and scoped to the
merge blockers while preserving the existing scanner API.

Test Plan:
- just fmt
- just test
- just clippy
- just build
- git diff --check

Refs:
- FINDINGS.md
2026-05-16 14:19:10 +02:00
ddidderr 6c8a2bb9f0 feat(peer): add transactional local game operations
Implement the peer-owned state model from PLAN.md. A root-level version.ini
is now the download completion sentinel, local/ as a directory is the install
predicate, and exact root-level version.ini detection prevents nested files
from becoming sentinels by accident.

Add the peer operation table that gates downloads, installs, updates, and
uninstalls by game ID. Serving paths now reject non-catalog games, active
operations, missing sentinels, and any request that points under local/.
Remote aggregation treats LocalOnly peers as non-downloadable so they do not
contribute peer counts, candidate source selection, or latest-version checks.

Move install-side filesystem mutation into lanspread-peer::install. The new
module writes atomic .lanspread.json intents, uses .local.installing and
.local.backup with .lanspread_owned markers, and performs startup recovery
from recorded intent plus filesystem state. Downloads now buffer version.ini
chunks in memory and commit the sentinel last through .version.ini.tmp.

Replace the fixed 15-second monitor with notify-backed non-recursive watches,
per-ID rescan gating, and a 300-second fallback scan. The optimized rescan
path updates one cached library-index entry and active operation IDs preserve
their previous summary during scans.

Test Plan:
- just fmt
- just clippy
- just test
- just build

Refs: PLAN.md
2026-05-15 18:18:55 +02:00
ddidderr 2bbd2ac869 refactor(peer): adopt structured concurrency with supervised shutdown
Replace the detached tokio::spawn pattern in the peer runtime with a
supervised model built on tokio_util's CancellationToken and TaskTracker.
Long-lived services and child tasks now have an explicit parent, a
cancellation path, and a join point. Tauri can request a clean shutdown
on app exit instead of leaking work into process termination.

Background
~~~~~~~~~~

start_peer() previously returned only a command sender. The four startup
services (QUIC server, mDNS discovery, peer liveness, local library
monitor) and their child tasks (ping workers, handshake jobs, download
workers, announcement fan-outs, connection/stream handlers) were spawned
with raw tokio::spawn and detached. Closing the command channel sent
Goodbye notifications but did not stop those services. The mDNS blocking
worker had no cancellation path at all. Active downloads were stored as
JoinHandle<()> and force-aborted, which could interrupt file writes
mid-chunk.

Supervisor
~~~~~~~~~~

The runtime now owns a CancellationToken and a TaskTracker, threaded
through Ctx and PeerCtx. Each long-lived service is spawned through a
small supervisor (spawn_supervised_service) that wraps the service in
catch_unwind and enforces an explicit SupervisionPolicy:

  QuicServer:    Required     (fatal; cancels the runtime if it dies)
  Discovery:     Restart(5s)  (matches the prior self-restart loop)
  Liveness:      Restart(5s)
  LocalMonitor:  BestEffort   (logs and exits, no restart)

A Required failure emits a new RuntimeFailed { component, error } event
to the UI and cancels the runtime; the command loop and goodbye
notifications still run to completion. The Tauri layer forwards the
event as "peer-runtime-failed" so a future UI can surface it.

mDNS cancellation
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

MdnsBrowser previously blocked on receiver.recv() forever. It now
exposes next_service_timeout(Duration) returning an MdnsServicePoll
enum (Service/Timeout/Closed) via recv_timeout(). The discovery worker
polls at 250ms and checks the shutdown flag between ticks, so
cancellation reaches the blocking thread within one poll interval
instead of waiting for the next mDNS event.

Downloads
~~~~~~~~~

active_downloads is now HashMap<String, CancellationToken>. Each
download gets a child token of the runtime shutdown, checked at chunk
and peer-attempt boundaries (never inside file writes). When all peers
with a game disappear, liveness cancels the token and emits
DownloadGameFilesAllPeersGone; the download exits Ok(()) without
emitting a duplicate Failed event.

DownloadStateGuard (context.rs) is held inside the download task and
clears downloading_games + active_downloads on Drop, covering the happy
path, error returns, cancellation, and task abort. Drop falls back to
spawning the cleanup if write-lock contention prevents try_write.

Public API and Tauri integration
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

start_peer() now returns PeerRuntimeHandle exposing:

  fn sender(&self) -> UnboundedSender<PeerCommand>
  fn shutdown(&self)
  async fn wait_stopped(&mut self)

The Tauri layer stores the handle in managed state and switches its
main loop from .run(ctx) to .build(ctx).run(|h, e| ...). On
RunEvent::Exit it calls handle.shutdown() and blocks up to 2s on
wait_stopped(), giving services time to cancel and Goodbye packets time
to flush over a healthy LAN while staying short enough not to delay
process exit noticeably on a dead network.

The command loop distinguishes graceful shutdown from unexpected
channel closure: if recv() returns None and shutdown.is_cancelled() is
set, the loop returns Ok(()) silently. Only an unexpected close (no
cancellation observed) still emits RuntimeFailed. This avoids a
spurious failure event on every normal app close.

User-visible behavior changes
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

- Closing the app no longer leaks services into process termination;
  Goodbye notifications are reliably attempted before exit.
- Downloads cancel cleanly (between chunks) instead of force-aborting
  mid-write.
- A new "peer-runtime-failed" Tauri event fires when a Required service
  cannot recover. No frontend handler exists yet — that is a follow-up.

Tradeoffs
~~~~~~~~~

- Workspace tokio-util now requires the "rt" feature for TaskTracker.
- The mDNS worker still runs in spawn_blocking and may stay parked
  briefly between 250ms polls — acceptable for a desktop app.
- The 2s shutdown timeout on app exit is a deliberate compromise.

Tests
~~~~~

New unit tests:
  - DownloadStateGuard clears tracking on completion, cancellation, and
    parent-task abort (context.rs).
  - Required failure cancels the runtime and emits RuntimeFailed
    (startup.rs).
  - Restart policy restarts until shutdown is requested (startup.rs).
  - PeerRuntimeHandle.shutdown() observable via wait_stopped()
    (startup.rs).
  - Peers-gone cancellation emits only PeersGone, no duplicate Failed
    (services/liveness.rs).

Test plan
~~~~~~~~~

  cargo test --workspace
  cargo clippy --workspace --all-targets

Manual smoke test on two peers on the same LAN:
  1. Start a download, verify chunks transfer.
  2. Close the receiving app mid-download — verify the sending peer
     logs a Goodbye, not a connection-reset error.
  3. Stop the sending peer mid-download — verify the receiver emits
     DownloadGameFilesAllPeersGone, not Failed.

Follow-ups
~~~~~~~~~~

- Frontend handler for "peer-runtime-failed".
- Consider exposing the runtime handle's stopped watch to the frontend
  for a reconnecting indicator on Required failures.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-15 07:53:51 +02:00
ddidderr 87d00e7df6 refactor(peer): make startup directory-driven
Peer startup used to bootstrap itself by spawning the runtime and immediately
sending a SetGameDir command back through its own control channel. The Tauri
integration then polled shared state until a directory appeared and waited two
seconds before asking peers for games. That made startup ordering implicit and
left a race-prone sleep in the UI bridge.

Install the initial game directory directly into the peer context instead. The
runtime now attempts the initial local-library scan before starting discovery,
then launches the server, discovery, liveness, and local monitor services from
that initialized context. Later directory changes still use SetGameDir, so the
existing UI command surface stays intact.

Use PathBuf and Path references across peer filesystem boundaries so directory
state is represented as a path rather than an optional string. The Tauri layer
now validates a selected game directory before storing it, loads the bundled
catalog on first use, and starts or updates the peer runtime from one helper.
Peer event fan-out is split into named handlers so the Tauri setup closure only
wires state and starts the event loop.

Shutdown goodbye notifications are still best-effort, but they are now awaited
with a short timeout instead of being spawned and forgotten. The tradeoff is a
small bounded wait during peer runtime shutdown in exchange for clearer task
ownership.

Test Plan:
- cargo test -p lanspread-peer
- cargo clippy
- cargo clippy --benches
- cargo clippy --tests
- cargo +nightly fmt
- git diff --check

Refs: none
2026-05-02 17:09:00 +02:00
ddidderr b60dcef471 ChatGPT Codex 5.2 xhigh refactored > 45min 2026-01-13 18:59:12 +01:00
ddidderr 53c7fe10ba refactor (Opus 4.5): modularize and split 2025-11-28 21:10:42 +01:00