Files
lanspread/crates/lanspread-peer/ARCHITECTURE.md
T
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

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Markdown

# lanspread-peer proposed protocol and architecture
This document proposes a tighter, more fault-tolerant protocol while keeping
the current idea: mDNS discovery, QUIC transport, on-demand metadata, and
chunked file transfers.
## Goals (unchanged)
- Local LAN discovery via mDNS.
- QUIC + JSON messages for control, raw streams for file data.
- UI drives operations through `PeerCommand`, peers remain headless.
- Peers can appear/disappear at any time without data loss.
## Peer lifecycle and message flow
### 1) Startup and advertise
- Start QUIC server.
- Advertise via mDNS with TXT records:
- `peer_id` (stable ID, not tied to IP)
- `proto_ver`
- `library_rev` (monotonic local library revision)
- optional `hostname`
### 2) Discovery and handshake
When a peer is discovered:
1. Connect and send `Hello { peer_id, proto_ver, library_rev, library_digest, features }`.
2. Receive `HelloAck { peer_id, proto_ver, library_rev, library_digest, features }`.
3. If the remote `peer_id` is already known but the address changed, update it.
4. If protocol versions are incompatible, drop the peer (and keep mDNS watching).
5. If library digests match, do nothing else.
6. If digests differ:
- If we have a known `library_rev` for that peer, request `LibraryDelta`.
- Otherwise request `LibrarySnapshot`.
### 3) Steady state
- Any message updates `last_seen`.
- Pings run only when idle (or on a longer interval), not every 5 seconds.
- Library updates are pushed as deltas, debounced and coalesced.
### 4) Shutdown
- Optional `Goodbye { peer_id }` lets others remove the peer quickly.
- If a peer vanishes without goodbye, stale timeout + ping removal handle it.
- Goodbye is a hint, never required for correctness.
## Library sync protocol
### Summary and snapshot
- `LibrarySummary { library_rev, library_digest, game_count }`
- `LibrarySnapshot { library_rev, games: Vec<GameSummary> }`
### Delta updates
- `LibraryDelta { from_rev, to_rev, added, updated, removed }`
- `removed` is a list of game IDs.
- Deltas are idempotent; ignore if `to_rev` <= known rev.
### GameSummary (concept)
- `id`, `name`, `eti_version`, `size`, `downloaded`, `installed`
- `manifest_hash` (hash of file list + sizes)
- `availability` (e.g., `ready`, `downloading`, `local_only`)
## When peers broadcast their game list
- Only on changes, not on a timer.
- Filesystem events are gated per game ID instead of time-debounced:
- an active operation lock drops events for that game;
- a rescan already running for the ID sets a rescan-pending flag;
- the running rescan loops once more when that flag was set.
- Send `LibraryDelta` to known peers; send `LibrarySummary` on new connections.
## Local game scanning: fast and low cost
### Strategy
1. Maintain a persistent on-disk index (per game):
- `manifest_hash`, total size, file list (optional), and a fingerprint
(root-level `version.ini` mtime, root-level `.eti` mtime/size, and
`local/` directory presence).
2. Use filesystem watchers to update only changed games.
3. Keep a 300-second fallback scan to recover from missed events.
### Fast-path scanning
- On startup, list only top-level game directories.
- For each game, read a cheap fingerprint:
- root-level `.eti` file names, sizes, and mtimes
- root-level `version.ini` mtime
- presence of `local/` as a directory
- If fingerprint unchanged, reuse cached size and manifest hash.
- Only run a recursive scan for new or changed games.
## Local State and Recovery
Downloaded and installed are independent predicates:
- `downloaded` is true only when `<game_root>/version.ini` exists as a regular
file. The sentinel is written last through `.version.ini.tmp` and atomic
rename. An interrupted replacement leaves no restored old sentinel because
archive bytes may already have changed.
- `installed` is true when `<game_root>/local/` is a directory. The contents of
`local/` are user-owned and are skipped by manifests, fingerprints, and file
serving.
Reserved per-game paths:
- `.version.ini.tmp` and `.version.ini.discarded` are download transaction
scratch files and are swept during startup recovery.
- `.local.installing/` is extraction staging.
- `.local.backup/` holds the previous install while an update or uninstall is in
flight.
- `.lanspread.json` is the atomic per-game intent log.
- `.lanspread_owned` inside `.local.*` directories proves Lanspread ownership
when the current intent is `None`.
Recovery reads `.lanspread.json` and combines the recorded intent with the
observed `local/`, `.local.installing/`, and `.local.backup/` state. Intent
states `Installing`, `Updating`, and `Uninstalling` prove ownership of the
corresponding reserved directories even if the marker was not flushed before a
crash. With intent `None`, markerless `.local.*` directories are left untouched.
### Result
Most scans become O(number of game dirs), with full recursion only when needed.
## File manifests and downloads
- Keep `GetGame`/manifest requests, but keyed by `manifest_hash` so repeated
calls can be skipped when unchanged.
- Downloads remain chunked QUIC streams with the existing integrity checks.
- A game is transferable only when its ID is in the catalog, no operation is
active for that ID, and the root-level `version.ini` sentinel exists.
- `local/` paths are never served, even if a stale or malicious manifest request
asks for them.
## Fault tolerance rules
- Every peer is keyed by `peer_id`, not by IP address.
- `library_rev` is monotonic and guards against out-of-order updates.
- Any mismatch or missing delta falls back to `LibrarySnapshot`.
- Loss of goodbye is harmless; stale timeout is authoritative.
## Roadmap from current design to this one
1. Protocol updates in `lanspread-proto`:
- Define `Hello`, `HelloAck`, `LibrarySummary`, `LibrarySnapshot`,
`LibraryDelta`, and optional `Goodbye` messages.
- Thread `peer_id`, `library_rev`, and `manifest_hash` through all
library and manifest-bearing types.
- Make `HelloAck` carry the remote `library_rev` and `manifest_hash`
so the client can immediately select `LibraryDelta` vs `LibrarySnapshot`.
2. Peer identity:
- Persist a stable `peer_id` (UUID) in the peer config and inject it into
`PeerInfo` and `PeerGameDB` at startup.
- Track `peer_id -> SocketAddr` in the discovery table and update the
address on any incoming handshake or mDNS refresh.
3. Discovery handshake:
- Publish `peer_id` and `library_rev` in mDNS TXT records to avoid
immediate TCP/QUIC roundtrips when nothing changed.
- Add a lightweight handshake in `run_peer_discovery` that exchanges
`Hello`/`HelloAck` before any library sync.
- Ignore peers that do not advertise the current protocol version.
4. Library revisioning:
- Store a monotonic `library_rev` locally and increment only after a
successful index refresh completes.
- Apply `LibraryDelta` when `library_rev` matches; reject stale or future
revisions and request `LibrarySnapshot` instead.
- Cache the last accepted `manifest_hash` per peer to short-circuit
manifest requests when unchanged.
5. Local index + scan optimizations:
- Introduce a cached index file (e.g., `.lanspread/index.json`) that stores
per-root fingerprints and computed manifests.
- Use filesystem watchers with a debounce window to collect changes and
incrementally update the cache.
- Schedule a low-frequency full scan to reconcile missed watcher events.
6. Announce updates:
- Broadcast `LibraryDelta` updates keyed by `library_rev`.
- Send `LibrarySummary` on new connections to seed the delta flow.
7. File manifest caching:
- Store per-game `manifest_hash` and only fetch details when changed.
8. Liveness:
- Reduce ping frequency; update `last_seen` on any message.
- Add optional `Goodbye` on shutdown paths.
9. Tests:
- Delta apply/merge, rev ordering, manifest hashing, and scan cache behavior.