Files
lanspread/crates/lanspread-peer
ddidderr 3abb2e051b test(peer): cover uninstall rollback restore
Add coverage for the uninstall branch where `local` has already been moved to
`.local.backup`, but deleting that backup fails. The Unix-gated test makes a
child directory non-writable before uninstall starts, so recursive deletion of
the renamed backup fails without adding production hooks.

The test verifies rollback restores the previous local install, removes the
backup path, and clears the intent. It is gated to Unix because deletion
permission behavior is platform-specific; Windows coverage would need a
different failure mechanism rather than pretending this setup is portable.

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

Follow-up-Plan: FOLLOW_UP_2.md
2026-05-16 09:08:28 +02:00
..

lanspread-peer

lanspread-peer is the networking runtime that lets Lanspread nodes find each other on the local network, exchange library metadata, and transfer game files. It is designed to run headless other crates (most notably lanspread-tauri-deno-ts) embed it and drive it through a channel-based API.

Runtime Overview

  • start_peer(game_dir, tx_events, peer_game_db, unpacker, catalog) boots the asynchronous runtime in the background and returns a PeerRuntimeHandle whose sender controls the peer. The injected Unpacker keeps archive extraction out of the peer crate's platform layer, and the catalog set gates which local game roots are announced or served.
  • PeerCommand represents the small control surface exposed to the UI layer: ListGames, GetGame, DownloadGameFiles, InstallGame, UninstallGame, and SetGameDir.
  • PeerEvent enumerates everything the peer runtime reports back to the UI: library snapshots, download/install/uninstall lifecycle updates, runtime failures, and peer membership changes.
  • PeerGameDB collects remote peer metadata. It aggregates discovered peers Game definitions, tracks the latest ETI version per title, and keeps the last seen list of GameFileDescription entries for each peer.

Internally the peer runtime owns four long-lived tasks that run for the lifetime of the process:

  1. Server component (run_server_component) listens for QUIC connections, advertises via mDNS, and serves Request::ListGames, Request::GetGame, Request::GetGameFileData, and Request::GetGameFileChunk by reading from the local game directory.
  2. Discovery loop (run_peer_discovery) uses the lanspread-mdns helper to discover other peers. The blocking mDNS work is executed on a dedicated thread via tokio::task::spawn_blocking so that the Tokio runtime remains responsive.
  3. Ping service (run_ping_service) periodically issues QUIC ping requests to keep peer liveness up to date and prunes stale entries from PeerGameDB.
  4. Local game monitor (run_local_game_monitor) watches the configured game directory and each game root non-recursively, gates per-ID rescans while operations are active, and runs a 300-second fallback scan for missed events.

scan_local_library maintains a lightweight on-disk index and produces both a GameDB and protocol summaries. A game is downloaded only when its root-level version.ini sentinel exists; local/ being a directory is the install signal.

Networking and File Transfer

  • Transport is handled by s2n-quic; TLS cert/key material is compiled in from the repository root.
  • Protocol messages are JSON-encoded structures defined in lanspread-proto::{Request, Response}.
  • File transfers stream raw bytes over dedicated bidirectional QUIC streams. peer::send_game_file_data sends entire files, while peer::send_game_file_chunk services ranged requests.

Download Pipeline

When the UI asks to download a game:

  1. The UI first issues PeerCommand::GetGame. Each peer that still reports the game is queried via request_game_details_from_peer, and their file manifests are merged inside PeerGameDB.
  2. Once the UI receives PeerEvent::GotGameFiles, it forwards the selected file list back with PeerCommand::DownloadGameFiles.
  3. download_game_files starts a version-sentinel transaction, parks any old version.ini as .version.ini.discarded, prepares non-sentinel files, emits PeerEvent::DownloadGameFilesBegin, and builds a per-peer plan (build_peer_plans) that round-robins file chunks across the available peers that advertise the latest version.
  4. Each plan is executed in its own task (download_from_peer). Chunk requests use per-chunk QUIC streams and write into pre-created files. The chunk writer keeps existing data intact and only truncates when we intentionally fall back to a full file transfer, which prevents corruption when multiple peers fill different regions of the same file.
  5. version.ini chunks are buffered in memory and committed last via .version.ini.tmp followed by an atomic rename. Failures are accumulated and retried (up to MAX_RETRY_COUNT) via retry_failed_chunks; failed or cancelled downloads sweep .version.ini.tmp and .version.ini.discarded without restoring the previous sentinel.
  6. After a successful sentinel commit, PeerEvent::DownloadGameFilesFinished is emitted and the peer auto-runs the install transaction.

Install Transactions

Install, update, uninstall, and startup recovery live under src/install/. Each game root has an atomic .lanspread.json intent log for install-side operations and uses Lanspread-owned .local.installing/ and .local.backup/ directories marked by .lanspread_owned. Startup recovery combines the recorded intent with the observed filesystem state and only deletes reserved directories when intent or marker ownership proves they belong to Lanspread.

Integration with lanspread-tauri-deno-ts

The Tauri application embeds this crate in crates/lanspread-tauri-deno-ts/src-tauri/src/lib.rs:

  • LanSpreadState holds onto the peer control channel, the latest aggregated GameDB, per-game operation state, the catalog set, and the user-selected game directory.
  • The Tauri commands (request_games, install_game, update_game, and update_game_directory) translate UI actions into PeerCommands. In particular, update_game_directory validates the filesystem path before storing it, loads the bundled catalog on first use, kicks off the peer runtime on demand, and mirrors the installed/uninstalled state into the UI-facing database.
  • A background task consumes PeerEvents and fans them out to the front-end via Tauri publish/subscribe events (games-list-updated, game-download-*, game-install-*, game-uninstall-*, peer-*). The Tauri crate now only provides the unrar sidecar through the injected Unpacker; rollback and cleanup live in the peer transaction code.

Security & Operational Notes

  • All QUIC connections are TLS encrypted; the shipped certificates are suitable for local-network trust but should be rotated for production deployments.
  • Peer discovery is restricted to the local link via mDNS.
  • Long-running blocking mDNS calls are isolated on dedicated threads which keeps the async runtime responsive even when discovery takes a long time.
  • File writes are chunk-safe: partial chunk downloads open files without truncating existing data, and root-level version.ini is written only after the rest of the download has succeeded.

Known Limitations

  • PeerGameDB currently models the latest metadata that other peers advertise. If the UI needs to surface titles that only exist locally, additional merging with the locally scanned GameDB will be required.
  • The download planner uses a simple round-robin and does not yet take per-peer throughput or failures into account when distributing work.

Refer to the source (particularly src/lib.rs) for the exact message shapes and state machines.