Add core/quality/selection.py: rank_with_targets() returns (ranked,
satisfied) where satisfied = a candidate meets a real target (strict).
load_profile_targets()/rank_for_profile() are the DB-backed wrappers.
search_with_fallback now skips a source that can deliver no target-meeting
quality and escalates to the next (source priority still wins among
satisfying sources; first source's results kept as fallback unless the
profile disables it). Returns RAW tracks — the satisfied check is a coarse
source gate; match-filtering + final ranking stay in the orchestrator so
the correct track is never pruned. Ranking is fail-open: a ranking error
never drops a source's real results.
Tested: rank_with_targets satisfied/fallback matrix + engine escalation,
stop-on-first, raw-not-pruned, fallback on/off. Amazon field test updated
for the corrected format token.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 <noreply@anthropic.com>
get_event_loop() raises RuntimeError on Python 3.11+ Linux when no loop
exists. asyncio.run() creates its own loop per call — no deprecation warning,
works across all supported Python versions.
The download monitor blocks post-processing with a bytes-incomplete guard:
if size > 0 and transferred < size: continue
_stream_to_file throttles engine updates to every 0.5s. The last tick before
the file finishes typically leaves transferred slightly below the Content-Length
size in the engine record. Other streaming clients (YouTube, Tidal, HiFi, etc.)
use their own download threads and don't track bytes at all, so size stays 0
and the guard is always skipped. Amazon was the only client hitting it.
Fix: just before returning the file path from _download_sync, write a final
engine record update setting size == transferred == out_path.stat().st_size
(the decrypted output size). The bytes-incomplete guard then sees
transferred == size and falls through to trigger post-processing normally.
`get_all_downloads` was calling `engine.get_all_records()` — a method that
doesn't exist on DownloadEngine. Same story for `cancel_record` and
`clear_completed`. The engine exposes `iter_records_for_source`, `get_record`,
`update_record`, and `remove_record` — matching what every other streaming
client (Deezer, HiFi, Qobuz, SoundCloud, Tidal, YouTube) already uses.
With `get_all_downloads` silently returning `[]` on every call (the missing
method raised, `except Exception: return []` swallowed it), the download monitor
never saw Amazon records as complete — tasks stayed stuck at 0% even after the
file had fully downloaded.
Changes:
- `get_all_downloads` → `iter_records_for_source('amazon')`
- `get_download_status` → `get_record('amazon', id)`, no try/except
- `cancel_download` → `get_record` check + `update_record` (Cancelled) +
optional `remove_record` — same pattern as deezer/hifi/etc
- `clear_all_completed_downloads` → iterate + `remove_record` for terminal
states; returns True on no-engine (nothing to clear = success)
- `_record_to_status` drops the `download_id` argument; reads `rec['id']`
instead (worker stores `'id'` in every record — `iter_records_for_source`
returns the full record dict)
Tests updated to match: `iter_records_for_source` mock replaces
`get_all_records`, cancel test verifies `update_record`+`remove_record`,
clear test verifies only terminal-state records are removed, graceful-error
test replaced with no-records boundary test (exception propagation is handled
at the engine aggregator layer, not per-plugin).
The engine worker stores the encoded filename under the key 'filename'
(see worker.py dispatch). _record_to_status was reading 'original_filename',
which always returns "" — so every DownloadStatus emitted by
get_all_downloads/get_download_status had an empty filename string.
The download monitor builds lookup keys as
_make_context_key(download.username, download.filename). With filename=""
the key was always "amazon::" which never matched the task's
"amazon::B0B1234||Artist - Title" key. Monitor never detected Amazon
download completions, so tasks sat stuck at Downloading 0% forever even
though the files had actually downloaded.
Also fixes tests that had the same wrong key.
AmazonDownloadClient was missing set_engine() and set_shutdown_check().
The download engine auto-wires plugins by calling set_engine(self) at
registration time if the method exists (engine.py:136). Without it,
_engine stayed None forever, causing every download() call to raise
RuntimeError("_engine is not set") — silently failing and marking all
tracks not found.
All other streaming clients (Deezer, Qobuz, Tidal, HiFi, SoundCloud)
expose set_engine(); Amazon now matches the pattern.
Tests added: set_engine wires _engine, set_shutdown_check wires callback,
set_engine unblocks download dispatch (the exact live failure mode).
core/amazon_client.py — T2Tunes-backed metadata client following the
DeezerClient/iTunesClient contract. Exposes search_tracks, search_artists,
search_albums, get_track_details, get_album, get_album_tracks, get_artist,
get_artist_albums, get_track_features. T2TunesStreamInfo dataclass captures
the hex decryption key returned by the proxy (CENC/AES-128). Handles the
"stremeable" API typo. 0.5 s rate-limit guard + api_call_tracker.
core/amazon_download_client.py — DownloadSourcePlugin backed by the above
client. Codec waterfall: FLAC → Opus → EAC3. Downloads the encrypted MP4
container, decrypts with ffmpeg -decryption_key, yields the native audio
file (.flac / .opus / .eac3). Not yet wired into the app source registry —
validated in isolation only; see tests/tools/.
tools/t2tunes_probe.py + tools/t2tunes_media_plan.py — standalone CLI tools
used for live API exploration during development.
tests/tools/test_amazon_client.py — 72 unit tests (all mocked).
tests/tools/test_amazon_download_client.py — 52 unit tests (all mocked).
124 tests pass.