- Move the import pipeline runtime factory into core.imports.pipeline
- Move the metadata runtime factory into core.metadata.enrichment
- Keep the web server wiring thin and drop the shared glue module
- Add contract tests that keep the two runtime bundles separate
- Relocate the shared metadata helper module from core/metadata_common.py into core/metadata/common.py.
- Update the new metadata package, the import pipeline, and the web entrypoint to use the package-scoped helper.
- Keep the shared config, mutagen, file-lock, and tag-writing helpers centralized without touching unrelated files.
- Pass the live runtime bundle into the shared metadata facade so worker-backed source enrichment can actually run.
- Forward runtime from the import pipeline and web-server wrapper into embed_source_ids.
- Add a regression test that verifies the runtime object reaches the source-ID embedding path.
- Keep existing metadata_cache and metadata_service at the top level for now
- Move the new branch-local metadata helpers under core/metadata
- Share MusicBrainz release cache state from core.metadata.source and update import sites
- Move app-wide task and activity registries out of core/imports
- Share one runtime-state module across the web server, API, and import pipeline
- Keep import-specific helpers focused on context and post-processing
- Move import flow modules into a dedicated package
- Update app and test imports to the new namespace
- Group the import-focused tests under tests/imports
- remove runtime from metadata helper APIs where it only carried config, logger, mutagen, and database access
- keep runtime only for the source-ID enrichment path that still needs live worker handles
- add the new metadata helper modules and update the tests to match the slimmer interfaces
- Extract the import pipeline, album import, staging, path, file ops, guards, runtime state, side effects, and metadata enrichment out of .
- Canonicalize the refactored import path around and remove legacy , , , and request shapes from the import endpoints.
- Make album and track metadata lookups follow the configured provider priority instead of hard-coding Spotify, while still falling back when needed.
- Update the import routes and frontend payloads to use the new core helpers.
- Add coverage for the extracted helpers and the refactored import flows.
PS. apologies to anyone who might check this commit out - the intention was to start small, but things kinda snowballed out of control at some point since the logic just kept going on and on, and everything kinda had to be changed all at once for it all to make any sense
Addresses #365 (reported by JohnBaumb), parts 3 & 5. Client-side
IDB / sessionStorage data cache (part 4) deferred to its own PR.
Cover art on Library and Discover used to re-fetch from the source
CDN on every page visit. Now a service worker caches images locally
in CacheStorage with cache-first strategy — second visit serves art
instantly with zero network round-trips. PWA manifest added so the
app is installable to home screen / desktop.
Service worker (`webui/static/sw.js`):
- Cache-first for images: 10 known CDN hosts (Spotify, Last.fm,
Apple, Deezer, Discogs, MusicBrainz CAA, YouTube thumbnails) plus
the local `/api/image-proxy` endpoint plus same-origin .png/.jpg/
.webp/.gif/.svg paths. Cross-origin file-extension matches are
refused so we don't accidentally cache trackers.
- Stale-while-revalidate for `/static/*`: serve cached instantly,
refresh in background. Combined with the existing `?v=static_v`
cache-bust, deploys still ship live (different query → different
cache entry, old ages out).
- HTML / API / everything else: no caching, pass through.
- Cache-versioned (CACHE_VERSION = 'v1'); activate handler wipes any
cache whose name doesn't match the current version.
- skipWaiting + clients.claim so deploys propagate to open tabs
without requiring a full close-and-reopen.
PWA manifest (`webui/static/manifest.json`):
- Standalone display mode, theme color #1db954 (matches --accent-rgb).
- Two icons (192, 512) with both `any` and `maskable` purpose,
generated from favicon.png with aspect-preserving transparent
padding so the existing logo lands inside the safe zone for
OS-applied masks.
Wiring:
- `web_server.py` adds a `/sw.js` route that serves the file from
root scope (a service worker only controls URLs at or below its
served path; `/static/sw.js` would scope to `/static/*` only).
`Cache-Control: no-cache` on the SW response so deploys propagate
on next page load instead of being pinned by the 1yr static cache
the rest of /static/ uses.
- `webui/index.html` adds the manifest link, theme-color meta, and
an apple-touch-icon for iOS.
- `webui/static/init.js` registers the SW on `window.load`.
Feature-detected — no-op on browsers without serviceWorker support
or on non-secure origins (SW requires https or localhost).
One bug caught + fixed during line-by-line self-review:
`_staleWhileRevalidate` could return null to `respondWith()` when
both the cache miss AND the network fetch failed (the `.catch(() =>
null)` collapsed the rejection to null, which then short-circuited
through the falsy chain). Now explicitly awaits the network promise
and falls back to `Response.error()` when it resolves to null —
matches the `_cacheFirst` pattern.
Browser-verified: sw.js registers, status "activated and is running"
in DevTools. 603 tests pass.
Self-review nit on b0e7dae. Discover data is user-specific (hero
artists from your watchlist, similar artists from your taste,
recently-played derivations, etc.) — `Cache-Control: public` would let
intermediate proxies (corporate caching proxy, Cloudflare with cache
rules, Nginx with proxy_cache) store one user's response and serve
it to another. Privacy leak.
Switched to `private, max-age=300`. Browser-only cache, proxies skip.
Static assets stay `public` (shared content — everyone gets the same
library.js). Streaming and backup endpoints already correct
(`no-cache` and `no-store` respectively).
603 tests pass.
Addresses #365 (reported by JohnBaumb), parts 1 & 2 of the proposal.
Service worker, client-side IDB/sessionStorage, and PWA manifest
deferred to follow-up PRs.
1. Static asset cache (CSS/JS/icons/fonts).
`SEND_FILE_MAX_AGE_DEFAULT` flipped from 0 to 31536000 (1 year) in
production. Safe because every static URL is bust-tagged with
`?v=static_v` (computed once per process start), so each server
restart effectively invalidates every cached asset for every user.
Within a single deploy, repeat page loads hit zero round-trips on
static files — was a 304 round-trip per asset before.
Dev override (`SOULSYNC_WEB_DEV_NO_CACHE=1`) keeps it at 0 so
iterating on JS/CSS doesn't need a server restart between edits.
Collateral fixes from the bump:
- Music streaming endpoint (L16140): `response.headers.add('Cache-Control',
'no-cache')` → bracket-assign. Under the old max-age=0, send_file
set `no-cache` and `.add()` duplicated harmlessly. Under the new
max-age=31536000, `.add()` would APPEND a second Cache-Control
value → two conflicting headers, browser-undefined behavior.
Bracket-assign replaces.
- Backup download endpoint (L25181): explicit `Cache-Control:
no-store` on the response so DB backups don't inherit the new
long max-age — sensitive content, must never cache.
2. Discover GET browser cache (5 min).
New `@app.after_request` hook scoped to `/api/discover/` and
`/api/discovery/` paths, GET method, 2xx responses only. Sets
`Cache-Control: public, max-age=300`. Skipped when the endpoint
already set its own Cache-Control. Toggling between Discover
sections within 5 min serves from browser cache, no backend hit.
Try/except wraps the hook body and logs a warning if anything
throws — never let a header-tagging bug turn a successful response
into a 500. (Logging instead of `pass` since silent except-pass is
exactly the anti-pattern issue #369 is about.)
Audited every other Cache-Control set site in web_server.py — only
the two `send_file` callers needed adjustment. Range-branch streaming
uses `Response()` directly, unaffected by the config change.
603 tests pass.
Closes#370 (reported by JohnBaumb).
The /api/settings endpoint and three siblings (/log-level,
/config-status, /verify) had no auth check — any logged-in profile
could read or modify service tokens, OAuth secrets, and API keys.
Cin's "minimum" suggestion from the issue: gate to admin profile.
Added an `admin_only` decorator near `get_current_profile_id` that
returns 403 when the current profile isn't admin (id=1). Applied
to all four endpoints.
Auth model note (documented in the decorator docstring): SoulSync's
existing model is "trust local network" — single-admin / no-multi-
profile installs default `get_current_profile_id()` to 1, so the
gate is a no-op for solo users. The decorator is meaningful in
multi-profile setups where non-admin sessions exist. Tightening to
real per-request auth is out of scope.
Did NOT consolidate with api/settings.py (Cin's "better" suggestion):
that endpoint uses API-key auth (for external tools), the web_server.py
copy uses session/profile auth (for the web UI). Different consumers,
different auth models — merging would break one or the other.
603 tests pass.
Six items from a Cin-style line-by-line pass on PR #383:
- resolve_cors_origins: list of non-string entries (`[None, 123]`) now
drops them instead of coercing to junk strings like `'None'`/`'123'`.
- will_reject: backwards-compat shim removed. Production callers always
pass `request.scheme` (Flask-guaranteed); the shim only existed for
tests/non-Flask callers and made the production code path branchier
than necessary. Tests now pass scheme explicitly.
- maybe_log: redundant `if not origin` early-return dropped. will_reject
handles missing origin (engineio's own behavior — server.py:207).
- RejectionLogger.__init__: `int(dedup_cap)` wrapped in try/except so
bad-type input falls back to DEFAULT_DEDUP_CAP instead of raising.
- web_server.py: docstring on the before_request hook explains why the
hook fires on every request (Flask doesn't scope before_request to a
path prefix; the early-return string compare is the cheapest option).
- settings.js: cors-origins URL regex tightened from `[^\s/]+` to
`[^\s/?#]+` so query/fragment chars don't pass validation. Engineio
would silently fail to match those anyway; better to flag at save.
Test changes:
- parametrize gained an explicit `scheme` column (12 cases updated).
- New explicit case: scheme-mismatch rejects (engineio compares full
`{scheme}://{host}` strings).
- `test_will_reject_falls_back_to_host_only_when_no_scheme_info`
deleted — the shim it tested is gone.
- `test_will_reject_honors_x_forwarded_host` now passes scheme info.
Net: -9 production lines, -3 test lines. Production code path is
straight-line. 603 tests pass.
Self-review pass on the security fix uncovered five issues, all fixed
here:
1. will_reject scheme handling. Engineio compares full {scheme}://{host}
strings, not just hostnames. A TLS-terminating proxy can leave the
backend seeing http while the browser's Origin is https — engineio
rejects, but the original predictor said "allow" → no helpful log
line. Added request_scheme + forwarded_proto params, build full
candidate strings to match engineio.
2. EITHER-forwarded-header rule. Engineio adds the forwarded candidate
when EITHER X-Forwarded-Proto OR X-Forwarded-Host is present (it
falls back to HTTP_HOST for the missing one). The original predictor
only added it when forwarded_host was set — false negative for
misconfigs sending only X-Forwarded-Proto. Now mirrors engineio.
3. will_reject incorrectly rejected missing-Origin requests. Engineio
(server.py:207: `if origin: validate`) skips CORS validation when
no Origin header is sent — non-browser clients (curl etc.) are
intentionally permitted. The original code rejected them. Test was
asserting the wrong behavior. Both fixed.
4. RejectionLogger had unbounded dedup set growth. A hostile actor
opening connections from many distinct fake origins would fill
memory unboundedly. Capped at 100 unique origins (configurable);
when cap hit, one overflow notice is emitted and further rejections
are silently dropped until restart.
5. Lock pattern: the overflow log path called logger.warning() while
holding the dedup lock, inconsistent with the normal path. Fixed
to pick the message under the lock and log after release. Critical
section is now minimal and uniform.
Plus polish:
- Stale module docstring fixed (said "empty list" instead of "None").
- settings.js validates each cors_origins line against a URL regex on
save; toasts a one-shot warning if entries are malformed (resolver
silently filters them, but user gets feedback now).
- web_server.py wiring passes request.scheme + X-Forwarded-Proto so
the predictor has full proxy info.
Tests:
- 51 unit tests in tests/test_socketio_cors.py (was 45). New cases:
* scheme comparison (5 cases including TLS-terminating proxies)
* forwarded_proto-alone misconfig
* missing-origin matches engineio (was asserting wrong behavior)
* dedup cap with overflow + reset
* default cap is reasonable (uses public DEFAULT_DEDUP_CAP constant)
Engineio behavior independently verified by reading engineio/server.py
and engineio/base_server.py source. Predictor mirrors both files.
604 tests pass.
Closes#366 (reported by JohnBaumb).
Socket.IO was initialized with `cors_allowed_origins='*'`, accepting
WebSocket connections from any origin. A malicious site could open a
WS to a user's local SoulSync instance and exfiltrate live progress /
toast / activity events.
This commit:
- Defaults to engineio's same-origin behavior (`cors_allowed_origins=None`),
which automatically honors X-Forwarded-Host so reverse proxies that
send that header (Caddy / Traefik by default, properly-configured
Nginx) work transparently.
- Adds a `security.cors_origins` config setting + Settings → Security
textarea where users behind unusual proxies / Electron wrappers /
cross-origin integrations can whitelist their origin. Accepts comma
or newline separated values; `*` on its own line opts back into the
legacy wildcard with a startup-warning log.
- Logs a clear warning the first time engineio rejects each unique
origin, naming the rejected Origin and request Host and pointing
users to the settings field. Without this, engineio silently 403s
the upgrade and the user just sees a half-broken UI with no clue
why. Threadsafe dedup so a hostile origin can't spam logs.
Logic lives in `core/socketio_cors.py` (resolver, rejection
predictor, dedup logger class, startup-status emitter) — pure
functions, no Flask dependency. `web_server.py` adds 23 lines of
wiring and imports.
Important catch during review: my first pass used `cors_allowed_origins=[]`
as the "secure default." Reading engineio's source revealed `[]` actually
means "DISABLE CORS HANDLING" (engineio/server.py:202: `if cors_allowed_origins != []:`)
— identical security to `'*'`. Fixed to use `None` (engineio's actual
same-origin sentinel) and pinned with a regression test that asserts
the resolver never returns `[]` for any input shape.
Tests:
- tests/test_socketio_cors.py — 45 unit tests covering 19 resolver shape
cases (None, empty, whitespace, comma, newline, garbage types, lists),
the `[]`-must-never-be-returned security regression, 12 rejection
prediction cases, X-Forwarded-Host handling, dedup logger behavior,
threadsafe race (8 threads × 50 hammers → exactly 1 warning), and
startup-status emitter outputs.
Frontend:
- Settings → Security gains an "Allowed WebSocket Origins" textarea
with help text explaining same-origin default + when to add a domain
+ the `*` opt-out.
- helper.js — new '2.4.1' WHATS_NEW block (hidden until version bump)
with a chill-voice entry describing the change.
Conftest.py left at `'*'` — test environment, no security concern.
598 tests pass.
The version modal pulled its content from /api/version-info — a 295-line
hand-curated Python dict in web_server.py. The "What's New" panel pulled
its content from WHATS_NEW in helper.js. Same release notes, two files,
two languages, hand-edited at every release — drift was inevitable
(and happened: the kettui-fix entries I added recently differed in
detail between the two surfaces).
This commit makes helper.js the single editing surface:
- Adds VERSION_MODAL_SECTIONS const in helper.js right beside WHATS_NEW,
with a comment block documenting the relationship: WHATS_NEW is the
per-version detailed log used by the helper popover; VERSION_MODAL_SECTIONS
is the curated highlight reel shown by the sidebar version button. Both
edited at release time, both in the same file.
- Rewires showVersionInfo() in downloads.js to read from those consts
directly. No backend round-trip; the changelog content ships in the
same JS bundle the browser already loaded.
- Deletes the /api/version-info route and its 295-line version_data dict.
- Updates the line-39 comment to drop the now-stale "version-info endpoint"
reference.
Note: this is collocation, not true unification. WHATS_NEW and
VERSION_MODAL_SECTIONS are still two distinct structures with overlapping
content, linked by a comment convention rather than a shared schema. A
deeper refactor (e.g. a `featured` flag on WHATS_NEW entries that the
modal aggregates) was rejected as out-of-scope — the curated section
titles ("Earlier in v2.3", "Recent Fixes") aren't 1:1 mappable to
WHATS_NEW entries. Saving for a follow-up if the drift problem persists.
Risk audit:
- Load order: helper.js loads at line 7967, downloads.js at line 7873.
Both classic scripts execute synchronously before any clickable
interaction, so showVersionInfo (only invoked on the version-button
onclick) always sees both consts defined.
- populateVersionModal() unchanged — receives the same {title, subtitle,
sections: [{title, description, features, usage_note?}]} shape.
- Stale-cache window during deploy: old downloads.js hitting a 404 on
the deleted endpoint falls through to the existing catch + toast path
("Failed to load version information"). Cache-buster ?v=static_v
resolves on next page load.
553 tests pass. helper.js + downloads.js parse cleanly. No residual
references to /api/version-info anywhere in the repo.
_OLD_V22_NOTES (655 lines) and _OLD_V2_NOTES (556 lines) were
triple-quoted Python strings holding old release-notes JSON. No code
references them — `grep _OLD_V22_NOTES|_OLD_V2_NOTES` returns only
the definitions themselves. They were leftover from earlier
version-info refactors and have been sitting in the file unread.
Pure deletion. No behavior change.
- _SOULSYNC_BASE_VERSION → 2.4.0 (was 2.39).
- Migrate WHATS_NEW key '2.40' → '2.4.0', strip unreleased flags off
the 27 entries shipping in this release, set release date.
- Replace parseFloat() version compare with proper int-tuple semver
comparator — parseFloat('2.4.0') and parseFloat('2.4.1') both return
2.4, which would have made future patch bumps invisible to the
What's New surfacing logic.
Five issues kettui flagged on PR #377:
- Worker race (reorganize_queue.py): _next_queued() picked an item and
released the lock, then re-acquired to flip status='running'. A
cancel() landing in that window marked the item cancelled but the
worker still ran it. Replaced with _claim_next_or_wait() that picks
AND flips under one lock acquisition.
- Wakeup race (reorganize_queue.py): _wakeup.clear() after the empty
check could lose an enqueue's _wakeup.set(), parking a freshly-queued
album for up to 60 seconds. Replaced Lock + Event with a single
threading.Condition; cond.wait() releases and re-acquires atomically
on notify.
- Bulk dedupe (reorganize_queue.py:enqueue_many): looped single-item
enqueue, so a duplicate album_id later in the same batch could slip
through if the worker finished the first copy before the loop
reached the second. Now holds the lock for the whole batch and tracks
a per-batch seen set, so intra-batch duplicates dedupe against each
other and not just pre-existing items.
- Preview button stuck disabled (library.js:loadReorganizePreview):
early returns and thrown errors skipped the re-enable line. Moved
state into a canApply flag committed in finally, so any exit path
lands the button correctly.
- DB helpers swallowing failures (music_database.py): get_album_display_meta
and get_artist_albums_for_reorganize used to catch every Exception
and return None / [], so a real DB outage masqueraded as "album not
found" / "no albums". Now lets exceptions bubble; the route layer
already wraps them as 500.
Tests:
- test_cancel_and_run_are_mutually_exclusive — hammers enqueue+cancel
pairs and asserts the invariant that no successfully-cancelled item
ever ran (catches regressions to the atomic pick).
- test_enqueue_many_dedupes_batch_internal_duplicates — pins the
intra-batch dedupe.
- test_get_album_display_meta_propagates_db_errors and
test_get_artist_albums_for_reorganize_propagates_db_errors — pin
the bubble-up behavior.
Changelog updated in helper.js and version modal.
Replaces the single-slot "one reorganize at a time, return 409 on collision"
model with a per-user FIFO queue. Buttons stay clickable, "Reorganize All"
is one backend call instead of an N-call JS loop, and a status panel mounted
at the top of the artist actions bar shows live progress (active item,
queued count, recent completions) with per-item cancel buttons.
Backend
- core/reorganize_queue.py: singleton queue + worker thread, dedupe-on-
enqueue, cancel rules (queued cancellable, running not), enqueue_many
for bulk operations, progress fan-out via update_active_progress
- core/reorganize_runner.py: factory builds the worker's runner closure
with injected dependencies. Reads config per-call so changing the
download path in Settings takes effect on the next reorganize without
a server restart
- database/music_database.py: get_album_display_meta and
get_artist_albums_for_reorganize — moves the SQL out of route handlers
- web_server.py: thin enqueue/snapshot/cancel/clear endpoints, runner
registration at module load. Old _reorganize_state globals + status
endpoint deleted. Static-asset cache buster (?v=<server-start>)
added so JS/CSS updates ship live without users clearing cache
Frontend
- webui/static/library.js: status panel mount, polling (1.5s when
active, 8s when idle), expand/collapse, per-item cancel, debounced
enhanced-view reload (one reload per artist batch instead of N).
Per-album reorganize button paints with queued/running indicator
and short-circuits to a toast when the album is already in queue
- webui/static/style.css: panel + button styling matching the existing
glass-UI accents
- webui/static/helper.js + version modal: WHATS_NEW entry
Tests (22 new)
- tests/test_reorganize_queue.py (19 tests): FIFO order, dedupe,
per-item source, cancel rules, continue-on-failure, snapshot
shape, progress propagation, bulk enqueue
- tests/test_reorganize_runner.py (4 tests): per-call config reads,
setup-failure summary, dependency injection, progress fan-out
- tests/test_reorganize_db_methods.py (7 tests): SQL JOIN behavior,
ordering, fallback for blank strings, artist isolation
Full suite 549 passed in 27s.
Four changes addressing kettui's PR #377 review comments:
1. **`_finalize_track` no longer over-counts on DB failure (🔴 bug).**
The function previously bailed on DB-update failure but
`_process_one_track` still incremented `summary['moved']`
unconditionally — overstating how many tracks the UI knows are
at their new locations. Fixed by:
- `_finalize_track` now returns ``bool`` (True only when DB row
was updated AND original was dealt with)
- Caller checks the return; on False, records as a failed track
with a clear message ("Track landed at new location but DB
update failed — file is at both old and new paths until library
scan re-indexes")
- Existing `test_db_update_failure_leaves_original_in_place` now
also asserts `moved == 0`, `failed == 1`, and that the error
message names the cause
2. **`executeReorganize` toast no longer says "undefined tracks" (🐛
bug).** `/reorganize` doesn't return `result.total` anymore (the
track count is determined server-side after planning), so the
"Reorganizing undefined tracks..." string was meaningless. Now uses
`result.message` from the backend instead.
3. **`_pollReorganizeStatus` distinguishes completed from skipped
(🟡 risk).** Backend now propagates the orchestrator's status
(`completed` / `no_source_id` / `no_album` / `no_tracks` /
`setup_failed` / `error`) into `_reorganize_state['result_status']`
so the frontend can warn appropriately. Two new helpers:
- `_classifyReorganizeOutcome(state)` — returns 'success' only
when `result_status === 'completed'` AND `failed === 0`;
'warning' otherwise
- `_formatReorganizeResultMessage(state)` — returns a message
specific to the outcome ("Reorganize skipped — album has no
metadata source ID. Run enrichment first." for `no_source_id`,
etc.)
Zero-failure non-completed runs now show as warnings instead of
green checkmarks.
4. **Bulk mode no longer counts skipped albums as succeeded (🟡
risk).** `_executeReorganizeAll`'s loop was treating any HTTP
200 response as success, ignoring the orchestrator's actual
outcome for that album. Fixed by:
- `_waitForReorganizeComplete()` now resolves with the final
state object (was: void)
- Loop checks `finalState.result_status === 'completed'` AND
`finalState.failed === 0` before counting `succeeded++`;
otherwise increments `skipped` (with a per-album warning
toast) or `failed` accordingly
- Final summary toast now reads
"Reorganized N of M albums, K skipped, J failed" and only
shows green when nothing was skipped or failed
All four addressed in a single commit because they form one
coherent UX-correctness fix — the bug bug (#1) and the count-
overstatement bug (#4) both made the user see "everything succeeded"
when reality was different. Together they make the UI honestly
reflect what actually happened.
Files:
- core/library_reorganize.py — `_finalize_track` returns bool,
`_process_one_track` reads it
- web_server.py — `_reorganize_state['result_status']` populated
from orchestrator's summary on success and on exception
- webui/static/library.js — `_classifyReorganizeOutcome` /
`_formatReorganizeResultMessage` helpers, single-album +
bulk-mode flows both consume them
- tests/test_library_reorganize_orchestrator.py — strengthened
the existing DB-failure test to assert moved/failed counts
Credit: kettui — four PR #377 review comments named all of these
precisely with line numbers and severity.
Reported on Discord by winecountrygames. The library "Reorganize" tool
had several layered bugs that all traced to the same root cause: the
endpoint reinvented every wheel post-processing already turns — its own
template engine, its own disc-number resolution from file tags, its own
sidecar sweep, its own collision detection — and each had drifted from
the canonical path used by fresh downloads. Reported symptoms:
- 3-disc Aerosmith deluxe collapsed to a flat single-disc layout
- Half the tracks on other albums silently skipped, no error / no count
- Re-runs left empty leftover album folders cluttering the artist dir
Architecture: stop reinventing wheels. Route reorganize through exactly
the same pipeline downloads use. Per-album:
1. Fetch the canonical tracklist from a metadata source (Spotify /
iTunes / Deezer / Discogs / Hydrabase) using the album's stored
source IDs. New `core/library_reorganize.py::plan_album_reorganize`
does this — primary-source-first, fall through priority chain
unless the user picked a specific source in the modal (strict mode).
2. For each local track, find the matching API entry via a scored
candidate matcher. Score components: exact-title (100),
substring-with-length-ratio (40-90), track-number agreement (20).
Hard reject when the two titles have different version
differentiators (Remix vs no-remix means different recordings,
not annotation drift). Below threshold = unmatched, surfaced as
"not in source's tracklist, left in place" rather than silently
mis-routing.
3. Copy the file to a per-album staging directory, build the same
context dict the import flow builds (`spotify_album` /
`track_info` / etc. with `is_album_download=True` so the path
builder enters ALBUM mode, not SINGLE mode), call
`_post_process_matched_download(...)` — same function fresh
downloads use. Post-process handles tagging, multi-disc subfolder
decisions, sidecar regeneration, AcoustID verification.
4. Read `context['_final_processed_path']` to learn where it landed.
Update `tracks.file_path` in the DB BEFORE removing the original
(DB-update failure leaves the file at both locations, recoverable
via library scan; the reverse would orphan the row). Delete
per-track sidecars (post-process recreates them at the new
destination).
3 concurrent workers per album via ThreadPoolExecutor, matching the
download path's per-batch worker count. State mutations all guarded by
a single lock; staging filenames carry a UUID prefix so concurrent
copies of identically-named source files don't overwrite each other.
Source picker in the modal lets the user choose which source to read
the tracklist from. Two endpoints feed it:
- `/api/library/album/<id>/reorganize/sources` — sources for THIS
album that are both authed AND have a stored ID. For the per-
album modal.
- `/api/library/reorganize/sources` — all authed sources globally.
For the bulk "Reorganize All" modal where per-album ID coverage
varies.
When the user picks a specific source, the orchestrator runs in
`strict_source=True` mode (no fallback chain) — picking Spotify means
"use Spotify or fail", not "use Spotify and silently fall back."
Preview endpoint shares the same planning logic as apply via
`preview_album_reorganize` — the destination path comes from the same
`_build_final_path_for_track` post-process uses, so what you see in
the preview is exactly what you get on apply.
Empty destination folders (from earlier failed runs OR from the
current run when post-process creates a dir then fails AcoustID)
get cleaned up after each successful run: walk up to the artist
folder from any successful destination, prune empty album-sibling
folders one level deep. Bounded scope = won't touch unrelated user
dirs.
Web_server.py shrinks by ~450 net lines. The endpoint handler is now
a thin wrapper that builds injected callables (path resolver, post-
process function, DB updater, empty-dir cleaner), spawns a thread
that calls `reorganize_album()`, and returns. All actual logic lives
in `core/library_reorganize.py` where it's unit-testable without
spinning up Flask.
Frontend cleanup: the per-call template input in both reorganize
modals (per-album and bulk) was redundant — the backend always uses
the configured global download template. Removed the input and the
variables-grid reference UI it was for.
39 new unit tests pin every contract:
- source resolution (no_source_id when album has none, fallthrough
chain when primary returns nothing, strict mode bypasses fallback)
- matcher scoring (exact / substring / multi-disc disambiguation /
smart-quote tolerance / dash-vs-parens / bonus-track substring /
Remix-vs-original differentiator rejection / "Real" doesn't false-
match "Real Real Real" / track-number-only no longer fires)
- file safety (DB-update failure leaves original in place, post-
process failure leaves original in place, post-process exception
caught and original preserved, success removes original AND
updates DB in the right order)
- sidecar handling (per-track .lrc/.nfo deleted on success, kept on
failure; album-level cover.jpg/folder.jpg cleaned only when
directory has no remaining audio)
- staging cleanup (recreated between tracks because post-process
nukes it, dir cleaned up on success AND on failure)
- destination-dir prune (empty siblings removed, real album with
files preserved, no recursive sweep)
- source picker (only authed-with-stored-ID sources for per-album,
all authed sources for bulk; strict mode doesn't fall back)
- concurrency (3 workers in flight, state stays consistent under
races, stop_check cuts off pending tasks)
- preview parity (preview produces same destination as apply for
multi-disc; ALBUM mode not SINGLE mode; unmatched/no-path tracks
surfaced with reasons)
Limitations (deliberate punts, NOT in this PR):
- Renamed local titles on multi-disc albums where track_number
also disagrees: matcher returns nothing (track is "not in
source"). Fixable by using duration_ms as a tertiary signal.
- Per-track in-modal source switching with per-album track-count
hints (would need a second API call before opening the modal).
- UI status panel on the artist page during a run — currently
just toasts. Documented as a follow-up PR.
Files:
- core/library_reorganize.py — new module: plan_album_reorganize,
preview_album_reorganize, reorganize_album, available_sources_for_album,
authed_sources, _score_candidate, helpers for staging/post-
processing/finalizing, sidecar + dest-dir cleanup
- core/metadata_service.py — no changes; reused get_album_for_source,
get_album_tracks_for_source, get_source_priority,
get_client_for_source
- web_server.py — three endpoints (preview / apply / sources GETs)
are thin wrappers; -450 net lines
- tests/test_library_reorganize_orchestrator.py — 39 tests covering
every contract above
- webui/static/library.js — source picker UI in both modals; dead
template input + variables-grid removed
- webui/static/style.css — dropdown option styling fix (white-on-
white was unreadable)
Reported on Discord by winecountrygames — his bug report named the
trigger button (Enhanced view → Reorganize All) and both symptoms
(multi-disc collapse, half-album skip), which let the diagnosis go
straight to the architectural problem.
Three bugs from kettui's follow-up review pass on the MusicBrainz
search PR, all fixed in one commit because they share UI context.
1. Missing artist images on MB artist results
MusicBrainz doesn't store artist images directly. My earlier commit
returned `image_url=None` on every artist result and trusted the
frontend's lazy-loader — but the lazy-loader's `/api/artist/<id>/image?
source=musicbrainz` endpoint had no handler for MusicBrainz, so it
silently returned None and the emoji placeholder stayed.
Fix plumbs the artist name through:
- `renderCompactSection` stashes `data-artist-name` on artist cards.
- `search.js` and `downloads.js` lazy-loaders pass `name=<artist>` as a
query param.
- `/api/artist/<id>/image` accepts an optional `name` param.
- `metadata_service.get_artist_image_url` has a new `musicbrainz`
branch: since MB has no artist art, it searches fallback sources
(iTunes/Deezer by configured priority) for the artist name and
returns the first image found.
Verified live — Metallica/Kendrick Lamar/Daft Punk all resolve to
Deezer artist images via the name lookup.
2. total_tracks off-by-one on tracks with a release
`_recording_to_track` initialized `total_tracks = 1` and then summed
media track-counts on top. For an 11-track album, it reported 12. An
adapter-level regression introduced when the recording-projection
helper was extracted during the main MB refactor.
Fix: initialize at 0, sum normally. Standalone recordings with no
release (can happen for uncredited remixes etc.) still report 1 via
an explicit fallback — so the existing "single track" case isn't
broken.
3. "Artist Album Title" queries buried specific albums in the
discography list
Bare-name queries like "The Beatles Abbey Road" used to resolve "The
Beatles" as the artist and then browse their full discography — Abbey
Road was buried alphabetically among 200+ releases instead of being
the top result.
Fix adds a title-hint extractor. When the query starts with the
resolved artist name followed by more words, the trailing portion is
treated as a title hint. Browse results are filtered to those whose
release-group title contains the hint. If the filter matches nothing,
falls back to text-search with the hint as the title (the "keep the
old split-by-whitespace fallback" path kettui called for). If text-
search also misses, shows the full discography rather than nothing.
10 new tests in tests/test_musicbrainz_search.py (46 total):
- Title-hint extractor: basic match, case-insensitive, whitespace
tolerance, bare-artist-no-hint, artist-not-prefix-no-hint, word-
boundary required (no false splits on "Metallicasomething").
- Browse filtering by title hint.
- Text-search fallback when the title hint matches nothing in browse.
- Bare-artist queries return the full discography unfiltered.
- total_tracks for single-release, multi-disc, and no-release cases.
Cin flagged that Soulseek was always rendered as configured in the
source picker, even on dev instances with no slskd set up — letting
users click it and fire searches that could never succeed.
Three coordinated changes:
1. web_server.py SERVICE_CONFIG_REGISTRY: add Soulseek entry requiring
`slskd_url`. /api/settings/config-status now reports its real state
alongside every other service.
2. shared-helpers.js _ALWAYS_CONFIGURED_SOURCES: drop 'soulseek'. The
set is now just MusicBrainz + YouTube Music Videos (sources that
genuinely don't need user creds). Soulseek goes through the normal
config-status code path.
3. shared-helpers.js openSettingsForSource: special-case Soulseek to
route to Settings → Downloads tab (where slskd URL field lives,
gated behind the download-source-mode dropdown) and scroll to the
#soulseek-url input. Every other source still routes to Connections
and scrolls to its .stg-service card. Without this, Soulseek's
"click to configure" landed on a Connections card that doesn't
exist (Soulseek's URL/key fields are scoped to the download-source
selection on the Downloads tab).
The hourly `clean_search_history` automation was crashing with
`'DownloadOrchestrator' object has no attribute 'base_url'`. The guard
was written before the orchestrator refactor — `soulseek_client` is now
a DownloadOrchestrator that wraps individual download clients, with the
real Soulseek client sitting at `.soulseek`.
Two other call sites in web_server.py (lines 2634, 3092) already used
the correct `soulseek_client.soulseek.base_url` pattern with a getattr
guard. This call site was missed during the refactor.
Fix: reach through the orchestrator the same way the other sites do.
When a completed download's track_info has neither an `id` field nor a
`wishlist_id`, Methods 1-3 of _check_and_remove_from_wishlist() all skip
without defining `wishlist_tracks`. Method 4 (fuzzy match) then hits
`if not wishlist_tracks:` and raises UnboundLocalError, which the call
sites catch + log but silently skip the wishlist removal for that track.
Path became more common after the batch-queue-system refactor started
routing non-Spotify-id completions (e.g. discover sync tracks downloaded
under a non-Spotify primary source) through the same completion handler.
Fix: initialize `wishlist_tracks = []` at the top of the try block so
Method 3's reassignment still works and Method 4's `if not wishlist_tracks`
guard always has a defined value to test.
Credit to RENOxDECEPTION (JohnBaumb) for pinpointing the variable-scope
issue during PR #357 testing.
JohnBaumb's review: "If we're going to refactor the web_server.py soon,
might as well start moving stuff away from web_server.py in our PRs.
_build_source_only_artist_detail, make it a module, it's perfect."
This continues the pattern the prior commit started with the source-ID
lookup helpers: move the pure data-building logic to a side-effect-free
core module, leave a thin wrapper in web_server.py that bridges the
Flask response and the module-global clients.
**core/artist_source_detail.py** — pure function that takes the artist id,
name, and source plus dependency-injected per-source clients (spotify,
deezer, itunes, discogs) and a Last.fm API key. Returns
(payload_dict, http_status) so it isn't coupled to Flask.
**web_server.py wrapper** — builds the client bag from the module globals
(checks Spotify auth, constructs the Discogs client from the configured
token, reads the Last.fm API key) and wraps the core return in jsonify.
147 lines of logic go away from web_server.py; the 24-line wrapper is
purely glue.
**tests/test_artist_source_detail.py** — 21 focused tests covering the
response envelope, the source-specific ID-field stamping for all six
supported sources, the dedup_variants=False contract (the behaviour
that originally motivated the split of MetadataLookupOptions), per-source
genre/follower extraction with safe handling of missing or throwing
clients, and the Last.fm enrichment branch including the no-key and
error-path cases. Runtime 0.26s.
Cin's review note: typing artist_name as plain `str` forced callers
that didn't have a name to pass `""` as a placeholder, which leaks the
parameter's emptiness contract into every call site and reads badly in
tests. Switching to `Optional[str] = None` lets callers omit it.
The function body's `if artist_name and active_server:` check already
handles None and "" identically, so no body changes were needed. Tests
that previously passed `artist_name=""` drop the argument; one new test
covers the omitted-arg path explicitly.
The web_server.py wrapper takes the same default for symmetry.
Cin pointed out that the prior version of test_artist_source_lookup.py
AST-parsed web_server.py to verify a constant and to string-match a
function's response keys. That was a workaround for the fact that
web_server.py can't be imported at test time (it boots Spotify,
Soulseek, Plex, etc.) — the right answer is to move the logic into a
side-effect-free module so it can be imported and tested directly.
This commit:
- adds core/artist_source_lookup.py containing the SOURCE_ID_FIELD
map, the SOURCE_ONLY_ARTIST_SOURCES set, and find_library_artist_for_source
- replaces the inline definitions in web_server.py with imports +
a thin wrapper that injects the active media server
- rewrites the tests to import from the core module directly:
* mapping correctness is now a plain equality assertion
* lookup behaviour is exercised against a real MusicDatabase
* the AST parse and the string-matching contract test class are
gone
- drops the _build_source_only_artist_detail contract test entirely
(the weakest of the four — it was just string-matching the function
body); when that function moves to core/ it can get a real
behavioural test alongside.
Test runtime drops from ~161s to ~5.8s. All 18 tests pass.
The library-enrichment query inside /api/watchlist/artist/<id>/config
queries the `artists` table but used the column names from the
watchlist_artists table:
WHERE spotify_artist_id = ? OR itunes_artist_id = ?
OR deezer_artist_id = ? OR discogs_artist_id = ?
The `artists` table actually uses `deezer_id` and `discogs_id` for
those two columns (only `watchlist_artists` uses the `_artist_id`
suffix). The mismatch threw `no such column: deezer_artist_id` on
every config GET, which was caught by the surrounding try/except and
logged — releases came back empty and Spotify/genres etc. fell back
to defaults.
Visible side effects: the request that LOOKED slow ('1420.2ms') and
the recurring ERROR line in app.log every time a watchlist artist
overlay opened.
Watchlist-config GET now returns proper banner_url / summary / style
/ mood / label / genres for Deezer- and Discogs-source artists too.
The other watchlist queries in this endpoint (42302 / 42315 / 42379)
correctly target watchlist_artists and stay as-is.
Three issues from screenshots:
1. .collection-overview was hidden for source artists (CSS rule too
aggressive). It actually renders fine — just shows 0/N "missing"
for each release type, which is useful info. Removed from the hide
rules.
2. #artist-hero-sidebar (Top Tracks "Popular on Last.fm") was also
hidden. The renderer (_loadArtistTopTracks in library.js) already
fetches by artist name via /api/artist/0/lastfm-top-tracks, so it
works for source artists too. Removed from the hide rules.
3. Clicking a source-artist result for someone you ALREADY have in
the library was loading the bare source view instead of the
library view (bug). Backend now does a "library upgrade" lookup
in get_artist_detail: when the direct ID lookup misses but a
source param is provided, search the artists table by the source-
specific ID column (deezer_id / spotify_artist_id / etc.). If a
match exists, use that library PK and the rest of the library
path runs normally — owned releases, enrichment, completion
bars, all the goodies you'd see if you'd clicked from Library.
Falls back to a name match within the active server, then to the
source-only response if nothing matches.
The remaining library-only items (artist-enrichment-coverage, Radio
button, Enhance Quality button) stay hidden for source artists since
they all require owned tracks.
LastFMClient() with no args has no api_key -> get_artist_info silently
returns None -> source artists never see bio/listeners/playcount even
though my previous commit was supposedly fetching them.
Now reads config_manager.get('lastfm.api_key') and only attempts the
enrichment when the key is configured. Users without Last.fm credentials
in Settings simply get image+name+badges+genres on source artists
(everything except bio + stats), which is fine.
Source artists landing on /artist-detail were rendering an almost-blank
hero — image + name + a tiny Download button — because the backend
response only had {id, name, image_url, server_source: null, genres: []}.
The library.js renderers do their best with what they have, and that
wasn't much.
Backend changes (_build_source_only_artist_detail):
- Set the source-specific ID field (deezer_id / spotify_artist_id /
itunes_artist_id / discogs_id / soul_id / musicbrainz_id) on
artist_info so the corresponding service badge renders on the hero.
- Try the source's own get_artist_info / get_artist for genres +
followers (Spotify always; Deezer/iTunes/Discogs when available).
Spotify also fills image_url if metadata_service.get_artist_image_url
came up empty.
- Last.fm enrichment by artist name — bio + listeners + playcount +
lastfm_url. Mirrors what library artists get from the cached
enrichment workers but on demand for source artists.
- All enrichment lookups are wrapped in try/except so a 500 from any
one source doesn't break the whole response.
Frontend (library.js populateArtistDetailPage):
- Watchlist button now initialises for source artists too. Falls back
to artist.id + artist.name when there's no canonical Spotify
identity (which is the common case for non-library artists).
Discography dedup opt-out:
- Added dedup_variants flag to MetadataLookupOptions (default True so
library artists are unchanged). Source-only path now passes
dedup_variants=False so every "Deluxe Edition" / "Remastered" /
"Anniversary" variant the source returns is shown — matches the
inline /artists page behaviour the user was comparing against.
Result: source artists' hero now shows badges + bio + listeners +
playcount + watchlist button + genres in addition to image and name.
Discography lists every release the source returns, not the deduped
canonical view.
Part D + E of the deferred cleanup + the final version bump that
publishes the whole Search/Artists unification project.
Deletions:
- webui/static/artists.js (1903 lines) — removed entirely. The 2
remaining externally-referenced helpers (lazyLoadArtistImages +
showCompletionError) moved into shared-helpers.js first.
- webui/index.html — 140-line #artists-page HTML block and the
<script src="artists.js"> tag both removed.
init.js wiring:
- 'case artists:' removed from loadPageData switch (no page to init).
- navigateToPage top-level alias extended: 'artists' → 'search'
(same pattern as the existing 'downloads' → 'search' alias).
Legacy /artists bookmarks land on the unified Search page, the
natural place to find an artist now.
- _getPageFromPath now maps artist-detail → library as its parent
(was artists). Matches the existing library-nav-highlight at
init.js:2161.
Version bump:
- _SOULSYNC_BASE_VERSION 2.39 → 2.40.
- WHATS_NEW entries lose the 'unreleased' scaffolding and gain a
new top entry summarizing the unified artist-detail page + the
final artists.js retirement.
- version-info modal gets a 'Search & Artists Unification' section
at the top.
- The _getLatestWhatsNewVersion filter added during the unreleased-
tracking phase is rolled back — entries now display as soon as
they land in WHATS_NEW, matching the pre-unification behaviour.
Test suite:
- tests/test_script_split_integrity.py SPLIT_MODULES updated:
'artists.js' dropped, 'shared-helpers.js' added. escapeHtml's
cross-file dupe list entry updated to reference shared-helpers.
- 354/354 tests pass.
User-visible result after this commit:
- Sidebar: Search, Downloads, Discover, Library, Wishlist, etc. —
no more Artists entry.
- Click any artist anywhere: lands on the same /artist-detail page.
- Search page has a source dropdown; Soulseek is just another option.
- Legacy /downloads and /artists URLs alias to /search.
- Version button shows v2.3 (Docker major); "What's New" panel
opens to the unification summary.
Closes the project Cin requested in Discord. Future work: source-aware
/api/artist-detail could be extended to fall back through the whole
source priority chain when a specific source is given but returns no
discography. Not needed for the current flows.
Part A of the deferred unification cleanup. The standalone artist-
detail endpoint used to 404 whenever `artist_id` wasn't a local library
primary key, which is exactly what source artists (Deezer/Spotify/
iTunes/etc.) have. That forced the Phase 4a revert: source artists had
to use the inline Artists page because this endpoint couldn't handle
them.
New behaviour:
- Library PK path — unchanged. Existing callers see the same response.
- `/api/artist-detail/<id>?source=<src>&name=<name>` with source in
(spotify, itunes, deezer, discogs, hydrabase, musicbrainz) — when
the library DB lookup misses, synthesize a response by:
• fetching artist image via metadata_service.get_artist_image_url
with source_override (the helper already backing /api/artist/
<id>/image)
• fetching discography via metadata_service.get_artist_detail_
discography with MetadataLookupOptions(source_override=source,
artist_source_ids={source: artist_id})
• returning { success, artist: {id, name, image_url, server_source:
null, genres: []}, discography, enrichment_coverage: {} }
- Library PK missing AND no source — preserves the 404 (caller didn't
give enough info to fall back).
Frontend plumbing: library.js loadArtistDetailData now appends
?source=<src>&name=<name> to the fetch URL when
artistDetailPageState.currentArtistSource is set. The field is already
seeded by navigateToArtistDetail's third arg (added during the earlier
unification work), so no new state plumbing is needed.
populateArtistDetailPage gracefully handles the missing-library-data
case per earlier exploration — owned_releases empty is fine,
enrichment_coverage optional, spotify_artist_id optional.
Part B will re-route the source-artist callsites (Search / Discover /
Watchlist / etc.) back through navigateToArtistDetail so they actually
exercise this new fallback path.
Reverts the 2.40→2.49 version spam from this session — every phase
commit was bumping the display version when the whole Search/Artists
unification project should really be a single release.
Changes:
- _SOULSYNC_BASE_VERSION back to 2.39
- All session-level version-info sections consolidated — the endpoint
response is back to the pre-session 2.39 shape
- helper.js WHATS_NEW entries for 2.40–2.49 collapsed into a single
'2.40' block with one bullet per phase, marked unreleased
- _getLatestWhatsNewVersion / _showOlderNotes filter out entries
whose version is higher than the current build, so the 2.40 block
won't fire the 'new' badge or appear in the What's New panel until
we actually flip the build version
- Picks up the artist-detail back-button fix from the previous turn
(falls back to browser history when the user reached the inline
detail from outside the Artists page)
When the unification project is done, a single commit that bumps
_SOULSYNC_BASE_VERSION to 2.40 will publish the whole folded entry.
Phase 4a (9361c29) mistakenly routed every artist click to
navigateToArtistDetail, which fetches /api/artist-detail/<id>. That
endpoint only knows how to look up local DB primary keys. For source
artists (Spotify/Deezer/iTunes/etc.) the id is a metadata-source id,
not a library PK — so clicks 404'd out.
Library artists (db_artists section in search results, library page
clicks, stats links, media player) continue to go to the standalone
/artist-detail page as before. Source artists now route back to the
Artists page's inline view via selectArtistForDetail, which calls
/api/artist/<id>/discography with a source param — the endpoint that
actually handles non-library IDs.
Reverted 7 migration points:
- search.js: Enhanced Search source-artists onClick
- downloads.js: global widget _gsClickArtist non-library branch
- downloads.js: _navigateToArtistFromModal fallback
- discover.js: viewRecommendedArtistDiscography
- discover.js: viewDiscoverHeroDiscography
- discover.js: 'Your Artists' card name-click inline HTML
- discover.js: 'Your Artists' info-modal 'View All' button
- discover.js: artist-map context menu
- discover.js: genre-deep-dive artist click
- api-monitor.js: watchlist artist discography view
Phase 4a's goal of "one artist page for everything" is deferred —
it needs backend work on /api/artist-detail to accept a source param
and fall back to metadata-source lookup when the local DB lookup
fails. Keeping the signature extension on navigateToArtistDetail
(source parameter) in place for when that lands.
Phase 4c of the Search/Artists unification — docs-only cleanup.
The click-for-help system and the 'Your First Download' guided tour
referenced elements that no longer exist (the Basic/Enhanced toggle,
the embedded download-manager toggle, the active/finished queue
panels). Updated annotations + tour steps to match the current UI.
- New annotation for .search-source-picker-container (the dropdown)
- Removed 6 annotations for deleted elements
- 'first-download' tour now walks users through the source picker
and uses page: 'search' (PAGE_TOUR_MAP accepts both 'search' and
the legacy 'downloads' id so older bookmarks still match)
- Retired the 'artists-browse' standalone tour — no sidebar entry
- Dropped the dead #finished-queue detection in the setup milestone
check (the dashboard stat card is the single source of truth)
Phase 4b of the Search/Artists unification. Cin flagged that 'Artists'
in the sidebar read like a library section but was actually a
dedicated artist-search page, duplicating what unified Search already
does. Removed the sidebar entry so users funnel through Search.
- Sidebar Artists button gone
- 'Browse Artists' on empty Watchlist now opens Search
- 'View artist from Wishlist' opens Search pre-filled with the name
- Profile Home Page + Page Access drop the Artists option
artists.js stays on disk: it defines ~30 shared helpers used across
the app (escapeHtml, openDownloadMissingModalForArtistAlbum, service
status, download bubbles, image helpers) that library/discover/etc.
depend on. Wholesale deletion would orphan too much. The inline
Artists page and its selectArtistForDetail flow are still there —
just unreachable from the sidebar — so /artists deep links keep
working for bookmarks.
Phase 4a of the Search/Artists unification. The app had two artist-
detail implementations: the standalone page Library navigates to via
navigateToArtistDetail (its own route, deep-link support, highlights
Library in the sidebar), and an inline state inside the Artists page
reached via selectArtistForDetail. They rendered similar content but
were separate code paths and kept drifting apart (PR #356 just had
to fix source propagation in both).
Every external caller of selectArtistForDetail (9 sites across
api-monitor.js, discover.js, downloads.js, search.js) now calls
navigateToArtistDetail(id, name, source) directly. Removed ~63 lines
of the navigate-then-setTimeout-then-select dance. Source context
(Spotify/iTunes/Deezer/etc.) carries cleanly through via the new
third argument.
Artists sidebar entry, its inline search, and selectArtistForDetail
all still work — they just have no external callers. Phase 4b will
retire the sidebar entry and artists.js.
Phase 3c of the Search/Artists unification. The Search page carried
a second copy of the Download Manager (active + finished queues,
clear/cancel-all buttons) that was hidden by default and duplicated
the dedicated Downloads page. That duplicate is now gone.
Removed:
- Side-panel HTML block and the toggle button that showed/hid it
- ~290 lines of polling + render infra in downloads.js: loadDownloads-
Data, startDownloadPolling/stopDownloadPolling, updateDownload-
Queues, renderQueue, updateTabCounts/updateDownloadStats,
initializeDownloadTabs/switchDownloadTab, cancelDownloadItem,
clearFinishedDownloads, cancelAllDownloads, and the
activeDownloads/finishedDownloads globals
- initializeDownloadManagerToggle and its call from init.js
- Stopped hitting /api/downloads/status every second on the Search
page (the dedicated Downloads page already polls its own view)
CSS grid for the Search page collapsed from '1fr 370px' to '1fr' now
that the right panel is gone. Unused .controls-panel__* / .download-
manager__* / .downloads-side-panel CSS rules kept in place — harmless,
can be pruned later.
Phase 3b of the Search/Artists unification. The Search page's
internal id was 'downloads', which clashed with the actual Downloads
page (id 'active-downloads') and confused anyone reading the code.
Renamed to 'search' across HTML, navigation, DOM selectors, and the
deep-link route list.
Backwards compat: navigateToPage('downloads') aliases to 'search'
at the top of the function; /downloads URL still serves index.html
and the client router resolves the page correctly; profile ACL
checks accept both 'search' and 'downloads' so existing profiles
with 'downloads' in allowed_pages keep working without migration.
Sidebar label unchanged. Zero visual change — pure internal tidy.
Phase 3 of the Search/Artists unification. The Search page's two-mode
toggle is replaced by a single 'Search from' dropdown: All sources
(Auto), Spotify, Apple Music, Deezer, Discogs, Hydrabase, MusicBrainz,
or Soulseek (raw files). Auto keeps today's fan-out behavior for
backwards compatibility; picking a specific source hits only that
provider. 'Soulseek' routes to the raw-file basic section, so one
picker covers both old modes. Loading text and the enhanced fetch
now respect the selected source. Zero API changes — uses the source
param added in 2.40 and the shared fetch helper from 2.41.
Phase 2 of the Search/Artists unification: the Search page dropdown
and the global spotlight widget both POST to /api/enhanced-search
with identical boilerplate. Extracted into enhancedSearchFetch() in
search.js (loaded before downloads.js). Both callers migrated. Zero
UX change — purely sets up Phase 3 to wire a source picker in one
place instead of two.
Phase 1 of the Search/Artists unification project: the endpoint now
accepts an optional `source` (spotify, itunes, deezer, discogs,
hydrabase, musicbrainz) so callers can target a single metadata source
instead of always fanning out. Omitted or `auto` preserves current
multi-source behavior — no existing callers break. Cache keys include
the source tag so per-source and fan-out results don't collide.
User reported searching "Maduk - Leave A Light On" on Tidal silently
downloaded Tom Walker's completely different song of the same name, then
embedded Maduk's metadata into Tom Walker's audio. Three layers of
defense all failed permissively. Two of them are fixed here; the third
(score formula weights) was left alone since these two together cover it.
Layer 1 fix — candidate artist gate (web_server.py:27782)
Old: `if _best_artist < 0.4 and confidence < 0.85: continue`
New: `if _best_artist < 0.5 and confidence < 0.85: continue`
SequenceMatcher returns exactly 0.400 for "maduk" vs "tom walker"
(5-char vs 10-char strings with coincidental char matches), which
slipped past the strict `< 0.4` check. The word-boundary containment
check earlier in the function already short-circuits legitimate
formatting variations to sim=1.0, so falling to SequenceMatcher means
strings are genuinely different. 0.5 closes the fencepost AND gives
a small safety buffer.
Layer 3 fix — AcoustID verification (acoustid_verification.py:316)
When title matches but artist doesn't AND expected artist isn't found
anywhere in AcoustID's returned recordings:
Old: always SKIP (let file through, assume cover/collab)
New: FAIL if artist_sim < 0.3 (clear mismatch)
SKIP if artist_sim >= 0.3 (ambiguous — cover/collab/formatting)
The 0.3 cutoff catches hard mismatches like Maduk/Tom Walker (sim ~0.2)
while preserving benefit-of-the-doubt for borderline artist formatting
differences. Legitimate covers and collabs where the expected artist
appears anywhere in AcoustID's recordings still PASS via the existing
secondary-match loop above.
Both fixes are defense-in-depth — either alone would have caught this
bug. Together they close the pre-download AND post-download gaps.
All 292 tests pass. Version bumped to 2.39 with changelog entries.
New smart template variable that emits "CD01" / "CD02" etc. in filenames
on multi-disc albums, and expands to empty string on single-disc albums
so mixed libraries don't end up with "CD01" on every single.
Template behaviour:
- total_discs > 1 -> "CD{disc:02d}" (zero-padded, CD prefix)
- total_discs <= 1 -> empty string
- Both $cdnum and ${cdnum} bracket form supported
- Empty value collapses cleanly via existing double-dash regex plus new
leading-dash cleanup pass
Wiring:
- _apply_path_template in web_server.py (download pipeline)
- _apply_path_template in core/repair_jobs/library_reorganize.py
(Reorganize repair job)
- total_discs added to every album-mode template context:
* download pipeline album branch (uses resolved total_discs even for
single-track downloads from search)
* per-album Reorganize preview + apply endpoints (pre-scan all track
tags once, take max disc_number)
* Library Reorganize repair job (already had album_total_discs map,
just added to context dict)
Leading-dash cleanup added to _get_file_path_from_template (web_server)
and _build_path_from_template (library_reorganize) so templates like
"$cdnum - $track - $title" don't leave "- 05 - Title" on single-disc
albums.
UI:
- Template hint in Settings -> File Organization documents $cdnum
- Template validation variable list includes $cdnum
- Reorganize modal variable reference shows $cdnum with example "CD01"
Verified:
- Multi-disc disc 1 -> "CD01 - 05 - Track"
- Multi-disc disc 2 -> "CD02 - 05 - Track"
- Single-disc -> "05 - Track" (no leading dash)
- Templates without $cdnum behave unchanged
- 276/276 tests pass
Three closely-related changes bundled together. The UI work exposed the
backend bug when I tried to cancel a Deezer download and saw it marked
cancelled in the DB but continuing in the background.
Backend — cancel_task_v2 orchestrator dispatch fix:
The slskd-specific cancel block was written back when soulseek_client
was a raw SoulseekClient. It was later swapped to DownloadOrchestrator
(which doesn't expose .base_url / ._make_request), so the first
diagnostic log line crashed with AttributeError. The outer try/except
swallowed it, leaving streaming downloads (YouTube / Tidal / Qobuz /
HiFi / Deezer / Lidarr) running in the background after the user
clicked cancel.
Replaced the ~80-line block with a single
soulseek_client.cancel_download(download_id, username, remove=True)
call — the orchestrator's dispatch picks the right client by username,
same path /api/downloads/cancel already uses successfully.
Per-row cancel button (fancy):
Circular X button on .adl-row for rows in active or queued state.
Hidden by default (opacity 0, translateX + scale), fades in + settles
on .adl-row:hover with a cubic-bezier overshoot. Own :hover gives a
1.12x scale pop and brighter red glow. Touch devices (@media
(hover: none)) keep it visible.
Backend: surfaced playlist_id in /api/downloads/all items so the
frontend can hit cancel_task_v2 without a second lookup. Frontend:
adlCancelRow(btnEl, playlistId, trackIndex) with double-click guard
via data-cancelling + adl-row-cancel-pending class.
Cancel All header button:
Red-themed button next to "Clear Completed". Only visible when any
task is in downloading / searching / post_processing / queued state —
auto-hides the moment the last one finishes. Confirm dialog shows
"Cancel N tasks across M batches?". Iterates _adlBatches, calls
/api/playlists/<batch_id>/cancel_batch sequentially (same endpoint
each modal's "Cancel All" and the per-batch-card cancel use). Disables
during the loop, mixed/success/error toast based on result.
All 276 tests pass.
Download-status meta enrichment only checked spotify_album.images[0].url
for the card artwork. That's the Spotify-API shape, but the context
builder for wishlist and manually-fixed tracks populates spotify_album
with image_url (singular string) and no images array. Result: those
tracks downloaded and post-processed fine (different path) but the
downloads page showed a placeholder note icon.
Enrichment now falls through three spots before giving up:
1. spotify_album.images[0].url (Spotify-originated)
2. spotify_album.image_url (wishlist / fixed discovery)
3. track_info.image_url (some discovery flows)
Pure read-side fix — no changes to the context builder, so existing
behaviour for Spotify-primary users is unchanged.
Companion fix to the provider-hardcode bug (6ceedc8). The cache
matched_data built by the 5 update_match / fix endpoints was dropping
image_url and album.images when album came back as a bare string —
common for Deezer and iTunes search results. Cache hits on re-discovery
then produced downloads with no artwork.
Each save site now carries image info through:
- album_obj gets image_url + images:[{url}] populated from spotify_track.image_url
- matched_data adds top-level image_url for pipeline consumers that check there
- Works for both dict-shaped album (Spotify) and string-shaped album (Deezer/iTunes)
Mirrors the handling already present in _build_fix_modal_spotify_data for
the in-memory result['spotify_data'] — explains why the UI showed art fine
during the fix modal but the cached entry lost it after restart.
save_discovery_cache_match uses INSERT OR REPLACE, so existing bad cache
entries refresh when the user re-fixes the track. No manual cache clearing
needed.
Added to 2.38 changelog (same round of discovery-fix work).
Five update_match endpoints hardcoded the provider as 'spotify' when
saving manual fixes to the discovery cache, but the re-discovery worker
queries the cache with _get_active_discovery_source() — the user's
actual primary. If the primary was Deezer/iTunes/Discogs/Hydrabase, the
provider column never matched, so every manual fix looked like it
vanished on restart.
Replaced 'spotify' with _get_active_discovery_source() at all 5 sites:
- Tidal update_match (web_server.py:34569)
- Deezer update_match (web_server.py:36235)
- Spotify Public update_match (web_server.py:37084)
- YouTube update_match (web_server.py:38037)
- Discovery Pool fix (web_server.py:49787)
Now symmetric with how the auto-discovery workers already save. Spotify-
primary users see no change (the hardcoded value matched their source).
Version bumped to 2.38 with changelog + version-info entries.
Two bugs reported in issue #320:
1. Auto-watchlist scan bypassed Global Override settings.
scan_watchlist_profile applied _apply_global_watchlist_overrides, but
the scheduled auto-scan called scan_watchlist_artists directly —
bypassing the override. Users who unchecked "Albums" or "Live" under
Watchlist → Global Override still saw full albums and live tracks
added during nightly scans (per-artist defaults, which include
everything, won).
Moved override application into scan_watchlist_artists itself so
every entry point respects it. scan_watchlist_profile now forwards
the apply_global_overrides flag through to avoid double-application.
2. is_live_version (watchlist + discography backfill) and
live_commentary_cleaner's content patterns used bare \blive\b, which
matched verb uses like "What We Live For" by American Authors,
"Live Forever" by Oasis, "Live and Let Die" by Wings.
Tightened the live patterns to require clear recording context:
(Live) / [Live Version] / - Live / Live at|from|in|on|version|
session|recording|performance|album|show|tour|concert|edit|cut|take
/ In Concert / On Stage / Unplugged / Concert.
Locked in 11 regression tests covering the reported false positives
(What We Live For, Live Forever, Living on a Prayer, Live and Let Die)
and the reported true positives (Dimension - Live at Big Day Out,
MTV Unplugged, etc.).
Version bumped to 2.37 with changelog entries.
Root-cause fix for "scanning 50 artists" then silence: when the master
repair worker was paused, force-run still kicked off _run_job but the
job's first wait_if_paused() blocked forever because is_paused was tied
to the master-enabled state. Force-run now bypasses master-pause —
scheduled runs still respect it.
Also fixes Fix All on discography findings doing nothing: the backend
bulk_fix_findings query had a fixable_types allowlist that excluded
missing_discography_track (and acoustid_mismatch). Added both.
Backfill job rebuild:
- auto_add_to_wishlist opt-in setting — creates findings AND pushes to
wishlist during the scan
- 3-option fix dialog (Add to Wishlist / Just Clear / Cancel) on single
Fix, Bulk Fix selection, and Fix All (page-level)
- Fix All "Just Clear" path uses the clear endpoint with job_id filter
instead of the generic "may delete files" bulk-fix warning
- Batched in-memory matching using get_candidate_albums_for_artist +
get_candidate_tracks_for_albums (same fast path the Library pages use)
- Rich album context per finding (id, name, album_type, release_date,
images, artists, total_tracks) — flows through the wishlist pipeline
so auto-processor classifies each track into the right cycle
(albums vs singles) and post-processing gets correct folder/tags/art
- Per-artist progress logs [N/50] Scanning ArtistName
- Default interval 24h (was 168h); all release types default on; settings
reordered with _section_* group headers (Core / Release Types /
Content Filters)
Repair settings UI:
- Generic _section_<name> key convention renders as an uppercase group
divider in the settings panel — any job can opt in
- .repair-setting-row gets a dashed bottom border so label↔toggle pairing
is visually clear
- _prettifyRepairSettingKey fixes acronym capitalization (EPs, not Eps)
Version bumped to 2.36 with changelog entries.
User reported: after clicking Fix on a Not-Found discovery track and
picking a replacement in the fix modal, the resulting download card had
no cover image, and the track seemed to still behave like a Wing-It
stub. Both suspicions were correct. Three compounding bugs:
1. /api/spotify/search_tracks returned only id/name/artists/album/
duration_ms — no image_url — unlike the sibling /api/itunes/ and
/api/deezer/ endpoints which include image_url. The fix modal had
no image data to work with when users searched via Spotify.
2. Frontend selectDiscoveryFixTrack discarded any image info it did get
and posted the same minimal shape to the backend.
3. All 7 backend discovery/update_match endpoints built
result['spotify_data'] with 'album' as a bare string (track.album
which is just the album name). The download pipeline expects
spotify_album to be a dict with image_url or images[].url — a string
yields blank cover art. Normal discovery workers already build album
as a rich dict; the fix-modal path was the anomaly.
4. Bonus: result['wing_it_fallback'] was never cleared on manual match.
Tracks fixed after the auto Wing-It fallback kept the flag set, so
downstream code checking it treated them as wing-it even though the
user picked real metadata.
Changes:
- New helper _build_fix_modal_spotify_data(spotify_track) in web_server.py
near _build_discovery_wing_it_stub. Handles both string and dict album
inputs, normalises to a dict with image_url and images populated when
the payload carries one. Matches the shape produced by normal discovery
so downstream code is happy on both paths.
- /api/spotify/search_tracks now returns image_url (parity with iTunes
and Deezer endpoints).
- All 7 discovery/update_match endpoints (youtube, tidal, deezer,
spotify-public, listenbrainz, beatport — 6 via the identical pattern
plus the listenbrainz variant with its None branch) now:
* use the helper to build spotify_data (album as dict + top-level
image_url)
* explicitly set result['wing_it_fallback'] = False
- selectDiscoveryFixTrack forwards track.image_url in the POST body and
mirrors the helper's output in the local state update so the UI
reflects the same shape immediately.
Audit: every downstream reader of spotify_data['album'] is already
dict-or-string tolerant (isinstance checks at lines 2073, 2158, 25844,
28938, 29011, etc.) so promoting album from string to dict is safe.
Normal discovery already sets it as a dict, so we're moving the fix-
modal path to match the existing majority case.
Full suite stays at 263 passed. Ruff clean.
User reported pausing the Spotify/Last.fm/Genius enrichment worker via the
dashboard bubble would silently turn back on "by itself". Real cause was
a race in the download-yield auto-pause/resume loop (_emit_enrichment_worker_stats_loop):
1. Download starts. Loop sees worker running, auto-pauses it, adds its
name to _download_auto_paused.
2. User clicks the enrichment bubble to pause — already paused visually,
but they want it to STAY off. Pause endpoint sets config_manager
'_enrichment_paused' to True and calls worker.pause() — but does not
remove the name from _download_auto_paused.
3. Download finishes. Loop sees 'not downloading and name in
_download_auto_paused' and blindly flips w.paused = False,
overriding the user's explicit pause. Config still says paused,
but the worker is actually running.
Two defensive fixes:
- Auto-resume block now checks the user's persisted config intent before
flipping the worker on. If {name}_enrichment_paused is True in config,
the name is dropped from _download_auto_paused without touching
w.paused — user's pause stays honored.
- Pause endpoints for spotify-enrichment, lastfm-enrichment, and
genius-enrichment now also discard from _download_auto_paused so a
stale marker can't trigger this race again.
Both together mean the auto-pause loop can no longer override a manual
pause regardless of ordering.
Full suite stays at 263 passed. Ruff clean.
Adds green/yellow header gradient on each service card showing whether the
user has filled in credentials, plus an expand-triggered verification layer
that surfaces working-or-not status inline.
Backend (web_server.py):
- SERVICE_CONFIG_REGISTRY mapping each of the 11 services in Connections to
its config requirements. Supports required-keys, always-green, any-of,
and custom-check semantics (Tidal uses token-file check, Qobuz accepts
either email/password OR cached auth token).
- _is_service_configured(service) — cheap config presence check, no APIs hit.
- GET /api/settings/config-status — returns {service: {configured}} for all
services in one call. Drives the page-load gradient.
- POST /api/settings/verify — takes {services: [...]}, runs
run_service_test per service, caches results 5 min in-memory, parallelizes
with ThreadPoolExecutor(max_workers=3) to avoid self-rate-limiting. Query
param ?force=true busts cache.
- Added verify branches for iTunes, Deezer, Discogs, Qobuz, Hydrabase in
run_service_test (previously missing — these services couldn't be tested).
HTML (webui/index.html):
- data-service="..." on all 11 .stg-service containers so JS can map card
to backend service name.
CSS (webui/static/style.css):
- .status-configured gradient (subtle green, left-to-transparent fade)
- .status-missing gradient (yellow, same shape)
- Spinner badge in header for .status-checking state
- "Testing connection…" status line style inside panel body
- Red warning bar style for verify failures at top of expanded panel
- Brand dot now glows always (was only glowing when expanded); hover and
expand states intensify the glow progressively.
JS (webui/static/script.js):
- applyServiceStatusGradients() fetches config-status and applies
green/yellow class per card. Called on Connections tab activate + after
any settings save.
- _stgVerifyServices(services, {force}) — batch verify POST, tracks
in-flight state, renders spinners/status lines/warnings per service.
- toggleStgService() fires single-service verify when a card is expanded
(not on collapse). Skipped if a verify is already in flight for that
service.
- toggleAllServiceAccordions() fires one batched verify for all 11 services
when "Expand All" is clicked; skipped on "Collapse All".
- _stgRefreshAfterSave() — after settings save, refreshes gradient (cheap)
and re-verifies only the cards the user currently has expanded (so
freshly-edited credentials show their new verify result immediately,
without re-pinging every service).
Failure UI: top-of-panel red warning bar with the error message (e.g.
"Discogs token rejected (HTTP 401)", "Hydrabase not connected…"). Removed
automatically on next successful verify.
No existing tests changed. Full suite stays at 263 passed. Ruff clean.
PR #340 added ruff to the build-and-test.yml CI gate, which surfaced
286 pre-existing lint errors. Left unfixed, every feature branch push
fails CI. This commit resolves all of them so CI goes green and
contributors can actually land work.
Auto-fixes (248 of 286): removed unused f-string prefixes (F541),
renamed unused loop control variables with underscore prefix (B007),
removed duplicate imports (F811).
Manually fixed 10 latent bugs ruff caught (all wrapped in try/except
today, silently failing):
- music_database.py: _add_discovery_tables() called undefined
conn.commit() — would have crashed the iTunes-support migration
for existing databases. Now uses cursor.connection.commit().
- web_server.py settings GET: referenced undefined download_orchestrator
when it should be soulseek_client. Feature (_source_status on the
settings payload) was silently missing for UI auto-disable logic.
- web_server.py _process_wishlist_automatically: active_server
undefined in track-ownership check. Auto-wishlist was falling
through to the error handler and re-downloading owned tracks.
- web_server.py start_wishlist_missing_downloads: same active_server
bug in the manual wishlist path.
- web_server.py _process_failed_tracks_to_wishlist_exact: emitted
wishlist_item_added automation event with undefined artist_name
and track. Automation event silently never fired correctly.
- web_server.py discovery metadata enrichment: referenced cache
without calling get_metadata_cache() first. Track enrichment from
cached API responses was silently skipped.
- web_server.py Beatport discovery worker: wing-it fallback branch
used undefined successful_discoveries variable. Wing-it counter
never incremented correctly. Now uses state['spotify_matches']
consistently with the rest of the function.
- web_server.py _run_full_missing_tracks_process: stale import json
mid-function shadowed the module-level import, making an earlier
json.dumps() call reference an unbound local (F823).
- web_server.py discovery loop: platform loop variable shadowed
the module-level platform import (F402).
- core/watchlist_scanner.py: 7 lambda captures of loop variables
(B023 classic Python closure-in-loop bug) now bind at creation.
No existing tests had to change. Full suite stays at 263 passed.
- Move /api/artist/<artist_id>/image resolution into core.metadata_service.
- Resolve artist artwork through source priority, with explicit source/plugin overrides preserved.
- Keep Spotify call tracking inside the client layer to avoid double counting.
- Update similar-artist lazy loading to pass source context and add service coverage.
- Relocate the streamed MusicMap similar-artist flow out of web_server.py and into core.metadata_service.
- Match similar artists through the configured source-priority chain instead of assuming Spotify first.
- Add iTunes artwork fallback so streamed artist payloads still carry image_url when search results are sparse.
- Cover the new service behavior with tests.
Artist detail pages ran check_album_exists_with_editions and check_track_exists
per discography item, each firing 5+ title variations times 3 artist variations
of fuzzy LIKE searches plus fallback broad-artist queries. For a 30-album artist
that was ~450 SQL round-trips just to answer "which of these do I own."
Hoist the artist's library albums and tracks into memory once per request via
two new helpers — get_candidate_albums_for_artist and get_candidate_tracks_for_albums —
and thread them through as optional candidate_albums / candidate_tracks params on
check_album_exists_with_editions, check_album_exists_with_completeness,
check_track_exists, check_album_completion, and check_single_completion.
Batched path scores the same _calculate_album_confidence / _calculate_track_confidence
against the in-memory list, preserving Smart Edition Matching and accuracy.
Title-only cross-artist fallback still fires for collaborative-album edge cases.
None on either param preserves legacy per-item SQL behavior for unaffected callers.
Applied to both /api/library/completion-stream (library artist detail page) and
iter_artist_discography_completion_events (Artists search page). Timing logs
added to confirm the pre-fetch cost and loop elapsed time.
On a Kendrick page load, per-album resolution drops from ~8 seconds to under
the 50ms streaming sleep floor. Observed ~100x SQL reduction on the happy path.
The reorganize endpoints built a template context without albumtype,
so ${albumtype} silently fell through to the engine's hardcoded "Album"
default — EPs, singles, and compilations all landed in Albums/.
Wires albumtype through from the albums table's record_type column
(populated by Spotify/Deezer/iTunes enrichment workers) with track-count
fallback when record_type is missing. New helper mirrors the download
pipeline's classification logic so reorganize produces the same folders
as initial placement. Also handles Deezer's raw 'compile' value which
the Deezer worker writes directly without mapping.
- collapse old multi-line debug bursts into single structured rows
- remove leftover DEBUG-style prefixes from message text
- keep the app log readable without losing useful trace detail
If the application was using a non-standard location for app.log, the other logs would still go to the default location. Now everything goes under the same, configured folder
print calls only end up in stdout, so there will be no trace of them
once docker loses access to its own logs. Using the logger makes sure
that logs end up in the filesystem as well
New "Reorganize All" button in enhanced library artist header processes
all albums sequentially using the configured path template.
Version bumped to 2.35. Updated What's New modal with major features
(Discography Backfill, Multi-Artist Tagging, Enriched Downloads,
Template Delimiters, Reorganize All). Updated helper.js changelog
with all April 20 fixes and features.
Three new settings in Paths & Organization:
- Artist Tag Separator: choose comma, semicolon, or slash between artists
- Write multi-value ARTISTS tag: each artist as separate tag value for
Navidrome/Jellyfin multi-artist linking (FLAC ARTISTS key, ID3 TPE1
multi-value, MP4 multi-entry)
- Move featured artists to title: keep only primary artist in ARTIST
tag, append others as (feat. ...) in track title
All opt-in with defaults matching current behavior. Raw artist list
stored on metadata dict for tag writers to access without re-parsing.
The downloads page previously showed only title and source per download.
Now shows album artwork thumbnail, artist name, album name, source badge,
and quality badge (after post-processing). All metadata comes from the
existing matched_downloads_context — no extra API calls needed.
Falls back gracefully to title-only display when context metadata is
not available (e.g. orphaned Soulseek transfers with no task mapping).
Users can now append literal text to template variables using curly
braces: ${albumtype}s produces "Albums", "Singles", "EPs". Without
braces, $albumtypes was rejected as an unknown variable by validation.
Both syntaxes work: $albumtype (plain) and ${albumtype} (delimited).
Bracket vars are resolved first to prevent partial matching conflicts.
Validation updated for album, single, and playlist templates.
soulseek_client is the DownloadOrchestrator, not the SoulseekClient.
The base_url check needs to go through soulseek_client.soulseek.base_url
to reach the actual slskd client instance.
Playlist folder mode passed album_info=None to _enhance_file_metadata,
which crashed on the first .get() call. The try/except caught it and
called _wipe_source_tags, stripping ALL metadata from the file.
Now normalizes None album_info to empty dict at the top of the function,
and adds a cover art fallback that pulls the image URL from the
spotify_album context when album_info doesn't have one.
The download monitor and transfer cache were calling slskd every second
during active downloads regardless of whether Soulseek was configured.
Users not using slskd got ERROR log spam from failed connection attempts
to host.docker.internal:5030.
Now checks if soulseek is in the active download mode/hybrid order
before making any slskd API calls. Also calls non-Soulseek download
clients directly instead of going through the orchestrator (which
redundantly hit slskd just to discard the results).
Two fixes:
- Single-track downloads from search didn't know total_discs, so multi-disc
albums like HIStory never got Disc N/ subfolders. Now resolves total_discs
from the album's track listing (cached) or from disc_number > 1.
- Allow duplicate tracks setting was ignored during album download analysis.
Global per-track search found the track in any album and marked it "found",
skipping the download. Now when allow_duplicates is enabled for album
downloads, only checks ownership within the target album.
- Move album-track resolution into metadata_service
- Use the configured provider order instead of Spotify-first branching
- Switch the frontend to the unified /api/album/<id>/tracks endpoint
- Add tests for source-priority lookup, DB resolution, and formatting
iTunes API can return collection metadata without song tracks for
region-restricted albums. The _lookup fallback only checked if results
was empty, so a collection-only response was accepted and cached as
{'items': []}. All future lookups returned the cached empty result.
Three fixes:
- get_album_tracks now checks for actual song items and tries fallback
storefronts when only collection metadata is returned
- Skip cached results with empty items array (prevents stale cache hits)
- Backend returns descriptive 404 error, frontend surfaces it in toast
Track ownership: check-tracks endpoint now filters by album context
when provided, preventing false "Found" when a track exists in a
different album by the same artist (e.g. Thriller on HIStory).
Wing-it wishlist: manual "Add to Wishlist" button now skips wing-it
fallback tracks (wing_it_ ID prefix), matching the behavior of
failed download and failed sync paths.
Debug info: watchlist/wishlist/automation counts were always 0
because get_db() doesn't exist — fixed to get_database().
The /api/artist/{id}/album/{id}/tracks endpoint was hardcoded to use
spotify_client and returned 401 if Spotify wasn't authenticated,
even when the user's primary source was Deezer or iTunes. Now uses
the configured primary metadata source via _get_metadata_fallback_client
with Spotify as fallback. Also gives a clearer error message when
no metadata source is available at all.
Some metadata APIs return fewer or no results for all-lowercase
queries. Title-case the query when it's all lowercase before
sending to the API ("foreigner" → "Foreigner"). Mixed-case input
is left as-is. Confidence scoring still uses the original query.
Fixed 5 critical gaps in the download orchestrator where lidarr was
missing from client loops: get_all_downloads, get_download_status,
cancel_download fallback, clear_all_completed_downloads, and
cancel_all_downloads. Without these, lidarr downloads were invisible
to the UI, couldn't be cancelled, and accumulated in memory.
Also: error messages now visible in download list (appended to
filename on error state), removed "(Development)" label from UI.
- pass provider-specific artist ids into the source-priority discography lookup
- stop relying on the local library artist id when querying external metadata
- add a regression test for source-specific artist id resolution
- Stop passing in spotify_id as the id in the UI, use the actual db id instead
- Fixes an issue where albums for another artist would end up being returned for the actual searched artist
- Remove the redundant artist_id filtering code
- Fixes an issue where not-currently-owned albums would be filtered out from the results, even if they were successfully fetched from the configured metadata provider
M3U files were generated when the download batch completed but
before post-processing finished tagging and moving files. Paths
pointed to download locations instead of final library paths,
making every track show as missing. Now regenerates the M3U from
the backend batch completion handler after all post-processing
is guaranteed done, resolving real file paths from the library DB.
Skips overwrite if zero tracks resolve to avoid replacing a
partially-good M3U with an all-missing one.
The retag fix for AcoustID mismatches was only updating the DB
record (title, artist_id) without writing corrected tags to the
actual audio file. Users would click Fix, the finding disappeared,
but the file on disk stayed unchanged. Now writes title and artist
tags to the file via Mutagen after the DB update.
Also fixed artist INSERT missing server_source when creating a new
artist during retag — now uses the active media server value.
Auto-wishlist albums cycle was passing is_album=True to
_get_batch_max_concurrent which returns 1 for soulseek mode.
This restriction is for folder-based album grabs from a single
peer, not individual track downloads. Wishlist always does
single-track downloads regardless of cycle, so it should use
the user's configured concurrency setting.
_adlFetch() fetches /api/downloads/all?limit=300 then _adlUpdateBadge()
was counting active statuses from that truncated array, overwriting
the real server-side count maintained by WebSocket. Removed the
badge update from _adlFetch — the WebSocket status push already
keeps it accurate.
Fix modal results: sort standard album versions above live, remix,
cover, soundtrack, remaster, and deluxe variants so users see the
original studio track first instead of obscure versions.
Plex Find & Add: tracks were always appended to the end of the
playlist because addItems ignores position. Now moves the track
to the correct slot after adding via moveItem.
Discovery Fix modal search results now sort standard album versions
above live recordings, remixes, covers, soundtracks, remasters,
deluxe editions, and other variants. Fixes cases where searching
"Mother Danzig" returned a live version first, or "Even Flow Pearl
Jam" returned a soundtrack instead of the original from Ten.
Unmatch: found tracks in playlist discovery now have a red X button
to remove bad matches. Clears match data, sets back to Not Found,
persists in DB for mirrored playlists, and respects user choice on
re-discovery runs (won't re-match automatically).
Video naming: new path template in Settings with $artist, $title,
$artistletter, $year variables. Default unchanged ($artist/$title-video)
so existing Plex setups aren't affected.
slskd logs: Clean Search History automation skips when Soulseek is
not the active download source, eliminating connection error spam.
Video naming: new path template in Settings → Paths & Organization
with $artist, $artistletter, $title, $year variables. Default
unchanged ($artist/$title-video → Artist/Title-video.mp4) so
existing Plex setups aren't affected. Users can remove the -video
suffix or reorganize however they like.
slskd logs: the Clean Search History automation now skips when
Soulseek is not the active download source, eliminating noisy
connection error logs for users who don't use Soulseek.
When playlist discovery fails to match a track on any metadata API,
instead of marking it "Not Found" and excluding it from downloads,
automatically build stub metadata from the raw source title/artist
and include it in the download queue. Soulseek searches with the
raw data, post-processing enhances whatever it can find.
All 7 discovery workers updated: YouTube, ListenBrainz, Tidal,
Deezer, Spotify Public, Beatport, and automated mirrored playlists.
Amber "Wing It" badge distinguishes stubs from real API matches.
Fix button still available so users can manually find a proper match.
Wing It stubs persist in DB for mirrored playlists and are
re-attempted on future discovery runs. Failed wing-it downloads
skip wishlist per-track (checked by wing_it_ ID prefix) so real
matched failures in the same batch still go to wishlist normally.
soul_id.startsWith() threw TypeError for non-string values, crashing
the entire card rendering pipeline. Letter-specific filters worked
because the problematic artist wasn't in those filtered results.
Added String() wrapper on all 3 soul_id.startsWith calls and a
try-catch around individual card rendering so one bad card can't
take down the whole page.
- Flask catch-all route serves index.html for client-side paths, excluding api/static/auth/callback/status prefixes.- navigateToPage pushes history state so URL reflects current page.- popstate listener handles browser back/forward without reloading.- Initial load reads window.location to restore the page after refresh or direct link.- artist-detail and playlist-explorer fall back to parent pages since they need runtime context.
- move artist-detail discography resolution onto the shared source-priority metadata service
- keep the variant dedup helper in the UI-facing adapter
- pass the chosen source through completion checks
- add coverage for the new adapter and dedup behavior
The ID resolver tried int() conversion first, which fails for text-based
IDs from Navidrome/Jellyfin. Now tries direct string match first (works
for both text and integer IDs), then integer fallback, then source
columns. Also added discogs_id to source column search. Fixes#323
Track and album delete with file removal now also cleans up associated
lyrics sidecar files (.lrc synced, .txt plain) that share the same
base filename as the audio file. Fixes#322
Move completion checks into metadata_service and make them follow the configured metadata source priority.
Drop the old test-mode path, remove the web_server wrapper indirection, and keep artist inference on explicit release metadata instead of guessing from a track search.
Add coverage for the source-priority completion behavior and the safer artist-name handling.
_resolve_db_album_id was missing deezer_album_id from stored ID checks
and hardcoded Spotify for the name-based search fallback. When Spotify
was rate limited (common for new Navidrome users), no fallback was tried
and the album returned 404.
Now checks all stored IDs (spotify, deezer, itunes, discogs) in priority
order matching the active metadata source, and falls back through all
available sources for name-based search instead of only Spotify.
- Fix level filter showing nothing: now uses heuristic classification
for print() output (error/traceback/failed→ERROR, warn→WARNING, etc.)
in addition to exact logger format matching
- Speed up WebSocket updates from 2s to 0.5s polling
- Add search box with 300ms debounce — filters both initial load and live
- Use DocumentFragment for batch DOM appends (performance)
- Increase line cap from 1000 to 2000
- Backend search parameter support in /api/logs/tail
Terminal-style real-time log viewer with:
- Log file selector (app, post-processing, acoustid, source reuse)
- Color-coded log levels (DEBUG gray, INFO blue, WARNING yellow, ERROR red)
- Level filter buttons (All/Debug/Info/Warn/Error)
- Auto-scroll with toggle, copy and clear buttons
- Live updates via WebSocket (2s polling, pushes new lines)
- Initial load fetches last 200 lines via REST API
- 1000-line display cap with oldest lines trimmed
Also fixes Advanced tab settings (Discovery Pool, Security, etc.) being
hidden inside collapsed Library Preferences section body — misplaced
closing div caused them to be invisible.
New toggle in Settings → Library → Post-Processing: "Apply ReplayGain
tags after download". When enabled, analyzes loudness via ffmpeg's
ebur128 filter and writes track-level ReplayGain gain/peak tags.
Runs after metadata tagging but before lossy copy so both files get
the tags. Off by default — adds a few seconds per track.
Applied to both album and playlist/single download paths.
New core/genre_filter.py with ~180 curated default genres. When strict
mode is enabled in Settings → Library Preferences → Genre Whitelist,
only whitelisted genres pass through during enrichment. Junk tags from
Last.fm (artist names, radio shows, playlist names) are silently dropped.
Applied at all 10 genre write points: Spotify, Last.fm, AudioDB, Deezer,
Discogs, iTunes, Qobuz enrichment workers + post-processing genre merge
+ initial download artist/album creation.
Strict mode is OFF by default — zero behavior change for existing users.
First enable auto-populates the whitelist with defaults. Users can add,
remove, search, and reset genres via the Settings UI.
Per-artist log lines now show the full details string from the worker
(e.g. "5 albums, 0 new tracks (150 existing updated)") instead of
just "5 albums, 0 tracks". Finished message shows "library up to date"
when no new content is found instead of "0 successful, 0 failed".
Full Refresh now clears all soulsync library records and rebuilds from
file tags in the output folder. Reads tags via Mutagen, groups by
artist/album, creates DB records with stable IDs. Files stay in place.
Previously Full Refresh did nothing for standalone — just returned.
Dashboard scan polling checked for 'completed' but backend sets 'finished'.
Added 'finished' to the completion check so polling stops, button resets,
stats refresh, and toast fires correctly. Also fixed deep scan reporting
stale record removals as 'failed' instead of 'successful'.
Playlist and single track downloads pass None as album_info to
_enhance_file_metadata. The downstream _extract_spotify_metadata
called .get() on it without a null guard, crashing with AttributeError.
All user-facing labels, docs, help text, tooltips, error messages, and debug
info output updated. Backend config keys, variable names, actual path values,
and Docker volume mounts are completely unchanged — zero functional impact.
Users can now override which metadata provider (Spotify, Deezer, Apple Music,
Discogs) is used when scanning a specific watchlist artist for new releases.
The selector appears in the artist config modal and only shows sources the
artist has enrichment IDs for. Default behavior is unchanged — all artists
use the global metadata source unless explicitly overridden.
The gunicorn PR blocked direct Python execution with SystemExit.
Replaced with _DIRECT_RUN flag at top and startup block at bottom
so both paths work:
- python web_server.py (Werkzeug dev server, Windows compatible)
- gunicorn -c gunicorn.conf.py wsgi:application (production)
Switch the web UI from Werkzeug's built-in server to Gunicorn for a more stable production deployment path.
Keep a separate dev config so local runs still reload quickly, while the production path uses a dedicated WSGI entrypoint and cleaner startup behavior.
The main motivation is to reduce the websocket teardown noise and make the server behavior more predictable under the app's mostly background-driven workload.
Added -vn flag to all codec ffmpeg commands (MP3, Opus, AAC) to strip
video/image streams during conversion. Embedded cover art in FLAC
files caused ffmpeg to fail when the output muxer couldn't handle
the image stream, producing 0KB output files. Cover art is
re-embedded afterwards by Mutagen.
The dedup key (normalized_title, year) caused different albums from
the same year to collide when title normalization stripped too much.
The "prefer more tracks" logic then kept compilations over studio
albums.
Two fixes:
- Title similarity check: if normalized titles are <85% similar,
they're different albums, not variants — keep both
- Compilation deprioritization: studio albums win over compilations
and "best of" collections when they do collide
Move Hydrabase availability checks into metadata_service so source resolution owns the policy. Keep web_server delegating to the centralized helper and add tests for the enabled/disabled cases.
Move artist discography resolution into core metadata_service, introduce MetadataLookupOptions, and keep web_server focused on request handling. Add focused tests for the new service boundary and preserve current fallback behavior for now.
Delay alternate-source fan-out until the primary enhanced-search response arrives, and stagger those follow-up requests so they do not all compete at once. Also parallelize artist, album, and track lookups inside each metadata source request to shorten the time the UI thread spends waiting on remote APIs. This keeps the single-worker web UI more responsive under the app's chatty search flow.
New MusicBrainz tab in Enhanced and Global search — finds tracks and
albums on MusicBrainz's community database with Cover Art Archive
images. Covers obscure tracks that Spotify/Deezer/iTunes miss.
- core/musicbrainz_search.py: search adapter with Track/Artist/Album
dataclasses, Cover Art Archive integration, smart query parsing
- Albums deduplicated (keeps best version with date and art)
- No artist results shown (MusicBrainz has no artist images)
- Album detail with full tracklist for download modal
- Smart word-boundary splitting for queries without separators
- Global search results container widened from 620px to 920px
- UI version bumped to 2.32
SoulSync Standalone Library is now the first section in both the
version modal and What's New popup. Auto-Import section updated with
all improvements (recursive scan, singles, tag preference, AcoustID).
New Downloads & Soulseek section groups download-related improvements.
Recent Fixes cleaned up — feature items moved to proper sections.
Deep scan for standalone mode:
- Scans Transfer folder for all audio files
- Compares against soulsync DB records by file_path
- Moves untracked files to Staging for auto-import processing
- Removes stale DB records where files no longer exist
- Cleans orphaned albums and artists with no tracks
Incremental scan skips for standalone — library updates at download
time, no periodic scanning needed. Both changes are purely additive
and only activate when server_type is 'soulsync'.
All sync-related buttons hidden when active server is SoulSync
Standalone. Covers static buttons (querySelectorAll on status update)
and dynamic modal buttons (_isSoulsyncStandalone flag).
UI version bumped to 2.31 (Docker stays at 2.3).