Final lift in the web_server.py extraction effort. Pulls two route
handlers + one background worker out of `web_server.py` into new
focused packages:
- `core/streaming/prepare.py` — 258-line stream-prep worker that
downloads a track to the local Stream/ folder for the browser audio
player.
- `core/playlists/explorer.py` — 305-line route handler for
`POST /api/playlist-explorer/build-tree` that streams an NDJSON
discography tree from a mirrored playlist.
What `prepare_stream_task` does:
1. Reset stream state to 'loading' with the new track info.
2. Clear any prior file from Stream/ (only one stream lives there).
3. Spin up a fresh asyncio event loop and `soulseek_client.download()`.
4. Poll progress every 1.5s. Queue timeout 15s; overall 60s.
5. On succeeded + bytes-match: find the file with retry, move into
Stream/, signal slskd completion, mark state 'ready' with file_path.
6. On error/timeout/cancel: state goes to 'error' or 'stopped'.
7. Finally: tear down the event loop cleanly.
What `playlist_explorer_build_tree` does:
1. Validate request, load playlist + tracks from DB.
2. Pick active metadata source (Spotify if authed, else fallback).
3. Group tracks by artist using discovered matched_data when the
provider matches the active source.
4. Stream NDJSON: meta line → one artist line per group → complete line.
5. Per artist: cache check → resolve discography → tag releases with
`in_playlist` flag based on title-similarity match → filter by mode
(`albums` = only matches; `discographies` = full disco).
6. Mark playlist as explored on completion.
Strict 1:1 byte parity:
Both functions exposed their dependencies through proxy patterns
established in earlier lifts (PR4–PR8). For prepare_stream_task,
`stream_state` is a deps property; for the explorer, Flask `request` /
`jsonify` / `Response` are injected via deps so the lifted body keeps
its native syntax. Both lifts verified ZERO diff against the original
after `deps.X` → global X normalization.
258 lines orig = 258 lines lifted (prepare_stream_task).
305 lines orig = 305 lines lifted (explorer).
Bonus cleanup: web_server.py's module-level `import shutil` and
`import glob` were now unused (only `_prepare_stream_task` used them
at module scope; every other reference is via inline `import shutil`
in respective function bodies). Removed both module-level imports —
ruff caught the F811 redefinitions and confirmed they're truly
redundant.
Dependencies for `PrepareStreamDeps` (11 fields):
config_manager, soulseek_client, stream_lock, project_root,
docker_resolve_path, find_streaming_download_in_all_downloads,
find_downloaded_file, extract_filename, cleanup_empty_directories,
plus 2 stream_state property delegates.
Dependencies for `PlaylistExplorerDeps` (9 fields):
Flask request/Response/jsonify, spotify_client, get_database,
get_active_discovery_source, get_metadata_fallback_client,
get_metadata_fallback_source, get_metadata_cache.
Tests: 6 new under tests/streaming/test_prepare.py (state init,
Stream/ folder creation + clearing, download-init failure, completed
+ moved + ready state, partial-bytes incomplete-warning path) plus 9
new under tests/playlists/test_explorer.py (5 validation early-exit
paths, streaming response shape with meta/complete lines, mark-
explored side effect, discovered-artist grouping using matched_data,
provider mismatch falling back to raw artist name).
Full suite: 1355 passing (was 1340). Ruff clean.
End of the web_server.py extraction effort. Started at ~45,000 lines
across PR4–PR8 + this commit; finished around 35,000 lines with the
heavy worker + route logic now living in domain-cohesive packages
under core/. The remaining bulk in web_server.py is route handlers,
service initialization, and the deferred 1530-line
`_register_automation_handlers` (startup-only, marginal lift value).
Pulls the 284-line artist quality enhancement helper out of
`web_server.py` into a new `core/artists/` package. Flask route handler
split: route + request parsing stay in web_server.py, the body lifts to
a pure function returning `(payload_dict, http_status_code)`.
What `enhance_artist_quality` does:
1. Validate request: track_ids must be non-empty, artist must exist.
2. Build a `track_lookup` from `database.get_artist_full_detail` so each
selected track resolves with its album context.
3. Per track:
- Read current quality tier from the file extension.
- Build `matched_track_data` for the wishlist entry, in priority
order:
- Spotify direct lookup via stored `spotify_track_id` (preferred).
Uses raw API data when available; otherwise rebuilds the payload
and pulls album images via a follow-up `get_album` call.
- Spotify search fallback using matching_engine queries with
artist+title similarity scoring (album-type bonus for albums,
smaller bonus for EPs). Stops at first >= 0.9 confidence match.
- iTunes/fallback source search with the same scoring shape.
- Add to wishlist via `wishlist_service.add_spotify_track_to_wishlist`
with `source_type='enhance'` and a `source_context` carrying the
original file path, format tier, bitrate, original_tier, and
artist_name.
- Tally `enhanced_count` / `failed_count` / per-track failure reasons.
4. Return `{success, enhanced_count, failed_count, failed_tracks}` 200.
Dependencies injected via `ArtistQualityDeps` (7 fields) — spotify_client,
matching_engine, get_database, get_wishlist_service,
get_current_profile_id, get_quality_tier_from_extension,
get_metadata_fallback_client.
Diff vs original after `deps.X` → global X normalization is **1 line of
cosmetic drift** — the success return now uses an explicit `(payload, 200)`
tuple to keep all returns shape-consistent for the wrapper. Flask treats
`jsonify(x)` and `(jsonify(x), 200)` identically. 284 lines orig = 285
lines lifted, body otherwise byte-identical.
Tests: 10 new under tests/artists/test_quality.py covering input
validation (empty track_ids, artist not found), Spotify direct lookup
via raw_data, Spotify direct lookup with enhanced format requiring
album image rebuild, Spotify search fallback, iTunes/fallback source
match path, track-not-found and no-file-path failure modes, complete
no-match failure, and source_context payload assertions (enhance flag,
file path, format tier, bitrate, source_type).
Full suite: 1340 passing (was 1330). Ruff clean.
Pulls the 258-line retag worker out of `web_server.py` into a new
`core/library/` package. Pure 1:1 lift — wrapper keeps the original
entry-point name so the retag-trigger endpoint continues to work
without changes.
What `execute_retag` does:
1. Fetch album + track metadata for the new `album_id` (Spotify or
iTunes — the Spotify client transparently falls back).
2. Load existing files in the retag group from the DB.
3. Match each existing track to a new Spotify track:
- Priority 1: same disc + track number.
- Priority 2: title similarity >= 0.6 (SequenceMatcher).
4. For each matched pair:
- Re-write metadata tags via `_enhance_file_metadata`.
- Compute the new path via `_build_final_path_for_track` and move
the audio file (plus .lrc / .txt sidecars) if the path changes.
- Drop an orphaned cover.jpg if it's left in an empty directory.
- Clean up empty parent directories left behind.
- Download the new cover art into the new album dir.
5. Update the retag group record with new artist / album / image /
total_tracks / release_date and the appropriate Spotify-or-iTunes
album ID (numeric → iTunes, alphanumeric → Spotify).
6. Mark the retag state 'finished' (or 'error' on exception).
Strict 1:1 byte parity:
The original mutated `retag_state` as a module global (the function
declared `global retag_state` even though it only mutates in place).
Here `retag_state` is exposed through the `RetagDeps` proxy as a Python
property so the lifted body keeps `name[key] = value` /
`name.update(...)` syntax. The property setter rebinds the
web_server.py reference if the function ever reassigns it (currently
it doesn't, but the setter is wired for parity with the watchlist lift).
Diff vs original after `deps.X` → global X normalization is **zero
differences** apart from the dropped `global retag_state` decl and the
inline `from database.music_database import get_database` (replaced by
deps.get_database()). 258 lines orig = 258 lines lifted, byte-identical
body otherwise.
Dependencies injected via `RetagDeps` (13 fields) — config_manager,
retag_lock, spotify_client, plus 8 callable helpers
(get_audio_quality_string, enhance_file_metadata,
build_final_path_for_track, safe_move_file, cleanup_empty_directories,
download_cover_art, docker_resolve_path, get_database) and 2 property
delegates (_get_retag_state / _set_retag_state).
Tests: 11 new under tests/library/test_retag.py covering setup error
paths (no album data, no album tracks, no existing tracks),
track-number priority match, title-similarity fallback, no-match skip,
missing file skip, file move when path changes, group record update
(spotify vs iTunes ID branching by alphanumeric vs numeric album_id),
multi-disc total_discs computation.
Full suite: 1330 passing (was 1319). Ruff clean.
Pulls the 390-line watchlist auto-scan orchestrator out of `web_server.py`
into a new `core/watchlist/` package. Watchlist (followed-artists scanner
that finds new releases) is a separate domain from kettui's wishlist
(failed-download retry queue), so this lift does not overlap with the
ongoing PR400-style extractions.
What `process_watchlist_scan_automatically` does:
1. Smart stuck-detection guard before acquiring the timer lock —
prevents deadlock when a previous scan flag is dangling past the
2-hour timeout.
2. Inside the timer lock: re-check + set the active scan flag with the
current timestamp.
3. Per-profile expansion (or single-profile when manually triggered):
- Watchlist count check + Spotify auth gate.
- Backfill missing artist images.
4. Initialize a fresh `watchlist_scan_state` dict (the deps property
setter rebinds the web_server.py module-level name so external
sentinel checks via id() comparison still detect the swap).
5. Pause enrichment workers, then call
`WatchlistScanner.scan_watchlist_artists` with a per-event progress
callback that translates scanner events into automation log lines.
6. Post-scan steps (skipped if the scan was cancelled mid-flight):
- Populate discovery pool from similar artists (per-profile).
- Refresh ListenBrainz playlists.
- Update current seasonal playlist (weekly cadence).
- Generate Last.fm radio playlists.
- Sync Spotify library cache.
- Activity feed entry + automation_engine.emit('watchlist_scan_completed').
7. On exception: mark state['status']='error', re-raise so the
automation wrapper records the failure.
8. Finally: resume enrichment workers, clear the scanner's rescan
cutoff, reset the auto-scanning flag.
Strict 1:1 byte parity:
The original mutated `watchlist_auto_scanning`,
`watchlist_auto_scanning_timestamp`, and `watchlist_scan_state` as
module globals (with a leading `global` decl). Here those names are
exposed through the `WatchlistAutoScanDeps` proxy as Python properties
so the lifted body keeps the same `name = value` / `name[key] = value`
shape. Property setters fan writes back to web_server.py via callback
pairs.
Diff vs original after `deps.X` → global X normalization is **zero
differences** apart from the dropped `global` declaration line — Python
doesn't need it once the names are property accesses on the deps object.
390 lines orig = 390 lines lifted, byte-identical body otherwise.
Dependencies injected via `WatchlistAutoScanDeps` (15 fields total) —
Flask app, spotify_client, automation_engine, watchlist_timer_lock, plus
5 callable helpers and 6 property delegate callbacks (paired
get/set for each of the three globals).
Tests: 11 new under tests/watchlist/test_auto_scan.py covering
stuck-detection guard, race-check inside lock, zero-watchlist short-
circuit, unauthenticated Spotify gate, successful scan with all post-
scan steps, automation event emission, activity feed logging,
cancellation mid-scan skipping post-steps, profile-scoped trigger,
flag reset in finally, rescan cutoff clear in finally.
Full suite: 1319 passing (was 1308). Ruff clean.
- let core.metadata.registry own per-profile Spotify client caching
- register the DB-backed profile credentials provider from web_server.py
- invalidate only the affected profile cache entry on save, delete, and auth
- make web_server.py read and refresh Spotify from core.metadata.registry
- add single-key metadata cache eviction for Spotify reauth
- export the new cache helper through the metadata package shims
Pulls the 201-line staging-folder shortcut out of `web_server.py` into
its own module under the existing `core/downloads/` package. Pure 1:1
lift — wrapper keeps the original entry-point name so the task worker's
existing call site continues to work without changes.
What `try_staging_match` does:
1. Pull the per-batch staging-file cache (one filesystem scan per batch).
2. For each staging entry, compute title + artist similarity using
SequenceMatcher and the matching engine's `normalize_string`. Require
title >= 0.80, then a combined score >= 0.75. The weighting flips
based on whether artist info is available on both sides:
- both have artist: 0.55*title + 0.45*artist
- either side missing artist: 0.80*title + 0.20*artist (lean on title)
3. Copy the matched file to the configured transfer dir (with a
"_staging" suffix when the destination filename already exists, to
avoid overwriting a legitimate prior download).
4. Mark the task as 'post_processing', username='staging',
staging_match=True.
5. Build a synthetic spotify_artist / spotify_album context (mirroring
the modal-worker logic so the file-organization template applies
cleanly) and store it under "staging_<task_id>". Two paths:
- Explicit context branch (track_info has _is_explicit_album_download)
→ real album/artist data copied through.
- Fallback branch → synthesized from track + track_info, with
`is_album_download` heuristically derived (album differs from title
and isn't "Unknown Album").
6. Hand off to `_post_process_matched_download_with_verification` which
does tagging, path building, AcoustID verification, and DB insertion.
Returns True if the staging shortcut won; False to fall through to the
normal Soulseek search path.
Dependencies injected via `StagingDeps` (5 fields) — config_manager,
matching_engine, get_staging_file_cache, docker_resolve_path,
post_process_matched_download_with_verification.
Diff vs original after `deps.X` → global X normalization is **zero
differences** — 201 lines orig = 201 lines lifted, byte-identical body
(including all whitespace, comments, log strings, and the inline
`from difflib import SequenceMatcher` / `import shutil` imports inside
the function body).
Tests: 9 new under tests/downloads/test_downloads_staging.py covering
no staging files / no track title / low-confidence match returning
False, exact match copying file + transitioning task state + invoking
post-processing, existing-file rename via `_staging` suffix, explicit
album context branch, fallback context synthesis (with both album-as-
album and album-equals-title cases), and copy failure (missing source
file) returning False.
Full suite: 1308 passing (was 1299). Ruff clean.
Missed worker from the PR5 discovery-workers series — Tidal sits in the
same domain as the deezer / spotify_public / listenbrainz / youtube /
beatport workers that were lifted in PR5b–PR5h, follows the same shape,
shares the same `_search_spotify_for_tidal_track` helper, and was simply
overlooked in the original inventory.
Pure 1:1 lift of the 212-line worker. Wrapper keeps the original
entry-point name so the existing call sites in web_server.py continue
to work without changes.
What `run_tidal_discovery_worker` does:
1. Pause enrichment workers (release shared resources).
2. For each Tidal track:
- Cancellation gate (state['cancelled']).
- Discovery cache lookup; cache hit short-circuits the search.
- SimpleNamespace-style track passed straight to
`_search_spotify_for_tidal_track` (the shared helper used by every
worker in this family).
- On Spotify match: build `match_data` preserving track_number /
disc_number from raw API data, image extracted from album images
or track object fallback, release_date filled from
track.release_date when album dict is missing it.
- On iTunes match: dict result populated as `match_data` with source
set to discovery_source, image extracted from album images.
- Save matched result to discovery cache.
- On miss: Wing It stub stored as 'wing-it' status (success ticked).
3. After all tracks: phase='discovered', activity feed entry, sync
discovery results back to mirrored playlist via
`_sync_discovery_results_to_mirrored` with 'tidal' tag.
4. On error: state['phase']='error' + status with error string.
5. Finally: resume enrichment workers.
Dependencies injected via `TidalDiscoveryDeps` (13 fields) —
tidal_discovery_states, spotify_client, plus 11 callable helpers
(pause/resume enrichment, get_active_discovery_source,
get_metadata_fallback_client, get_discovery_cache_key, get_database,
validate_discovery_cache_artist, search_spotify_for_tidal_track,
build_discovery_wing_it_stub, add_activity_item,
sync_discovery_results_to_mirrored). Same surface as the deezer worker.
Diff vs original after `deps.X` → global X normalization is **zero
differences** — 212 lines orig = 212 lines lifted, byte-identical body
(including all whitespace, comments, log strings).
Tests: 9 new under tests/discovery/test_discovery_tidal.py covering
cache hit short-circuit, Spotify tuple match (track/disc preservation),
iTunes dict match path, Wing It fallback, cancellation, completion
phase update, activity feed entry, mirrored sync invocation, per-track
error handling.
Full suite: 1299 passing (was 1290). Ruff clean.
First lift in the new PR6 batch. Pulls the 312-line candidate-fallback
download dispatcher out of `web_server.py` into a new module under the
existing `core/downloads/` package. Pure 1:1 lift — wrapper keeps the
original entry-point name so all callers (search/match pipeline) work
unchanged.
What `attempt_download_with_candidates` does:
1. Sort candidates by descending confidence.
2. For each candidate:
- Cancellation gates (3 points: top of loop, before download starts,
after download_id is assigned).
- Skip already-tried sources via the per-task `used_sources` set.
- Skip blacklisted sources (user-flagged bad matches).
- Race protection: bail when the task already has an active
download_id.
- `update_task_status('downloading')`, then `soulseek_client.download`.
3. On a successful download_id:
- Build `matched_downloads_context` entry keyed by
`make_context_key(username, filename)`.
- For tracks with clean Spotify metadata, pull track_number /
disc_number from (1) track_info → (2) track object → (3) Spotify
API call. When local album context is incomplete, the API response
backfills release_date / album_type / total_tracks / images / id.
- Set `is_album_download` based on explicit context flag or
heuristic (album differs from title, isn't "Unknown Album").
- Store task/batch IDs and track_info on the context for post-
processing + playlist-folder mode.
4. On a cancellation that wins the race after the download started:
- `cancel_download(...)` to stop the in-flight Soulseek transfer.
- `on_download_completed(batch_id, task_id, success=False)` to free
the worker slot.
5. On exception or download-start failure: reset task status to
'searching', continue to next candidate.
Dependencies injected via `CandidatesDeps` (7 fields) — soulseek_client,
spotify_client, run_async, get_database, update_task_status,
make_context_key, on_download_completed.
Diff vs original after `deps.X` → global X normalization is **zero
differences** — 312 lines orig = 312 lines lifted, byte-identical body
(including all whitespace, comments, log strings).
Tests: 14 new under tests/downloads/test_downloads_candidates.py
covering happy path (first candidate succeeds, confidence ordering),
used_sources dedup, blacklist skip, cancellation gates (cancelled
status, deleted task, active download_id, mid-flight cancel + cleanup
callback), failure paths (all candidates failed, exception during
download falls through to next), context payload (explicit album
context, track_number priority order, API backfill of incomplete album
metadata), and equal-confidence stable order.
Pre-existing behavior documented in tests:
`spotify_album_context['id']` initializes to a non-empty placeholder
'from_sync_modal' in the fallback path, so the API-backfill condition
`if not spotify_album_context.get('id')` never fires for the id field
specifically. Other album fields (release_date, album_type) backfill
fine because they default to empty.
Full suite: 1290 passing (was 1276). Ruff clean.
PR400 added imports for `check_and_remove_from_wishlist` and
`check_and_remove_track_from_wishlist_by_metadata` from
`core.wishlist.resolution` (aliased with leading underscores in
web_server.py) but left the original inline definitions of those
functions in place at L17139 and L17243. Python's later definition
wins, so the local defs were silently shadowing the imports — meaning
the new package versions were never actually called from web_server.py.
Ruff caught the redefinition (F811) and broke CI.
Deleted the inline definitions (176 lines). Imports at L143-144 now
serve all callers, and the package functions in
`core/wishlist/resolution.py` are actually exercised. Behavior is the
same: I diffed both versions before deleting and confirmed they're
functionally equivalent.
Tests: 1232 passing (no change). Ruff clean.
Final lift in the PR5 discovery-workers series. Pulls the 328-line
library quality scanner out of `web_server.py` into its own focused
module under `core/discovery/`. Pure 1:1 lift — wrapper keeps the
original entry-point name.
What the quality scanner does:
1. Reset scanner state (counters, results), load quality profile +
minimum acceptable tier from QUALITY_TIERS.
2. Load tracks from DB based on scope:
- 'watchlist' → tracks for watchlisted artists only.
- other → all library tracks.
3. For each track:
- Stop-request gate (state['status'] != 'running').
- Quality-tier check via _get_quality_tier_from_extension(file_path).
- Skip tracks meeting standards (tier_num <= min_acceptable_tier).
- For low-quality tracks: matching_engine search query gen, score
candidates against Spotify (artist + title similarity, album-type
bonus), pick best match >= 0.7 confidence.
- On match: add full Spotify track to wishlist via
`wishlist_service.add_spotify_track_to_wishlist` with
source_type='quality_scanner' and a source_context that captures
original file_path, format tier, bitrate, and match confidence.
4. After all tracks: status='finished', progress=100, activity feed
entry, emit `quality_scan_completed` event for automation engine.
5. On critical exception: status='error', error message captured.
Wishlist service interaction is via the public
`add_spotify_track_to_wishlist` API only — no overlap with kettui's
planned `core/wishlist/` package extraction (the import lives inside
the function, exactly as in the original, and will follow whatever
path that package takes).
Dependencies injected via `QualityScannerDeps` (8 fields) —
quality_scanner_state dict, quality_scanner_lock, QUALITY_TIERS
constant, spotify_client, matching_engine, automation_engine, plus 2
callable helpers (get_quality_tier_from_extension, add_activity_item).
Diff vs original after `deps.X` → global X normalization is **zero
differences** — 328 lines orig = 328 lines lifted, byte-identical body
(including all whitespace, comments, log strings, and the inline
`from core.wishlist_service import get_wishlist_service` /
`from database.music_database import MusicDatabase` imports at the
top of the function).
Tests: 11 new under tests/discovery/test_discovery_quality_scanner.py
covering state init/reset, no-watchlist-artists short-circuit,
unauthenticated Spotify error, high-quality skip, low-quality search
trigger, match → wishlist add (with full source_context payload),
no-match no-add, mid-loop stop request, completion phase + progress,
automation engine event emission, all-library scope load.
Full suite: 1152 passing (was 1141). Ruff clean.
End of the PR5 series — `web_server.py` lost ~328 lines on this commit
alone; total trim across PR5a–PR5h is ~2,400 lines of discovery worker
code moved into focused `core/discovery/*.py` modules. The remaining
discovery-adjacent worker `_process_watchlist_scan_automatically` was
deliberately deferred to avoid overlap with kettui's planned wishlist
extraction.
Seventh lift in the PR5 discovery-workers series. Pulls the 286-line
ListenBrainz discovery worker out of `web_server.py` into its own
focused module under `core/discovery/`. Pure 1:1 lift — wrapper keeps
the original entry-point name.
What the ListenBrainz discovery worker does:
1. Pause enrichment workers (release shared resources).
2. For each ListenBrainz track:
- Cancellation gate (state['phase'] != 'discovering').
- Discovery cache lookup; cache hit short-circuits the search.
- Strategy 1: matching_engine search queries with confidence scoring
against Spotify (preferred) or iTunes (fallback).
- Strategy 2: swapped artist/title query.
- Strategy 3: album-based query (uses album_name when available —
unique to LB, since YouTube tracks don't have album metadata).
- Strategy 4: extended search with limit=50.
- On match → save to discovery cache with image extracted from album
images or matched_track.image_url fallback.
- On miss → Wing It stub stored as 'wing-it' status.
3. After all tracks: phase='discovered', status='complete', activity feed
entry mentioning 'ListenBrainz Discovery Complete'.
4. On error: state['status']='error', phase='fresh'.
5. Finally: resume enrichment workers.
Dependencies injected via `ListenbrainzDiscoveryDeps` (16 fields) —
listenbrainz_playlist_states, spotify_client, matching_engine, plus 13
callable helpers (pause/resume enrichment, get_active_discovery_source,
get_metadata_fallback_client, get_discovery_cache_key, get_database,
validate_discovery_cache_artist, extract_artist_name,
spotify_rate_limited, discovery_score_candidates, get_metadata_cache,
build_discovery_wing_it_stub, add_activity_item).
Diff vs original after `deps.X` → global X normalization is **zero
differences** — 286 lines orig = 286 lines lifted, byte-identical body
(including all whitespace, comments, log strings).
Pre-existing bug preserved (not fixed): if `listenbrainz_playlist_states[
state_key]` raises KeyError on entry, the outer except handler tries to
mutate `state` which is unbound → secondary UnboundLocalError. Same bug
in the original (and the YouTube discovery worker). Documented here for
future cleanup but out of scope for the lift.
Tests: 11 new under tests/discovery/test_discovery_listenbrainz.py
covering cache hit short-circuit, Strategy 1 confidence match, Wing It
fallback, iTunes fallback (Spotify unauthenticated and rate-limited),
cancellation (phase change), completion phase update, activity feed
entry, per-track error handling, float duration_ms tolerance (regression
for the :02d format crash fixed earlier), enrichment workers resume on
finally.
Full suite: 1141 passing (was 1130). Ruff clean.
Sixth lift in the PR5 discovery-workers series. Pulls the 323-line
Beatport chart discovery worker out of `web_server.py` into its own
focused module under `core/discovery/`. Pure 1:1 lift — wrapper keeps
the original entry-point name.
What the Beatport discovery worker does:
1. Pause enrichment workers (release shared resources).
2. For each Beatport track:
- Cancellation gate (state['phase'] != 'discovering').
- Clean Beatport text (artist/title) of common annotations via
`clean_beatport_text` helper.
- Single-string artist normalization for "CID,Taylr Renee"-style
entries — split on comma, take the first.
- Discovery cache lookup; cache hit short-circuits the search and
normalizes cached artists from ['str'] → [{'name': 'str'}] to
match the frontend's expected list-of-objects shape.
- matching_engine search-query generation (with high min_confidence
of 0.9 to avoid bad matches).
- Strategy 1: scored candidates from initial Spotify/iTunes searches.
- Strategy 4: extended search with limit=50 if no high-confidence
match found.
- On Spotify match: format artists as [{'name': str}] objects, pull
full album object from raw cache when available, fallback to
reconstructed album dict otherwise.
- On iTunes match: format with image_url-derived album.images entry
(300x300 spec), source set to discovery_source.
- Save matched result to discovery cache when confidence >= 0.75
(note: lower than search threshold; discovery still benefits from
these less-confident matches as user-visible suggestions).
- On miss: Wing It stub stored as 'wing-it' status (success ticked).
3. After all tracks: phase='discovered', activity feed entry, sync
discovery results back to mirrored playlist via
`_sync_discovery_results_to_mirrored` with 'beatport' tag.
4. On error: state['phase']='fresh' + status='error'.
5. Finally: resume enrichment workers.
Dependencies injected via `BeatportDiscoveryDeps` (17 fields) —
beatport_chart_states, spotify_client, matching_engine, plus 14
callable helpers (pause/resume enrichment, get_active_discovery_source,
get_metadata_fallback_client, clean_beatport_text,
get_discovery_cache_key, get_database, validate_discovery_cache_artist,
spotify_rate_limited, discovery_score_candidates, get_metadata_cache,
build_discovery_wing_it_stub, add_activity_item,
sync_discovery_results_to_mirrored).
Diff vs original after `deps.X` → global X normalization is **zero
differences** — 323 lines orig = 323 lines lifted, byte-identical body
(including all whitespace, comments, log strings).
Tests: 12 new under tests/discovery/test_discovery_beatport.py covering
cache hit short-circuit (with cached-artist normalization), Spotify
match formatting (list and string artist inputs), iTunes match
(image_url to album.images), Wing It fallback, cancellation
(phase change), completion phase update, activity feed entry, mirrored
sync invocation, top-level error handler, per-track error handling,
comma-separated artist split.
Full suite: 1130 passing (was 1118). Ruff clean.
Fifth lift in the PR5 discovery-workers series. Pulls the 278-line
public-Spotify-link discovery worker out of `web_server.py` into its
own focused module under `core/discovery/`. Pure 1:1 lift — wrapper
keeps the original entry-point name.
What the Spotify Public discovery worker does:
1. Pause enrichment workers (release shared resources).
2. For each track:
- Cancellation gate (state['cancelled']).
- Normalize artists to plain string list (handles dict + str inputs).
- Discovery cache lookup; cache hit short-circuits the search and
populates display fields from the cached match.
- SimpleNamespace duck-type → `_search_spotify_for_tidal_track`
(shared search helper, returns tuple for Spotify or dict for iTunes).
- On Spotify match: build `match_data` preserving track_number /
disc_number from raw API data; image extracted from album images
or track object fallback; release_date filled from track.release_date
when album dict is missing it.
- On iTunes match: dict result → match_data with source set to
discovery_source; image extracted from album images.
- Save matched result to discovery cache.
- On miss: Wing It stub stored as 'wing-it' status.
3. After all tracks: phase='discovered', activity feed entry.
4. On error: state['phase']='error' + status with error string.
5. Finally: resume enrichment workers.
This worker is structurally close to the Deezer worker (see PR5d) but
intentionally diverges on:
- Track-data field names (`spotify_public_track` vs `deezer_track`).
- Artist normalization (Spotify Public can pass dicts or strings).
- No mirrored-playlist DB writeback (sync is handled separately).
Dependencies injected via `SpotifyPublicDiscoveryDeps` (12 fields) —
spotify_public_discovery_states, spotify_client, plus 10 callable
helpers (pause/resume enrichment, get_active_discovery_source,
get_metadata_fallback_client, get_discovery_cache_key, get_database,
validate_discovery_cache_artist, search_spotify_for_tidal_track,
build_discovery_wing_it_stub, add_activity_item).
Diff vs original after `deps.X` → global X normalization is **zero
differences** — 278 lines orig = 278 lines lifted, byte-identical body
(including all whitespace, comments, log strings).
Tests: 10 new under tests/discovery/test_discovery_spotify_public.py
covering cache hit short-circuit, dict-artist normalization, Spotify
tuple match (track/disc preservation), iTunes dict match path, Wing It
fallback, cancellation, completion phase update, activity feed entry,
top-level error handler, per-track error handling.
Full suite: 1118 passing (was 1108). Ruff clean.
Fourth lift in the PR5 discovery-workers series. Pulls the 270-line
Deezer discovery worker out of `web_server.py` into its own focused
module under `core/discovery/`. Pure 1:1 lift — wrapper keeps the
original entry-point name so the existing call sites continue to work
without changes.
What the Deezer discovery worker does:
1. Pause enrichment workers (release shared resources).
2. For each Deezer track:
- Cancellation gate (state['cancelled']).
- Discovery cache lookup; cache hit short-circuits the search and
populates display fields from the cached match (artist string,
album name).
- SimpleNamespace duck-type → `_search_spotify_for_tidal_track`
(shared search helper, returns tuple for Spotify or dict for iTunes).
- On Spotify match: build `match_data` preserving track_number /
disc_number from raw API data, image extracted from album images
or track object fallback, release_date filled from track.release_date
when album dict is missing it.
- On iTunes match: dict result populated as `match_data`, source set
to discovery_source, image extracted from album images.
- Save matched result to discovery cache.
- On miss: Wing It stub stored as 'wing-it' status.
3. After all tracks: phase='discovered', activity feed entry, sync
discovery results back to mirrored playlist via
`_sync_discovery_results_to_mirrored`.
4. On error: state['phase']='error' + status with error string.
5. Finally: resume enrichment workers.
Dependencies injected via `DeezerDiscoveryDeps` (13 fields) —
deezer_discovery_states dict, spotify_client, plus 11 callable helpers
(pause/resume enrichment, get_active_discovery_source,
get_metadata_fallback_client, get_discovery_cache_key, get_database,
validate_discovery_cache_artist, search_spotify_for_tidal_track,
build_discovery_wing_it_stub, add_activity_item,
sync_discovery_results_to_mirrored).
Diff vs original after `deps.X` → global X normalization is **zero
differences** — 270 lines orig = 270 lines lifted, byte-identical body
(including all whitespace, comments, log strings).
Tests: 10 new under tests/discovery/test_discovery_deezer.py covering
cache hit short-circuit, Spotify tuple match (track/disc number
preservation), iTunes dict match path, Wing It fallback, cancellation,
completion phase update, activity feed entry, mirrored sync invocation,
top-level error handler, per-track error handling.
Full suite: 1108 passing (was 1098). Ruff clean.
Third lift in the PR5 discovery-workers series. Pulls the 323-line
mirrored-playlist discovery worker out of `web_server.py` into its own
focused module under `core/discovery/`. Pure 1:1 lift — wrapper keeps
the original entry-point name so the existing call site
(`_run_playlist_discovery_worker(pls, automation_id=None)` from the
automation engine) continues to work without changes.
What the playlist discovery worker does:
1. Pause enrichment workers (release shared resources).
2. Pre-compute total track count across all playlists for the automation
progress card.
3. For each playlist:
- Fast pre-scan separates already-discovered tracks (skipped, unless
incomplete metadata or a Wing It stub) from undiscovered ones.
- For each undiscovered track:
- Cancellation gate via _playlist_discovery_cancelled set.
- Discovery cache lookup (with artist validation).
- matching_engine search-query generation, then Spotify (preferred)
or iTunes (fallback) search + scoring.
- Extended search fallback (limit=50) if no high-confidence match.
- On match → enrich album from metadata cache (id, images,
total_tracks, album_type, release_date, artists, plus track_number
and disc_number), build matched_data, write to track.extra_data,
save to discovery cache.
- On miss → Wing It stub stored as 'wing_it_fallback' provider.
4. After all playlists: emit `discovery_completed` event when at least
one new track was discovered, mark automation progress 'finished'.
5. On error → automation progress 'error', traceback printed.
6. Finally: resume enrichment workers.
Dependencies injected via `PlaylistDiscoveryDeps` (16 fields) —
spotify_client, matching_engine, automation_engine, the cancellation
set, plus 12 callable helpers (pause/resume enrichment,
get_active_discovery_source, get_metadata_fallback_client/source,
update_automation_progress, get_database, get_discovery_cache_key,
validate_discovery_cache_artist, discovery_score_candidates,
get_metadata_cache, build_discovery_wing_it_stub).
Diff vs original after `deps.X` → global X normalization is **zero
differences** — 323 lines orig = 323 lines lifted, byte-identical body
(including all whitespace, comments, log strings).
Tests: 15 new under tests/discovery/test_discovery_playlist.py covering
empty playlists, no-tracks playlist skip, complete-discovery skip,
incomplete-discovery re-run, Wing It always re-run, unmatched_by_user
respect, cache hit short-circuit, match above threshold (extra_data +
cache save), match below threshold falls to Wing It, iTunes fallback,
neither-provider error path, cancellation, discovery_completed event
emit, no-event on zero-discovered, multi-playlist grand_total
aggregation.
Full suite: 1098 passing (was 1083). Ruff clean.
yt_dlp sometimes returns float `duration_ms` for YouTube tracks. The
discovery workers format the duration with `f"{x // 60000}:{(x % 60000)
// 1000:02d}"` — and `:02d` requires an int. When the duration is a
float, the format string raises:
Unknown format code 'd' for object of type 'float'
Caught when running YouTube discovery on a real playlist (bbno$ tracks)
— every track failed with status='Error'.
Pre-existing bug, surfaced now because of yt_dlp returning float
durations on this playlist. Fixed at all 8 sites by casting through
`int()` before the `// 60000` and `% 60000` operations:
- core/discovery/youtube.py: 2 sites in run_youtube_discovery_worker
(cache hit + main result construction).
- web_server.py L29238/L29372: 2 sites in _run_listenbrainz_discovery_worker.
- web_server.py L40112/L40136/L40161/L40178: 4 sites in the YouTube
retry/pre-discovered results assembly path.
The `if duration_ms` / `if dur` guard already protects against None and 0,
so `int(...)` is only called on truthy numeric values.
Tests: 1 new regression test under tests/discovery/test_discovery_youtube.py
(`test_float_duration_does_not_crash_format`) — passes a float
duration_ms and asserts the worker completes without an error result.
Ruff clean.
Second lift in the PR5 discovery-workers series. Pulls the 332-line
YouTube discovery worker out of `web_server.py` into its own focused
module under `core/discovery/`. Pure 1:1 lift — wrappers keep the
original entry-point name so the two callers
(`youtube_discovery_executor.submit(_run_youtube_discovery_worker, ...)`)
continue to work without changes.
What the YouTube discovery worker does:
1. Pause enrichment workers (release shared resources).
2. For each YouTube playlist track:
- Cancellation check (phase != 'discovering' aborts).
- Discovery cache lookup; cache hit short-circuits the search.
- Strategy 1: matching_engine search queries with confidence scoring
against Spotify (preferred) or iTunes (fallback).
- Strategy 2: swapped artist/title query.
- Strategy 3: raw (untokenized) query.
- Strategy 4: extended search with limit=50.
- On match → save to discovery cache.
- On miss → build Wing It stub from raw source data.
3. After loop: phase='discovered', sort results by index, and for mirrored
playlists write extra_data back to the DB.
4. Activity feed entry with match summary.
5. On error → state['status']='error', phase='fresh'.
6. Finally: resume enrichment workers.
Dependencies injected via `YoutubeDiscoveryDeps` (16 fields) —
youtube_playlist_states, spotify_client, matching_engine, plus 13
callable helpers (pause/resume enrichment, get_active_discovery_source,
get_metadata_fallback_client, discovery cache key/validate, extract
artist name, spotify_rate_limited, discovery_score_candidates,
get_metadata_cache, build_discovery_wing_it_stub, get_database,
add_activity_item).
Diff vs original after `deps.X` → global X normalization is **zero
differences** — 332 lines orig = 332 lines lifted, byte-identical body
(including all whitespace).
Pre-existing bug preserved (not fixed): if `youtube_playlist_states[url_hash]`
raises KeyError on entry, the outer except handler tries to mutate
`state` which is unbound → secondary UnboundLocalError. Same bug in
the original. Documented here for future cleanup but out of scope
for the lift.
Tests: 14 new under tests/discovery/test_discovery_youtube.py covering
cache hit short-circuit, Strategy 1 confidence match, Wing It fallback,
iTunes fallback path (Spotify unauthenticated and rate-limited),
cancellation (phase changed), skip_discovery flag, completion phase
update, activity feed entry, mirrored playlist DB writeback, non-mirrored
no-writeback, enrichment workers pause/resume, error-during-loop resume,
results sorted by index after retry.
Full suite: 1082 passing (was 1068). Ruff clean.
- remove the redundant wishlist-service injection from the runtime wrappers
- keep the package owning its own singleton service access
- simplify the route runtime API and update the wishlist tests to match
- ignore unconfigured backends when clearing completed downloads
- keep the post-download cleanup route best-effort after a successful wishlist run
- add regression coverage for the orchestrator clear step
First lift in the new PR5 discovery-workers series. Pulls the 448-line
playlist sync background worker out of `web_server.py` into its own
focused module under `core/discovery/`. Pure 1:1 lift — wrappers keep
the original entry-point name so the four callers
(`sync_executor.submit(_run_sync_task, ...)`) continue to work without
changes.
What the sync worker does:
1. Convert frontend JSON tracks → SpotifyTrack/SpotifyPlaylist objects.
2. Normalize artist/album shapes for downstream wishlist parity.
3. Wire a progress_callback that updates `sync_states` + automation card.
4. Patch sync_service for database-only fallback when no media server is
connected.
5. `run_async(sync_service.sync_playlist(...))` and capture the result.
6. Update sync_states to 'finished', push playlist poster image to
Plex / Jellyfin / Emby, record sync history (with re-sync vs new-sync
branching), emit `playlist_synced` event for automation engine, and
persist sync status with a tracks_hash for smart-skip on the next
scheduled sync.
7. On exception → mark error in sync_states + automation; finally clear
progress callback + drop `_original_tracks_map` from sync_service.
Dependencies injected via `SyncDeps` (11 fields) — config_manager,
sync_service, plex_client, jellyfin_client, automation_engine, run_async,
record_sync_history_start, update_automation_progress,
update_and_save_sync_status, sync_states dict, sync_lock. The only
structural drift from a pure paste is the top-of-function variable
binding: original used `global sync_states, sync_service`, lifted version
rebinds them as locals from deps (`sync_states = deps.sync_states` etc.)
since the names aren't module-level in the new file. Same behaviour
otherwise — diff against the original after `deps.X` → global X
normalization is **zero differences**.
Tests: 18 new under tests/discovery/test_discovery_sync.py covering
sync history recording (new + resync), setup error path (with and
without automation_id), missing sync_service handling, sync_playlist
exception handling, successful sync state transition, unmatched-tracks
summary, playlist image upload (plex + jellyfin + zero-synced gate),
automation engine emit, automation progress finished call, sync history
DB persistence (completion + match_details), tracks_hash persistence,
and finally-block cleanup (callback clear + map drop).
Full suite: 1068 passing (was 1050). Ruff clean.
Kicks off the PR5 series — 9 discovery workers totaling ~2,400 lines
across `_run_sync_task`, `_run_*_discovery_worker` family,
`_run_quality_scanner`, and `_process_watchlist_scan_automatically`.
Wishlist-related extractions deliberately skipped to avoid overlap with
kettui's planned `core/wishlist/` package.
- add module-level loggers for the wishlist package instead of threading the web server logger through runtime objects
- default wishlist helper runtimes and cleanup helpers to their package logger while still allowing test overrides
- keep web_server.py as a thin caller that no longer injects its logger into wishlist flows
- extract the remaining wishlist endpoint behavior from web_server.py into core/wishlist/routes.py
- keep web_server.py as a thin Flask adapter around the new route helpers
- add tests that cover wishlist counts, stats, track listing, clear/remove flows, cycle updates, and album-track adds
- add core/wishlist as the home for wishlist payload, resolution, state, processing, reporting, and selection helpers
- move wishlist-specific tests into tests/wishlist alongside the new package layout
- keep web_server.py and the import/search callers as thin adapters for now
Final extraction in the download orchestrator series. Lifts the 586-line
master worker that drives the entire missing-tracks pipeline from
`web_server.py` into `core/downloads/master.py`. Pure 1:1 lift — wrappers
keep the original entry-point name so the three callers
(`missing_download_executor.submit(_run_full_missing_tracks_process, ...)`)
continue to work without changes.
What the master worker does:
1. PHASE 1 ANALYSIS — per-track DB ownership check with album fast path
(lookup album by name+artist, match tracks within it) plus a
MusicBrainz release-cache preflight so per-track post-processing all
uses the same release MBID (prevents Navidrome album splits).
2. Wishlist removal for tracks already in the library.
3. Explicit-content filter.
4. PHASE 2 transition — if nothing missing, mark batch complete, update
per-source playlist phases, kick auto-wishlist completion handler.
5. Soulseek album pre-flight — search for a complete album folder before
falling back to track-by-track search, cache the source for reuse.
6. Wishlist album grouping — derive per-album disc counts and resolve ONE
artist context per album so collab albums don't fold-split.
7. Task creation with explicit album/artist context injection +
playlist-folder-mode flag propagation.
8. Hand off to download_monitor + start_next_batch_of_downloads.
9. Error handler — phase=error, reset YouTube playlist phase to
'discovered', reset auto-wishlist globals on auto-initiated batches.
Dependencies injected via `MasterDeps` (21 fields) — wide surface
covering config, MB caches/locks, soulseek client, source-page state
dicts, multiple callbacks (wishlist removal, explicit filter, executor
+ auto-completion fn, monitor, start_next_batch). The only behaviour
difference from a pure paste is `import traceback` hoisted to module
scope (was inline in the except block) — same behaviour. Trailing
whitespace on two blank lines also got normalized away by the editor;
neither has any runtime effect.
`reset_wishlist_auto_processing` callback wraps the
`global wishlist_auto_processing, wishlist_auto_processing_timestamp`
write + `wishlist_timer_lock` since `global` can't reach back into
web_server.py from a separate module.
Tests: 21 new under tests/downloads/test_downloads_master.py covering
analysis-phase state, force_download_all, found-track wishlist removal,
explicit filter, no-missing complete + per-source state updates, auto
wishlist completion submit, album fast path (direct + fallthrough),
MB preflight (caches both keys, no-mb-worker no-op), task creation
(queue + tasks dict, explicit context for albums, wishlist album
grouping consistency, playlist folder mode), monitor + next-batch
handoff, multi-disc total_discs computation, error handler (phase set,
youtube reset, auto wishlist reset), and batch-removed-mid-flight
defensive path.
Full suite: 1050 passing (was 1029). Ruff clean.
End of the PR4 series — `web_server.py` lost ~590 lines on this commit
alone; total trim across PR4a–PR4h is ~2900 lines of orchestrator code
moved into focused `core/downloads/*.py` modules.
Seventh sub-PR in the download orchestrator series. Strict 1:1 lift —
zero behavior change. ~570 lines moved out of web_server.py.
What moved (lifted as 3 tightly-coupled functions in one module):
- _start_next_batch_of_downloads → start_next_batch_of_downloads
- _on_download_completed → on_download_completed
- _check_batch_completion_v2 → check_batch_completion_v2
Dependencies bundled in `LifecycleDeps` (15+ refs):
- config_manager, automation_engine, download_monitor, repair_worker,
mb_worker (live globals)
- is_shutting_down (lambda over IS_SHUTTING_DOWN flag)
- get_batch_lock (web_server helper for batch_locks dict)
- submit_download_track_worker (lambda wrapping
missing_download_executor.submit + _download_track_worker)
- submit_failed_to_wishlist + submit_failed_to_wishlist_with_auto_completion
(async, used by on_download_completed) AND process_failed_to_wishlist
+ process_failed_to_wishlist_with_auto_completion (sync, used by
check_batch_completion_v2 — direct call matches original v2 behavior;
the non-v2 path always submitted to executor)
- ensure_spotify_track_format, get_track_artist_name,
check_and_remove_from_wishlist, regenerate_batch_m3u (web_server
helpers — large, will lift in follow-up PRs)
- youtube_playlist_states, tidal_discovery_states,
deezer_discovery_states, spotify_public_discovery_states
(per-source playlist state dicts — phase transitions on batch
completion)
Direct imports for already-lifted helpers:
- core.runtime_state.{download_tasks, download_batches, tasks_lock,
add_activity_item}
- core.downloads.history.record_sync_history_completion (PR4a)
- core.album_consistency.run_album_consistency
- core.metadata.common.get_file_lock
Behavior parity verified line-by-line:
- start_next_batch: same batch lock acquisition, same shutdown gate,
same V2-cancelled-task skip, same searching-status-set-before-submit,
same submit-fails-no-ghost-worker semantics
- on_download_completed: same duplicate-call detection (skip decrement
but still check completion), same failed-track tracking with
spotify_track formatting + activity items + automation event emission,
same wishlist removal on success, same active_count decrement, same
stuck-detection (searching > 10min → not_found, post_processing >
5min → completed), same M3U regeneration + repair worker hand-off
+ album consistency pass + wishlist failed-tracks submission
- check_batch_completion_v2: same finished-count tally, same stuck
detection, same already-complete short-circuit returning True, same
per-source playlist phase updates, same album consistency pass,
same DIRECT (sync) wishlist processing call (NOT submit-to-executor
— matches original v2 which called process_* functions directly)
CRITICAL drift caught + fixed during review:
- Initial lift had v2 routing wishlist calls through submit_* deps
(async). Original v2 called process_* directly (sync). Added separate
process_* deps to LifecycleDeps and routed v2 to them. Tests updated.
Two minor defensive additions documented:
- `is_auto_batch = False` initialized before conditional in v2 (Python
scope rules made this unnecessary in original, but explicit is safer)
- Variable rename inside the queue-completion-check loop in
on_download_completed: `task_id` → `queue_task_id` to avoid shadowing
the outer parameter. Log output preserves the same task ID.
Tests: 28 new under tests/downloads/test_downloads_lifecycle.py
covering start-next (early-returns, shutdown gate, max_concurrent,
cancelled-task skip, searching-status-set, submit-failure-no-ghost,
orphan task), on-complete (decrement, duplicate skip, failed/cancelled
tracking, automation emit, wishlist removal, batch completion + emit
+ source phase update, stuck detection, auto vs manual routing),
check-v2 (missing batch, not-complete, complete-marking, already-
complete, auto routing, exception handling).
Full suite: 1029 passing (was 1001). Ruff clean.
Fifth sub-PR in the download orchestrator series. Strict 1:1 lift —
zero behavior change.
What moved:
- _build_batch_status_data → build_batch_status_data
- get_batch_download_status route body → build_single_batch_status
- get_batched_download_statuses route body → build_batched_status
- get_all_downloads_unified route body → build_unified_downloads_response
- Status priority dict → module-level _STATUS_PRIORITY constant
Dependencies bundled in `StatusDeps` dataclass:
- config_manager, docker_resolve_path, find_completed_file,
make_context_key, submit_post_processing (lambda wrapping
missing_download_executor.submit + _run_post_processing_worker),
get_cached_transfer_data
Direct imports from core.runtime_state for download_tasks /
download_batches / tasks_lock (already lifted by kettui).
Behavior parity:
- Same response payload shape across all 3 endpoints
- Same safety-valve mutation: stuck downloading task with file recovered
→ status='post_processing' + submit worker; stuck searching → not_found;
stuck downloading no file → failed
- Same live transfer state mapping (Cancelled/Canceled, Failed/Errored/
Rejected/TimedOut, Completed/Succeeded with byte-mismatch verification,
InProgress, default queued)
- Same intermediate post_processing status promotion + single-shot worker
submission (only when status != 'post_processing')
- Same 'Errored' handling: keeps current status to let monitor retry
- Same 17-key item dict in unified response with same field order
- Same artist/album/artwork normalization (handles string, dict, list,
list-of-dicts, list-of-strings variants)
- Same sort: (priority asc, -timestamp desc)
- Same batch summary aggregation
- Same items[:limit] slicing
- Same logger messages text-for-text
- Same lock scope (single tasks_lock per call) — no new contention
Pre-existing bug preserved (will fix in follow-up PR):
- batched_status `debug_info` block iterates `response["batches"]` and
guards with `if "error" not in batch_status`. Every successful
payload includes `"error": batch.get('error')` (key always present,
value usually None) so the guard is always False and debug_info
never populates in production. Test documents the buggy behavior so
the next PR can flip the check to `batch_status.get('error') is None`.
Tests: 32 new under tests/downloads/test_downloads_status.py covering
phase routing (analysis vs downloading vs unknown), task formatting +
sort + V2 fields, every live transfer state mapping (Cancelled,
Succeeded with full + partial bytes, InProgress, Errored, terminal-
not-overridden), safety valve (stuck searching → not_found, stuck
downloading recovered → post_processing, stuck downloading no file →
failed), all 3 route helpers (single, batched, unified), unified
artist/album/artwork normalization, batch summary aggregation, limit
slicing, plus debug_info bug documentation.
Full suite: 982 passing (was 950). Ruff clean.
Fourth sub-PR in the download orchestrator series. Strict 1:1 lift —
zero behavior change. ~407 lines moved out of web_server.py.
What moved:
- _run_post_processing_worker → run_post_processing_worker
The lifted function is intentionally kept as one ~400-line block to
preserve byte-for-byte parity with the original. Refactoring it into
smaller helpers (context lookup, file search loop, transfer-folder
handler, downloads-folder handler) gets its own follow-up PR.
Dependencies: 9 callbacks bundled in `PostProcessDeps` dataclass.
- config_manager, soulseek_client, run_async (live refs)
- docker_resolve_path, extract_filename, make_context_key
(small utilities still in web_server.py — will lift in a future PR
alongside other shared utilities)
- find_completed_file (file search helper, still in web_server.py)
- enhance_file_metadata, wipe_source_tags (web_server wrappers around
core.metadata.enrichment)
- post_process_with_verification (web_server wrapper around
core.imports.pipeline)
- mark_task_completed (wraps runtime_state.mark_task_completed +
session counter)
- on_download_completed (deferred to PR4g batch lifecycle)
Direct imports for already-lifted helpers (no injection needed):
- core.imports.album_naming.resolve_album_group
- core.imports.context.{get_import_clean_title, get_import_clean_album,
get_import_original_search, get_import_context_artist,
get_import_context_album, normalize_import_context}
- core.imports.filename.extract_track_number_from_filename
- core.metadata.enrichment (re-exported as metadata_enrichment)
- core.runtime_state.{download_tasks, tasks_lock,
matched_downloads_context, matched_context_lock}
Behavior parity:
- Same control flow: missing-task short-circuit → cancelled/completed
short-circuit → missing-filename failure → docker path resolution →
context lookup with fuzzy fallback → expected filename generation →
YouTube special-case path resolution → 5-attempt search loop with
Strategy 1 (original filename in download+transfer) and Strategy 2
(expected final filename in transfer) → file-not-found failure →
transfer-folder handler with metadata enhancement → downloads-folder
handler with full post-process verification
- Same retry count (5), sleep duration (5s), per-attempt logging
- Same album_info dict construction with is_album=True for explicit
album downloads
- Same album grouping skip when context.is_album_download is True
- Same wipe_source_tags fallback when enhancement context missing
- Same matched_downloads_context cleanup on success
- Same exception swallowing at processing-error and critical-error
layers, both setting status='failed' + error_message + calling
on_download_completed(b, t, success=False)
- Every logger message text preserved verbatim (so log filters keep
working)
Tests: 16 new under tests/downloads/test_downloads_post_processing.py
covering missing task, cancelled, already-completed, stream_processed,
missing filename + username, file-not-found-after-retries with sleep
mocked, stream-processor-completes-mid-search, transfer-folder with
metadata enhanced + with no context (wipes tags), downloads-folder
with + without context, processing exception, critical outer
exception, YouTube special path, fuzzy context matching.
Full suite: 950 passing (was 934). Ruff clean.
Third sub-PR in the download orchestrator series. Strict 1:1 lift —
zero behavior change.
What moved:
- _automatic_wishlist_cleanup_after_db_update → cleanup_wishlist_after_db_update
The lifted fn takes config_manager as an arg (so core/downloads/cleanup.py
doesn't need to import web_server). Other deps (wishlist_service,
MusicDatabase, get_database) stay as in-function imports — matches the
original deferred-import pattern.
The single caller in web_server.py (missing_download_executor.submit at
L18028) keeps using the same wrapper name with no signature change.
Behavior parity:
- Same per-profile iteration via get_all_profiles()
- Same essential-field skip (no name / no artists / no spotify_track_id)
- Same artist normalization (string / dict / fallback to str())
- Same 0.7 confidence threshold for db match
- Same break-on-first-artist-match semantics
- Same album extraction (dict.name vs string passthrough)
- Same active_server pulled via config_manager.get_active_media_server()
- Same per-track exception swallowing inside the loops
- Same top-level exception swallow with traceback.print_exc()
- Same logger messages (exact text match for "[Auto Cleanup]" prefix)
Tests: 13 new under tests/downloads/test_downloads_cleanup.py covering
empty wishlist short-circuit, found-in-db removal, missed track stays,
low-confidence skip, missing-fields skip, dict + string artist formats,
break-on-first-match, multi-profile walk, album dict/string handling,
db check failure continuing to next artist, top-level exception swallow,
active server propagation.
Full suite: 934 passing (was 921). Ruff clean.
Second sub-PR in the download orchestrator series. Strict 1:1 lift —
zero behavior change.
What moved:
- cancel_download (single slskd cancel) → cancel_single_download
- cancel_all_downloads (cancel + clear + sweep) → cancel_all_active
- clear_finished_downloads (slskd clear + sweep) → clear_finished_active
- clear_completed_downloads (local task tracker prune) → clear_completed_local
Slskd-touching helpers take (soulseek_client, run_async, sweep_callback)
explicitly so the route layer wires the live client + the existing
_sweep_empty_download_directories helper. The local-state helper imports
download_tasks/download_batches/batch_locks/tasks_lock straight from
core.runtime_state since those are module-level shared globals.
Prep change: `batch_locks` dict moved from web_server.py global into
core/runtime_state.py alongside the other download globals. web_server.py
re-imports from runtime_state so the ~3 existing call sites in
web_server.py keep resolving without modification. Identity preserved
(same dict across all importers).
Out of scope (deferred to PR4g batch lifecycle):
- cancel_download_task (calls _on_download_completed)
- cancel_task_v2 + _atomic_cancel_task + _find_task_by_playlist_track
(manipulate batch active_count directly, deeply coupled to lifecycle)
Behavior parity:
- Same response shapes + status codes on each route
- Same call order (cancel_all → clear_all_completed → sweep)
- Same conditional sweep on clear_finished (skipped on failure)
- Same sweep ALWAYS runs after cancel_all even if clear_all returns False
(matches original — clear failure was non-fatal in cancel_all path)
- Same TERMINAL_STATUSES set: completed/failed/not_found/cancelled/skipped/
already_owned (lifted to module-level constant)
- Same empty-batch pruning + same batch_locks cleanup
- Same lock acquisition pattern (single tasks_lock)
Tests: 14 new under tests/downloads/test_downloads_cancel.py covering
single cancel, cancel-all happy + failure paths, clear-finished + sweep
gate, local task pruning across all 7 active/terminal states, batch
queue trimming, batch_locks cleanup.
Full suite: 921 passing (was 907). Ruff clean.
First sub-PR in the download orchestrator series. Strict 1:1 lift —
zero behavior change.
What moved:
- _record_sync_history_start → record_sync_history_start
- _record_sync_history_completion → record_sync_history_completion
- _detect_sync_source → detect_sync_source
- Source prefix map → module-level _SOURCE_PREFIX_MAP constant
What stayed:
- web_server.py keeps three thin wrappers (_detect_sync_source,
_record_sync_history_start, _record_sync_history_completion) that
delegate into core/downloads/history.py. ~60 callers of these names
in web_server.py keep resolving without touching every site.
Each lifted function takes `database` as an arg (was
`db = MusicDatabase()` inline). The wrappers construct
`MusicDatabase()` per call to mirror the exact original behavior —
each invocation got a fresh DB connection.
Behavior parity:
- Same SQL UPDATE statement (preserves the in-place update path when
a sync_history entry already exists for the playlist_id)
- Same JSON serialization with ensure_ascii=False
- Same thumb URL extraction order (album_context.images → image_url
→ first track album.images)
- Same per-track result shape (index, name, artist, album, image_url,
duration_ms, source_track_id, status, confidence, matched_track,
download_status)
- Same status mapping (found/not_found, completed/failed)
- Same best-effort exception swallowing (sync history failure must
never break the actual download)
- Reads `download_tasks` from core.runtime_state (already lifted by
kettui in PR378)
Tests: 34 new under tests/downloads/test_downloads_history.py
covering source detection (16 prefixes), start happy paths + thumb
extraction + duplicate-update + DB error swallowing, completion stats
+ per-track results JSON shape + edge cases.
Full suite: 907 passing (was 873). Ruff clean.
The endpoint was returning a 200-line literal dict inline. Moved the
three lists (TRIGGERS, ACTIONS, NOTIFICATIONS) to module-level constants
in core/automation/blocks.py. Route shrinks to 7 lines. Data is now
importable for tests + future docs.
Added 8 shape tests so a typo in the dict (missing 'type', wrong
field type, missing options on a select, etc.) gets caught by CI
instead of breaking the builder UI silently.
The `known_signals` field stays computed at request time via
_collect_known_signals(database) since it's dynamic.
No behavior change. Same response shape. 869 tests passing (was 861).
Ruff clean.
Routes moved to thin parse-args/jsonify handlers; logic now lives in
three focused modules under core/automation/. 436 lines deleted from
web_server.py; 53 added back as wrappers.
Module split:
- core/automation/api.py — CRUD + run + history helpers. Each function
takes (database, automation_engine, ...) explicitly and returns
(response_body, http_status). Includes signal cycle detection
preflight checks for create + update.
- core/automation/progress.py — owns the in-memory progress state dict
+ lock (mirroring the original web_server.py globals as module-level
shared state so all callers see one view), init/update/history
helpers, and the WebSocket emit loop.
- core/automation/signals.py — collect_known_signals for the builder
autocomplete.
Out of scope (deferred):
- _register_automation_handlers — the 23+ action handler closures stay
in web_server.py because each one is tightly coupled to feature-
specific implementations (wishlist, watchlist, library scan, etc.).
- Worker functions (_process_wishlist_automatically, etc.) — belong
with their feature lifts.
- _run_sync_task / _run_playlist_discovery_worker — sync + discovery
PRs.
Behavior preserved 1:1:
- Same route response shapes + status codes
- Same JSON field hydration (trigger_config, action_config,
notify_config, last_result, then_actions)
- Same backward-compat: empty then_actions + notify_type set →
synthesize then_actions from notify_type/notify_config
- Same signal cycle detection behavior on create + update
- Same system-automation protection on delete + duplicate
- Same reschedule/cancel logic on toggle + bulk-toggle + update
- Same progress state shape (status, progress, phase, current_item,
log capped at 50, started_at/finished_at, action_type)
- Same emit-on-finish socketio push from update_progress
- Same emit loop semantics (1s tick, snapshot active states, reap
finished after window)
Pre-existing bugs preserved (will fix in follow-up PRs):
- emit_progress_loop uses naive datetime.now() against tz-aware
started_at/finished_at, so the timeout-zombie check raises
TypeError → caught → never fires, and the cleanup-after-window
check raises → caught → state is reaped on FIRST tick regardless
of the window. Tests document this behavior so the next PR can
flip them to the corrected expectation.
Tests: 72 new under tests/automation/ (signals 10, progress 24,
api 38). Full suite: 861 passing (was 789). Ruff clean.
Three drifts caught in line-by-line review against the pre-lift
web_server.py. All addressed for strict 1:1 behavior parity.
1. /api/enhanced-search/source/<src> now returns plain JSON
`{"artists":[],"albums":[],"tracks":[],"available":false}` (or
`{"videos":[],"available":false}` for youtube_videos) when the
source's client isn't available, matching the original endpoint
contract. Previously streamed an NDJSON `{"type":"done"}` line
instead.
Restructured by splitting the orchestrator into resolve+stream
helpers:
- `resolve_client(source_name, deps)` — already existed, used
for /api/enhanced-search single-source mode
- `resolve_youtube_videos_client(deps)` — new, returns the
soulseek_client.youtube subclient or None
- `stream_metadata_source(source_name, query, client)` — pure
NDJSON generator, caller resolves client first
- `stream_youtube_videos(query, youtube_client, run_async)` —
same shape for the yt-dlp path
The route now decides plain-JSON-vs-stream based on resolution
result, mirroring the original control flow exactly.
2. core/search/library_check.py — reverted the defensive `(x or '')`
and `getattr(plex_client, 'server', None) is not None` patterns
to original byte-for-byte (`x.get('name', '')`,
`plex_client.server`, no try/except around `get_plex_config`).
Lift PR shouldn't change crash semantics; if the original raises
on malformed input, mine should too. Pre-existing edge cases get
their own follow-up PR.
3. core/search/stream.py — same revert: `soulseek_client.youtube`
instead of `getattr(..., 'youtube', None)` etc.
Also removed the module-level `EMPTY_SOURCE` from sources.py and
moved its (per-call) duplicate into _fan_out_response as a local —
the original used a per-request local dict and the identity-check
behavior depends on that. Module-level was a footgun for future
mutations.
789 tests still pass (95 search), ruff clean.
Routes moved to thin parse-args/jsonify handlers; logic now lives in
six focused modules under core/search/. 720 lines deleted from
web_server.py; 109 added back as wrappers; ~700 lines of new core code
plus ~700 lines of tests.
Module split:
- core/search/cache.py — TTL+LRU cache for enhanced-search responses,
keyed by (query, active_server, fallback_source, hydrabase_active,
source_tag) so config changes don't poison stale entries.
- core/search/sources.py — per-kind metadata search (artists/albums/
tracks) and the multi-kind ThreadPoolExecutor that fans them out.
- core/search/library_check.py — library + wishlist presence check
with Plex thumb URL resolution; profile-aware wishlist with legacy
fallback for older DBs missing the profile_id column.
- core/search/stream.py — single-track preview search; effective stream
mode resolution, query-variant generation, retry walk, matching
engine integration.
- core/search/basic.py — flat Soulseek file search, quality-sorted.
- core/search/orchestrator.py — main enhanced-search dispatch
(short-query fast path, single-source bypass, hydrabase-primary fan
out, alternate source list builder), NDJSON streaming generator
for /source/<src>, and the SearchDeps dataclass that bundles the
cross-cutting deps.
Routes pass clients (spotify, hydrabase, hydrabase_worker, soulseek)
and helpers (config_manager, fix_artist_image_url,
_is_hydrabase_active, _get_metadata_fallback_*, _run_background_
comparison, run_async, dev_mode_enabled_provider) into core/search via
a SearchDeps bundle built per-request. fix_artist_image_url stays in
web_server.py because it touches 31 other call sites.
Behavior preserved 1:1:
- Same response shapes (db_artists, spotify_artists, spotify_albums,
spotify_tracks, primary_source, metadata_source, alternate_sources,
source_available)
- Same NDJSON line ordering (artists/albums/tracks as they finish, plus
done marker)
- Same per-kind exception swallowing
- Same hydrabase-worker mirror on dev mode
- Same cache key shape (5-tuple) and TTL/LRU semantics
- Same stream-track effective-mode resolution including the
Soulseek-coerce-to-YouTube edge case
- Same library-check Plex thumb URL rewriting and wishlist fallback
for older DBs
Tests: 94 new (cache TTL/LRU/key, sources happy/partial/all-fail,
library presence with library + wishlist + thumbs, stream effective
mode + query gen + retry, orchestrator client resolution + short
query + single source + fan-out alternates + hydrabase primary +
NDJSON drain). Full suite: 788 passing (was 694).
Ruff clean.
Stats route logic moves into core/stats/queries.py as pure-ish functions
that take dependencies (database, image-url fixer, listening worker) as
arguments. The 13 route handlers in web_server.py shrink to thin
parse-args / jsonify wrappers.
What moved to core/stats/queries.py:
- stats_cached: 3-key metadata cache lookup + image url fix-up
- stats_overview / timeline / genres / library_health / db_storage
- stats_top_artists / top_albums / top_tracks: top-N + DB enrichment
- stats_recent: listening_history readback
- stats_resolve_track: title+artist -> file_path lookup for playback
- listening_stats_sync: spawns daemon thread that runs worker._poll
- listening_stats_status: stats payload, with None-worker fallback shape
No behavior change. Same response shapes, same error handling, same
silent-except on per-row enrichment failure. fix_artist_image_url
stays in web_server.py and is passed through as a callback so we
don't have to lift its config_manager / media-server dependencies in
this PR.
Adds tests/stats/test_stats_queries.py — 27 tests covering happy
paths, edge cases, image-url plumbing, worker glue.
Ruff clean. 694 tests pass (was 667 + 27 new).
Lifted-then-not-deleted leftovers from the PR378 merge:
- web_server.py `_resolve_album_group` and `_build_final_path_for_track`
were already imported at module top from `core/imports/`. Removed the
shadowing local copies.
- Mutagen reimports (FLAC/MP4/OggVorbis) at L17736-17738 shadowed the
top-of-file imports. Picture/MP4Cover/MP4FreeForm were unused. Dropped
the whole block.
- core/imports/context.py: `getattr(artist, "name")` -> `artist.name`
(B009).
Ruff clean, 667 tests pass.
- keep single-track import lookup in imports/resolution.py
- normalize simple-download search_result data before wishlist matching
- run wishlist cleanup for simple-download post-processing
- keep source-only artist detail on resolved names and MB short-circuit