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3 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
BoulderBadgeDad
142a1aaf38 Cover art: a numeric difference is a different release — Vol.4 stops wearing Vol.4.5's cover
Sokhi (continued from #806): volume-numbered series ('B小町 …キャラクター
ソングCD Vol.2' / 'Vol.2.5' / 'Vol.4' / 'Vol.4.5') got each other's art from
both normal downloads and the retag tool. Two distinct holes, one principle:

1. The art picker's _album_matches validates by significant-token SUBSET —
   built to tolerate '(Deluxe)'/'- Remastered' suffixes. CJK strips out of
   the normalizer entirely, so Vol.4 → {b,tv,cd,vol,4}, a clean subset of
   Vol.4.5's {b,tv,cd,vol,4,5}: the wrong volume validated as "the same
   album with a suffix". Affected every fuzzy art source (iTunes, Deezer,
   AudioDB, Spotify) in downloads, retag, and the missing-art repair.

2. MusicBrainz match_release scores by string similarity — Vol.4 vs Vol.4.5
   is 0.973, so the wrong volume could win the match outright, and its MBID
   then feeds Cover Art Archive with NO downstream validation (CAA is
   MBID-keyed, trusted by design). With Sokhi's MB metadata source this is
   the likely path in his logs (his release-group 404s push re-matching).

The shared rule (core.text.title_match.numeric_tokens_differ): digit-bearing
tokens must be IDENTICAL between the two titles. A number on one side only —
volume, part, sequel, remaster year — is a different release, never a
suffix. '1989' vs '1989 (Deluxe)' still matches (digits shared); 'Album' vs
'Album 2' now rejects (sequels!). Art picker rejects outright (falls through
to next source / the download's own art — the designed cost of a false
reject); MB matcher halves the candidate's confidence, landing it below the
70 gate while the exact-volume result is untouched.

Tests: helper truth table, the exact reported pairs through _album_matches,
and match_release end-to-end (wrong volume alone → no match beats a wrong
MBID; exact volume beats near-identical wrong one despite lower MB score).
828 matching/metadata + 301 musicbrainz/retag/artwork tests pass.
2026-06-07 10:21:23 -07:00
BoulderBadgeDad
b202c176f7 Cover-art sources: skip low-res art (min-resolution guard) + max-res iTunes
Follow-up to the preferred-art feature. Real test runs showed a source could
win on priority while handing back a small cover: Cover Art Archive is
volunteer-uploaded with no size floor, so CAA-first gave a 599x531 (Taylor
Swift) and a 600x600 (Kendrick GNX) -- front-1200 only caps the max, so a
~600px upload stays ~600px -- and Deezer/iTunes lower in the order never got a
turn.

Fix:
- Minimum-resolution guard: artwork._min_size_art_validator builds the
  resolver's validate hook -- it fetches each candidate, caches the bytes (so
  the winner isn't fetched twice), and accepts art only when its shortest side
  >= metadata_enhancement.min_art_size (default 1000px; 0 disables). Art that's
  too small is a miss, so the resolver falls through to the next source instead
  of winning on priority. Unmeasurable images are accepted (don't over-reject;
  fallback is still today's art). Wired into both embed_album_art_metadata and
  download_cover_art.
- iTunes art upgraded to /3000x3000bb/ (was the 600px default) so it
  contributes high-res when it wins.
- select_preferred_art_url gains a validate passthrough to the resolver.
- config default metadata_enhancement.min_art_size: 1000.

Effect: with an order like caa > deezer > spotify > itunes, a ~600px CAA upload
is now skipped and Deezer's ~1900px wins -- consistent big art. (Spotify art
often maxes ~640px, so it's skipped at the 1000 floor in favor of bigger
sources; lower min_art_size to ~640 to allow it.)

Tests: tests/metadata/test_art_min_size.py (6 -- incl. the real 599x531 and
600x600 cases, shortest-side logic, unmeasurable-accept, no-bytes-reject,
0-disables) + iTunes max-res upgrade test. Full metadata suite green (617).
2026-06-01 12:24:51 -07:00
BoulderBadgeDad
6bc2836f47 Feature: preferred album-art source selection (opt-in, ordered, with fallback)
Lets users pick which providers' cover art to use and in what priority,
generalizing the single prefer_caa_art toggle into an ordered, mix-and-match
list (Sokhi's request). Fully opt-in: default album_art_order is [], so every
existing install is byte-for-byte unchanged until the user enables sources.

How it works:
- Per album, walk the user's ordered sources top-to-bottom; the first source
  that actually has THIS album's cover wins. A miss falls through to the next;
  if all miss, the download's own art is kept (today's default). The worst case
  is always exactly the cover you'd get today -- never wrong art, never an
  error into the download.
- Connection-gated: a source is only tried when the user is connected to it
  (free sources CAA/Deezer/iTunes/AudioDB always; Spotify only when
  authenticated). Tidal/Qobuz/HiFi deferred (cover-URL construction + no clean
  core accessor -- not shipping unverified extraction).
- Album-match validated: a source's art is used only when the album it returns
  matches the requested artist+album (significant-token subset, tolerant of
  Deluxe/Remastered/articles/feat./multi-artist). A loose top search hit for a
  different record is treated as a miss -> guarantees no wrong-album art.
- The list supersedes the legacy prefer_caa_art toggle: when album_art_order is
  non-empty it is the sole authority (add 'caa' to the list to use Cover Art
  Archive), and prefer_caa_art is neutralized for both the embedded-tag art and
  cover.jpg paths. With an empty list, prefer_caa_art behaves exactly as before.

Implementation:
- core/metadata/art_sources.py: pure resolver -- effective_art_order (config +
  legacy back-compat) and resolve_cover_art (ordered walk + fallback,
  exception-safe per source). No network/config/DB; fully unit-testable.
- core/metadata/art_lookup.py: availability gating, per-source lookups against
  existing clients (Deezer/iTunes/AudioDB/Spotify search + CAA via MBID),
  album-match validation, per-album caching, and select_preferred_art_url --
  the single gate the pipeline calls (no-op unless an explicit list is set).
- core/metadata/artwork.py: wired into embed_album_art_metadata and
  download_cover_art, gated so no configured list == current behavior.
- web_server.py: GET /api/metadata/art-sources (connected sources only).
- config/settings.py: default album_art_order: [].
- webui (index.html + settings.js): reorderable list in Core Features reusing
  the hybrid-source-list pattern + real service logos (with emoji fallback);
  load/save wired through the existing metadata_enhancement settings flow.
  loadArtSourceOrder populates the saved order synchronously (filtered to known
  sources, not availability) so a save before the availability fetch resolves,
  or a temporarily-disconnected source, can never wipe the saved order.

Tests: 40 unit/seam tests (resolver ordering/fallback/back-compat, availability,
per-source extraction, album-match validation incl. wrong-album/wrong-artist
rejection, caching, exception-safety, the off-by-default gate). Full metadata
suite still green (610 passed) -- the gated integration changes nothing when no
list is configured.

Note: the settings UI (DOM-heavy, not unit-testable in the JS harness) and the
live per-source art-fetch quality are validated by manual testing.
2026-06-01 11:45:07 -07:00