Adds full parity with Deezer/Qobuz/Tidal/Discogs in every dashboard
UI layer — orb button, live tooltip, WebSocket push, rate speedometer.
- webui/index.html: Amazon enrichment orb button after Discogs
- webui/static/amazon.svg: local icon (a + smile, same pattern as
hydrabase.png — avoids external URL dependency)
- webui/static/style.css: Amazon button/spinner/tooltip CSS with
FF9900 brand color; added to mobile tooltip suppress list
- webui/static/worker-orbs.js: Amazon orb in WORKER_DEFS [255,153,0]
- webui/static/api-monitor.js: Amazon in rate gauge services list,
label, and color map
- webui/static/enrichment.js: updateAmazonEnrichmentStatusFromData,
toggleAmazonEnrichment, DOMContentLoaded init + 2s poll
- webui/static/core.js: socket.on enrichment:amazon-enrichment listener
- web_server.py: amazon-enrichment added to _emit_enrichment_status_loop
workers dict so WebSocket pushes fire every 2s
Background worker matching library artists/albums/tracks to Amazon ASINs
via T2Tunes search. Follows same 6-tier priority queue as Deezer/iTunes/
Spotify/Qobuz/Tidal workers. Backfills artist thumbnails from album cover
stand-ins (T2Tunes exposes no direct artist images).
- core/amazon_worker.py: new AmazonWorker class with full parity
- database/music_database.py: expand _add_amazon_columns to cover
amazon_id/amazon_match_status/amazon_last_attempted on artists,
albums, and tracks (was artists-only)
- web_server.py: import, init, register in enrichment panel, add to
scan pause/resume dicts and rate monitor key map
- helper.js: WHATS_NEW 2.5.3 entry for enrichment worker
AcoustID verification was quarantining every Amazon track because T2Tunes
embeds [Explicit] and [feat. X] in stream tag titles/artists, but AcoustID
returns bare titles — triggering version-mismatch rejection on every track.
- get_track_details: apply _strip_edition to name/album, _primary_artist to
artist; wire s.track_number / s.disc_number instead of hardcoded None
- get_album_tracks: apply _strip_edition to name, _primary_artist to artist
Also fix TypeError crash in album download paths when disc_number is None
(present in dict but explicitly None, so .get('disc_number', 1) returns None):
- master.py run_full_missing_tracks_process: or 1 guard on both max() and disc_num
- candidates.py track_info extraction: or 1 guard on both disc_number reads
- web_server.py enhanced + standard album download max() calls: or 1 guard
- All search_raw calls switched from single-type to types="track,album" — T2Tunes only
returns results when both types are requested together
- _fetch_album_metas: parallel fetch (up to 5 workers) of album cover art via
album_metadata(asin) — T2Tunes search results carry no image URLs
- search_tracks: populates image_url, release_date, total_tracks from album meta
- search_artists: strips feat. credits via _primary_artist() so "Artist feat. X" and
"Artist ft. Y" collapse to one "Artist" entry; uses album cover as artist image
stand-in (same approach as iTunes — T2Tunes has no artist images)
- search_albums: name-based dedup (display_name + artist key) instead of ASIN-based;
populates image_url, release_date, total_tracks from album meta (cap 10 ASIN fetches)
- _strip_edition(): strips [Explicit]/(Explicit) from track/album names — explicit is
the default version; Clean/Edited/Censored labels kept as-is so they stay distinct
- get_album(): applies _strip_edition to name and _primary_artist to artist so
MusicBrainz preflight matching doesn't fail on "[Explicit]" album names
- get_album_tracks(): populates track_number and disc_number from T2TunesStreamInfo
instead of hardcoding None — fixes track ordering in multi-track album downloads
- get_artist() / get_artist_albums(): _unslugify() converts slug artist IDs back to
search names; _primary_artist() in comparison handles feat-annotated results
- SOURCE_ONLY_ARTIST_SOURCES: added "amazon" so artist detail page doesn't 404
- build_source_only_artist_detail: added amazon_client param + dispatch branch
- web_server.py: resolve amazon_client in _build_source_only_artist_detail wrapper;
add source_override=="amazon" branch in get_spotify_album_tracks endpoint
- 77 tests covering all above paths; all pass
- Add 'amazon' to VALID_SOURCES (and transitively VALID_STREAM_SOURCES)
in core/search/orchestrator.py so the backend accepts it as a
requested source without returning 400
- Add resolve_client('amazon') case — mirrors musicbrainz pattern,
gets the cached AmazonClient from the metadata registry
- Add 'amazon' to _alternate_sources() so it appears as a tab when
another source is primary (always available, no credentials)
- Add SERVICE_CONFIG_REGISTRY entry 'amazon': {'always': True} so
/api/settings/config-status reports it as configured
- Add SOURCE_LABELS['amazon'] and SOURCE_ORDER entry in
shared-helpers.js so both enhanced search and global search show
the Amazon Music tab
- Add 'amazon' to _ALWAYS_CONFIGURED_SOURCES so the picker never
dims the tab (no credentials required)
- Add .enh-tab-amazon.active CSS (Amazon orange #FF9900)
- 3530 tests pass
`validation.py` had amazon absent from `_streaming_sources`, causing
Amazon TrackResult objects (bitrate=None, size=0) to fall through to
the Soulseek P2P code path and get rejected by
`filter_results_by_quality_preference`. Every album track was marked
not found.
Fix: add 'amazon' to every streaming-source guard tuple/set that was
previously missing it:
- core/downloads/validation.py — primary bug fix (quality-filter bypass)
- core/downloads/status.py — _STREAMING_SOURCE_NAMES frozenset
- core/downloads/task_worker.py — hybrid fallback client map
- core/imports/side_effects.py — || filename→stream-id extraction
- web_server.py — is_streaming_source, transfer list display,
candidate source label, _try_source_reuse, _store_batch_source
- tests/test_download_plugin_conformance.py — registry count + parametrize
Also updates the 2.5.3 What's New entry to drop the stale
"not yet wired" disclaimer.
Follows the exact same standard as Tidal, Qobuz, HiFi, and Deezer.
registry.py — import + register AmazonDownloadClient as 'amazon'.
amazon_download_client.py — read amazon_download.quality / allow_fallback
from config on init; pass quality as preferred_codec to AmazonClient;
_download_sync codec waterfall respects allow_fallback flag.
download_orchestrator.py — reload_settings() updates preferred_codec +
allow_fallback on the live client after a settings save. 'amazon' added
to _streaming_sources so search_and_download_best routes it correctly.
api_call_tracker.py — 'amazon' registered in RATE_LIMITS (120/min),
SERVICE_LABELS, and SERVICE_ORDER so API call monitoring shows Amazon.
web_server.py — 'amazon_download' added to the settings service loop.
'amazon' added to serverless_sources (no slskd probe needed). Streaming
file-finder extended to handle amazon username + ||asin||title encoding
(extension-less fuzzy match, same as Tidal/Qobuz/HiFi). New endpoint:
GET /api/amazon/test-connection → checks T2Tunes proxy status.
webui/index.html — amazon-download-settings-container: quality dropdown
(flac/opus/eac3), allow-fallback checkbox, test-connection button.
webui/static/settings.js — 'Amazon Music' added to HYBRID_SOURCES,
_hybridSourceEnabled, allSources mode list, loadSettings(), saveSettings()
payload, updateDownloadSourceUI() show/hide + auto-test. New
testAmazonConnection() function.
Reproduced on the personalized playlist pipeline: selecting Fresh Tape
(or any kind) and running the automation surfaced
"Working outside of application context" in the UI.
Root cause: `get_current_profile_id` reads Flask's `g.profile_id` and
only catches `AttributeError`. Outside a request — automation engine,
sync threads, watchlist scanner — `g` raises `RuntimeError` instead,
so the except misses and the handler dies.
Mirrored playlist pipeline never hit this because it hardcodes
profile_id=1 in its sync call. The personalized pipeline calls
`deps.get_current_profile_id()` from a background thread, which is
what tripped the bug. Fresh Tape's generator also resolves the
profile via the same function — same path, same crash.
Fix: broaden the except to `(AttributeError, RuntimeError)` in all
three copies of the helper (`web_server.py`, `core/artists/map.py`,
`core/discovery/hero.py`). All three now safely degrade to profile_id=1
(admin profile) when called outside a request context — matches the
existing intent that single-admin installs Just Work.
No test changes — the existing pipeline tests stub the helper, so
they never exercised the bug. The fix is in the layer above the
stubs.
The action was registered + the block declared, but the automation
builder's per-action config renderer didn't have a case for
`personalized_pipeline` so users only saw the bare card with the
generic delay-minutes input — no way to select which playlists to
sync. This commit adds the multi-select picker.
Backend:
- `core/personalized/api.list_kinds(manager=...)` now optionally
takes a manager and includes the resolved variant list per kind
(calls each spec's variant_resolver(deps) when present). Singleton
kinds get an empty `variants` list. Variant-bearing kinds
(time_machine / genre_playlist / daily_mix / seasonal_mix) get
their full enumerated set.
- `web_server.py` `/api/personalized/kinds` route now passes a built
manager so the variants list lands in the response.
Frontend:
- `webui/static/stats-automations.js` `_renderBlockConfigFields`
gains a `personalized_pipeline` branch that renders a scrollable
multi-select picker:
- Singletons (Hidden Gems, Discovery Shuffle, Popular Picks,
Fresh Tape, The Archives) = one checkbox row per kind
- Variant kinds = a section header + one checkbox row per variant
(e.g. Time Machine: 1960s/1970s/.../2020s; Seasonal: halloween/
christmas/valentines/summer/spring/autumn)
- Pre-checks rows that match the existing `kinds` config on edit
- New `_autoLoadPersonalizedKinds(slotKey)` fetches `/api/personalized/kinds`
(cached after first load), renders the picker DOM, and pre-checks
saved selections via `data-kind` / `data-variant` attributes on
the checkboxes.
- `_renderBuilderCanvas` calls the loader for any `cfg-*-kinds-picker`
it finds in the freshly-rendered slots.
- The save-time `_collectActionConfig` walks the picker's checked
inputs (matched by `data-kind` attribute) and emits
`{kinds: [{kind, variant?}, ...], refresh_first, skip_wishlist}`
in the same shape the handler expects.
Tests:
- `tests/automation/test_automation_blocks.py::_FIELD_TYPES` adds
'personalized_playlist_select' so the block-shape regression test
accepts the new field type. (Test was failing because it whitelists
every field type used across all blocks.)
- 189 automation + personalized API tests pass; full suite intact.
Follow-up to the personalized-playlists standardization PR. New
`personalized_pipeline` automation action syncs selected discover-
page playlists (Hidden Gems / Discovery Shuffle / Time Machine /
Genre / Daily Mix / Fresh Tape / The Archives / Seasonal Mix) to
the active media server + queues missing tracks for download.
Same pattern as the existing mirrored `playlist_pipeline` but two
phases instead of four — no REFRESH (no external source to re-pull)
and no DISCOVER (manager-backed snapshots are already metadata-
matched). Pipeline shape:
SNAPSHOT → SYNC → WISHLIST
Where SNAPSHOT either reads the persisted track list from
`PersonalizedPlaylistManager` (default) or refreshes it first when
`refresh_first=true` (cron use case: regenerate Hidden Gems nightly
and sync the fresh set).
Shared helper extraction:
PHASE 3 (SYNC loop) + PHASE 4 (WISHLIST tail) lifted out of mirrored
`playlist_pipeline` into `core/automation/handlers/_pipeline_shared.py`
as `run_sync_and_wishlist(deps, automation_id, playlists, sync_one_fn,
sync_id_for_fn, ...)`. Both pipelines call it. Mirrored injects
`auto_sync_playlist` as the per-playlist sync function; personalized
injects a thin wrapper that launches `_run_sync_task` directly with
a pre-built tracks_json. Same sync-state polling / progress emission
/ status counting / wishlist trigger logic — 0 duplication.
Files added:
- core/automation/handlers/_pipeline_shared.py
- core/automation/handlers/personalized_pipeline.py
- tests/automation/test_handlers_personalized_pipeline.py
Files changed:
- core/automation/handlers/playlist_pipeline.py: PHASE 3+4 replaced
with shared helper call (~100 lines deleted, 1 helper invocation
added; behavior identical).
- core/automation/deps.py: new `build_personalized_manager` field
(lazy builder so the pipeline gets a fresh PersonalizedPlaylistManager
per run).
- core/automation/handlers/__init__.py + registration.py: register
`personalized_pipeline` action with the shared `pipeline_running`
guard so it can't overlap mirrored.
- core/automation/blocks.py: new `personalized_pipeline` block
declaration with config_fields (kinds multi-select, refresh_first,
skip_wishlist).
- web_server.py: thread `_build_personalized_manager` into
AutomationDeps construction.
- All 5 automation test fixtures: `_build_deps` adds
`build_personalized_manager=lambda: None` stub.
- tests/automation/test_handler_registration.py:
EXPECTED_ACTION_NAMES + EXPECTED_GUARDED_ACTIONS gain
`personalized_pipeline`.
Trigger schema:
{
"_automation_id": "...",
"kinds": [
{"kind": "hidden_gems"},
{"kind": "time_machine", "variant": "1980s"},
{"kind": "seasonal_mix", "variant": "halloween"}
],
"refresh_first": false,
"skip_wishlist": false
}
Tests (14 new, 178 automation total):
- _track_to_sync_shape: basic shape, source ID fallback chain,
no-id returns empty string
- empty config / non-list kinds / empty kinds list all return
error + clear pipeline_running flag
- _build_payloads_for_kinds: skips invalid entries, skips kinds
with no tracks, refresh_first vs ensure dispatch, payload shape
+ sync_id format, manager exception swallowed continues
- _sync_personalized_playlist: launches background thread + returns
status='started'
- happy path: stubbed sync_states drives helper to completion, flag
cleaned up
Full suite: 3383 passed.
Note: the trigger UI block declares config_fields but the frontend
doesn't yet render the `personalized_playlist_select` multi-select
type — usable today via API; polished UI ships in a follow-up
frontend PR.
Wraps the manager + generator dispatch behind one HTTP surface so
the UI can drop the patchwork `/api/discover/personalized/*` calls
in favor of a single REST shape. Legacy endpoints stay alive for
backward compat during the UI migration window.
New endpoints:
- GET /api/personalized/kinds — list every registered kind + metadata
- GET /api/personalized/playlists — list every persisted playlist for the active profile
- GET /api/personalized/playlist/<kind> — fetch singleton + tracks
- GET /api/personalized/playlist/<kind>/<variant> — fetch variant + tracks
- POST /api/personalized/playlist/<kind>/refresh — regenerate singleton
- POST /api/personalized/playlist/<kind>/<variant>/refresh — regenerate variant
- PUT /api/personalized/playlist/<kind>/config — patch singleton config
- PUT /api/personalized/playlist/<kind>/<variant>/config — patch variant config
Per-call manager construction wires the deps each generator needs:
- database (MusicDatabase singleton)
- service (PersonalizedPlaylistsService for legacy generator calls)
- seasonal_service (SeasonalDiscoveryService for seasonal_mix)
- get_current_profile_id (active profile accessor)
- get_active_discovery_source (source dispatcher)
API handlers themselves live as pure functions in
`core/personalized/api.py` so they're testable without Flask. The
Flask layer in `web_server.py` is a thin parse-body / call-handler /
jsonify wrapper.
11 new boundary tests (122 personalized total):
- list_kinds enumerates registry, exposes default config + tags
- list_playlists returns empty list when none exist, serializes
PlaylistRecord shape correctly
- get_playlist_with_tracks auto-creates on first access, returns
persisted tracks, raises ValueError on unknown kind
- refresh_playlist runs generator and returns track snapshot,
forwards config_overrides to the generator
- update_config patches stored config
3365 tests pass total. Manager construction triggers generator
registration via `from core.personalized import generators` import
side-effect.
Cleans up the four remaining inline callbacks at the bottom of
`web_server._register_automation_handlers` so the function is now
purely deps-construction + register_all + a logger.info line.
Lifted:
- `_progress_init`, `_progress_finish`, `_record_automation_history`,
and `_on_library_scan_completed` -> core/automation/handlers/progress_callbacks.py
Each is a top-level function that takes deps as a parameter; the
engine sees thin lambdas through `register_progress_callbacks` /
`register_library_scan_completed_emitter` (called from `register_all`).
Two new deps fields:
- `init_automation_progress` (delegates into the live progress tracker)
- `record_progress_history` (delegates into _auto_progress.record_history)
12 new boundary tests in tests/automation/test_progress_callbacks.py
pin every shape:
- progress_init forwards to init_automation_progress
- progress_finish skips when handler manages its own progress
(prevents double-emit of finished status)
- progress_finish: completed -> finished/Complete/success;
error -> error/Error/error; msg falls through error -> reason ->
status -> 'done'
- record_history threads the live db into the recorder
- on_library_scan_completed: no engine = noop, server type taken
from web_scan_manager._current_server_type, defaults to 'unknown'
- register_library_scan_completed_emitter: no scan manager = noop,
registered callback emits the right event when invoked
3256 tests pass, no regression.
Final state of `_register_automation_handlers`:
- Was: 1530 lines, 21 nested closures + 4 progress callbacks
- Now: ~50 lines, builds AutomationDeps and calls register_all
web_server.py: 34,220 -> 34,187 lines (-33 net, -1,406 across the
whole branch).
Final commit of the automation-handler refactor. With this commit
every closure that used to live in
`web_server._register_automation_handlers` is now a top-level
function in `core/automation/handlers/`.
Handlers extracted in this commit:
- start_database_update + deep_scan_library
-> core/automation/handlers/database_update.py
Both share the db_update_state monitoring pattern (poll until
status flips, stall detection emits warning at 10 min, 2-hour
outer timeout). Lifted into a shared `_run_with_progress` helper
inside the module so the per-handler bodies stay tiny.
- run_duplicate_cleaner -> core/automation/handlers/duplicate_cleaner.py
- start_quality_scan -> core/automation/handlers/quality_scanner.py
- clear_quarantine, cleanup_wishlist, update_discovery_pool,
backup_database, refresh_beatport_cache
-> core/automation/handlers/maintenance.py
Grouped because each body is short (~20-50 lines) and they share
no state — splitting into per-handler files would just add import
noise.
- clean_search_history, clean_completed_downloads, full_cleanup
-> core/automation/handlers/download_cleanup.py
Grouped because all three reach the download orchestrator,
tasks_lock, and download_batches/download_tasks accessors. The
full_cleanup multi-step orchestration shares phase-detection
logic with clean_completed_downloads.
- run_script -> core/automation/handlers/run_script.py
- search_and_download -> core/automation/handlers/search_and_download.py
`AutomationDeps` grew with the new dependency surface:
- get_db_update_state + db_update_lock + db_update_executor +
run_db_update_task + run_deep_scan_task
- get_duplicate_cleaner_state + duplicate_cleaner_lock +
duplicate_cleaner_executor + run_duplicate_cleaner
- get_quality_scanner_state + quality_scanner_lock +
quality_scanner_executor + run_quality_scanner
- download_orchestrator + run_async + tasks_lock +
get_download_batches + get_download_tasks +
sweep_empty_download_directories + get_staging_path
- docker_resolve_path + get_current_profile_id +
get_watchlist_scanner + get_app + get_beatport_data_cache
- set_db_update_automation_id (writes the legacy global so the live
DB-update progress callbacks still living in web_server.py keep
emitting against the active automation card)
`web_server._register_automation_handlers` is now ~50 lines: build
deps once, call register_all. The 667-line block of remaining
closure definitions and engine register calls is gone.
The final orphan was the `_db_update_automation_id` module global —
the DB-update progress callbacks at line ~14080 still read it
directly, so the extracted database_update handler propagates the
automation id through `deps.set_db_update_automation_id` (a closure
in web_server that writes the global). When the legacy callbacks
get extracted in a future PR the setter goes away.
Tests:
- tests/automation/test_handlers_maintenance.py adds 21 boundary
tests covering every newly-extracted handler shape: guard
short-circuits (already-running returns skipped), deps wiring
(set_db_update_automation_id called with the right id),
exception swallow contract, status returns, path-traversal
blocked in run_script, source-mode skip in clean_search_history,
active-batch skip in clean_completed_downloads, etc.
- 3244 tests pass (was 3223 — 21 new), no regression.
web_server.py: 35,593 -> 34,220 lines (-1,373 net across 3 commits).
Issue #1 from the extraction punch list is now COMPLETE.
Continues the lift from `web_server._register_automation_handlers`.
This commit extracts the four playlist-lifecycle closures:
- `refresh_mirrored` -> core/automation/handlers/refresh_mirrored.py
- `sync_playlist` -> core/automation/handlers/sync_playlist.py
- `discover_playlist` -> core/automation/handlers/discover_playlist.py
- `playlist_pipeline` -> core/automation/handlers/playlist_pipeline.py
The pipeline composes refresh + sync + discover, so all four ship
together. The pipeline imports the other three handler modules
directly (cross-handler call) instead of going through the engine,
preserving the "single trigger from the user's perspective" UX.
`AutomationDeps` grew to cover the new dependency surface:
- run_playlist_discovery_worker, run_sync_task, load_sync_status_file
(pre-existing background-task entry points)
- get_deezer_client, parse_youtube_playlist (per-source clients)
- get_sync_states (live mutable accessor for the sync UI's state dict)
`web_server._register_automation_handlers` now wires those plus the
existing infrastructure into a single `AutomationDeps` and calls
`register_all`. The 669-line block of closure definitions and engine
register calls (lines 959-1627 pre-edit) is gone -- the file shed
743 lines net on this commit.
`tests/automation/test_handlers_playlist.py` adds 17 new boundary
tests:
- discover_playlist: no_id error, specific_id starts worker, all=True
enumerates, no playlists in db
- refresh_mirrored: error path, source filter (file/beatport excluded),
Spotify happy path with auto-discovered marker, per-playlist
exception captured into errors counter
- sync_playlist: no_id, not_found, no_tracks, no-discovered-tracks
skip, discovered-track happy path, unchanged-since-last-sync skip
- playlist_pipeline: no_playlist clears running flag, no-refreshable
clears running flag, exception clears running flag
3223 tests pass. web_server.py: 35,593 -> 34,850 lines (743 removed).
Begins the lift of `web_server._register_automation_handlers` (1530
lines, 20 nested closures) into `core/automation/handlers/`. Each
extracted handler is a top-level function that accepts
`(config, deps)` instead of reaching for module-level globals --
makes them unit-testable in isolation.
Infrastructure:
- `core/automation/deps.py`: `AutomationDeps` (dependency-injection
bundle of clients + callables) and `AutomationState` (mutable flags
shared across handler invocations, with thread-safe accessors).
- `core/automation/handlers/__init__.py` + `registration.py`: one-stop
`register_all(deps)` that wires every extracted handler to the
engine.
First batch of handlers extracted:
- `process_wishlist` -> `core/automation/handlers/process_wishlist.py`
- `scan_watchlist` -> `core/automation/handlers/scan_watchlist.py`
- `scan_library` -> `core/automation/handlers/scan_library.py`
`web_server._register_automation_handlers` now builds the deps once
and calls `register_all(deps)` for the extracted batch. Remaining
17 closures still live below; subsequent commits in this branch
finish the lift.
14 boundary tests in `tests/automation/test_handlers_simple.py` pin
every shape: success path, exception swallow contract, fresh-vs-stale
state detection (scan_watchlist's id() trick), guard short-circuits,
state cleanup on exceptions, AutomationState concurrent-safe accessors.
All 101 automation tests pass; no regression.
The first token-leak fix scrubbed the artwork URL fixer's own log
calls. This catches three more sites that ALSO leaked tokens, plus
one upstream gap that let URL-encoded tokens slip through the
redactor.
Three sites in `web_server.py` (artist endpoint at line 8765-8773):
- "Artist image before fix: '...'" -- logged the raw image_url with
the auth token in plain form.
- "Artist image after fix: '...'" -- logged the URL-encoded form
after it had been wrapped in the image proxy
(`/api/image-proxy?url=<percent-encoded-token>`).
- "Final artist data being sent: {...}" -- dumped the entire
artist_info dict on every render, including the image_url field.
All three were dev-time debug noise. Removed entirely. The "No
artist image URL found" warning at line 8770 stays (no URL, just
the artist name).
One site in `core/discovery/sync.py:402`:
- "[PLAYLIST IMAGE] image_url=..." -- logged the playlist poster URL
during sync. Same auth-token leak risk for Plex / Jellyfin
playlists. Changed to log only `has_image=True/False`.
Upstream gap in `_redact_url_secrets`:
- The original regex only matched plain query params (`?key=value`).
When an auth-bearing URL gets wrapped inside another URL's query
string (our `/api/image-proxy?url=<encoded>` flow) the auth params
end up percent-encoded -- `%3FX-Plex-Token%3D...` -- and slipped
through.
- New second pattern catches the URL-encoded form. Both passes run
on every redact call; idempotent.
Verified manually:
/api/image-proxy?url=...%3FX-Plex-Token%3DABC...
-> /api/image-proxy?url=...%3FX-Plex-Token%3D***REDACTED***
6 artwork tests pass.
Adds an opt-in alternative metadata source for reorganize. The
existing API path (query Spotify / iTunes / Deezer / Discogs /
Hydrabase for the canonical tracklist) stays the default and is
unchanged. The new tag mode reads each file's embedded tags as the
source of truth instead -- useful for well-enriched libraries where
API drift can produce inconsistent renames, and avoids API calls
entirely.
- New pure helper `core/library/reorganize_tag_source.py` adapts the
output of `read_embedded_tags` (the same mutagen path the audit-
trail modal uses) to the `api_album` / `api_track` shapes that
`_build_post_process_context` already consumes. Handles ID3-style
"5/12" track + disc shapes, multi-value Artists tags, year
normalization across 5 date formats, releasetype canonical tokens,
multi-artist string splits across 9 separators.
- `plan_album_reorganize` accepts `metadata_source: 'api' | 'tags'`
(default 'api') and `resolve_file_path_fn`. Tag mode branches into
a new `_plan_from_tags` that reads each track's file and produces
per-item `api_album` + `api_track` instead of a shared one.
- `_run_post_process_for_track` accepts a per-item `api_album`
override so each file's own album metadata flows through post-
process (not a single shared dict).
- `total_discs` in tag mode honors the `totaldiscs` tag and the
trailing `/N` of an ID3 `discnumber = "1/2"`. Partial-album
reorganize still routes into the correct `Disc N/` subfolder when
the tag knows the total even if not all discs are present locally.
- Bare `discnumber = "1"` no longer poisons `total_discs` -- it
carries no total signal.
- `reorganize_album` surfaces a tag-mode-specific error when no
files are readable, instead of the API-mode "run enrichment first"
message which would mislead in tag mode.
- `QueueItem.metadata_source` field, `enqueue` / `enqueue_many`
pass-through, runner injects `item.metadata_source` into
`reorganize_album`.
- `web_server.py` endpoints accept `mode` body param. Falls back to
the `library.reorganize_metadata_source` config setting, then to
'api'. Strict allowlist (api / tags) -- anything else falls back.
- Frontend: per-album modal + reorganize-all modal both grow a new
"Metadata Mode" dropdown above the source picker. Tag mode hides
the source picker (irrelevant). Choice persisted in localStorage.
Both preview + execute fetches send `mode` in body.
Tests:
- 49 boundary tests on the pure helper pin every shape: ID3 "5/12",
multi-artist split, year normalization, releasetype validation,
total_discs precedence, defensive paths.
- 6 planner-level integration tests pin the wiring: tag-mode with
good tags, partial-disc with totaldiscs tag, file missing,
some-match-some-fail, defensive resolve_file_path_fn=None,
API-mode regression guard.
- All 3171 tests pass; 52 existing reorganize tests unchanged.
Discord report (netti93). The download flow runs `enhance_file_metadata`
(clears all tags) then `generate_lrc_file` (writes .lrc sidecar AND
embeds USLT). The retag flow only ran the first half — `enhance_file_metadata`
cleared USLT and there was no follow-up to restore it.
Two coordinated fixes (no new setting per kettui scope discipline —
user described it as "might even be an idea," consistency was the
load-bearing ask).
Fix 1 — retag calls generate_lrc_file after enhance
`core/library/retag.py:execute_retag` now invokes
`deps.generate_lrc_file` right after the `enhance_file_metadata`
call, mirroring the download pipeline. New `generate_lrc_file`
field on `RetagDeps`, defaults to None for backward compat with
any test caller that builds RetagDeps without it. Web_server's
`_build_retag_deps()` factory wires in the real
`core.metadata.lyrics.generate_lrc_file`.
Placement matters — runs BEFORE `safe_move_file` so the helper
sees the audio file at its current path with its existing sidecar
(which retag hasn't moved yet). After the embed, the audio file
gets moved with USLT now present; the sidecar move step that
follows is unaffected.
Fix 2 — create_lrc_file re-embeds from existing sidecar
`core/lyrics_client.py:create_lrc_file` used to early-return True
when an .lrc / .txt sidecar already existed (skipping the LRClib
fetch). For the retag case the sidecar is already there, so the
shortcut hit and USLT was never re-written. Now the helper reads
the existing sidecar and calls `_embed_lyrics` with its content
before returning. Empty / unreadable sidecars short-circuit
silently — defensive, no crash. Download flow unaffected because
no sidecar exists at fetch time.
7 boundary tests pin: existing .lrc triggers re-embed, existing
.txt triggers re-embed, empty sidecar skips embed, unreadable
sidecar swallows error, no sidecar falls through to LRClib (download
path regression guard), RetagDeps.generate_lrc_file field accepted,
field optional for backward compat.
Full suite: 3120 passed.
Closes#585. When a Spotify source track had a versioned suffix not
present in the local file ("Iron Man - 2012 - Remaster" vs "Iron Man"),
the auto-matcher missed the pair. User could click Find & Add to pick
the right local file — that worked, file got added to the Plex
playlist — but the source track stayed in Missing while the added
file appeared in Extra, because the matcher kept no record of the
user-confirmed pairing. On the next sync the source track re-tried
to download.
Fix: every Find & Add selection now writes a (spotify_track_id →
server_track_id) override into sync_match_cache at confidence=1.0.
The matching algorithm runs an override pass BEFORE the existing
exact and fuzzy passes, so any user-confirmed pair short-circuits
straight to "matched" without going through title normalization.
Covers every mismatch class — dash-suffix remasters, covers /
karaoke, alt masters, cross-language titles, typo'd local files.
- core/sync/match_overrides.py (new) — pure helpers
resolve_match_overrides + record_manual_match. 18 boundary tests
pin: cache hits, cache misses falling through to normal matching,
stale-cache (server track removed) handled gracefully, str/int
id coercion, partial cache hits, defensive against non-dict
inputs and DB exceptions.
- web_server.py — get_server_playlist_tracks runs the override
pre-pass before exact/fuzzy matching. server_playlist_add_track
accepts source_track_id + source_title + source_artist and
persists the override after every successful add (Plex / Jellyfin
/ Navidrome). source_track_id added to source_tracks payload so
the frontend has it.
- webui/static/pages-extra.js — _serverSelectTrack sends
source_track_id + source_title + source_artist when adding a
track from a mirrored playlist context.
- Sync match cache schema unchanged — already had UNIQUE
(spotify_track_id, server_source) which fits the override
semantics perfectly. Manual overrides distinguished from
auto-discovered matches by confidence=1.0.
Full suite: 3010 passed.
Closes#584. Quarantined files used to sit in ss_quarantine/ with a
thin sidecar — no UI, no recovery, no way to see what got dropped.
This adds the management surface the user needs without going to the
filesystem.
UI: new "Quarantine" button on the downloads page header opens a
modal with every quarantined file (filename, expected track/artist,
reason, when, size). Three actions per row:
- Approve (one-click): restores the file, re-runs the post-process
pipeline with ONLY the failing check skipped, lands in the library
with full tags + lyrics + scan
- Recover (legacy fallback): moves to Staging for thin-sidecar
entries that lack the embedded context Approve needs
- Delete: permanent removal of file + sidecar
Per-check bypass: context['_skip_quarantine_check'] = 'integrity' /
'acoustid' / 'bit_depth'. Skips ONLY the named check — other quality
gates stay live. No blanket bypass-all flag.
Sidecar expansion: move_to_quarantine now persists the full
json-serializable context via serialize_quarantine_context (drops
non-JSON-safe values, walks nested dicts/lists/sets, str-coerces
unknown objects) plus the trigger name. Existing thin sidecars are
detected and routed to Recover instead of Approve.
Pure helpers in core/imports/quarantine.py: list_quarantine_entries
/ delete_quarantine_entry / approve_quarantine_entry /
recover_to_staging / serialize_quarantine_context. 27 tests pin
every shape: orphan files / orphan sidecars / corrupt sidecars /
collision-safe filename restoration / full-context vs thin-sidecar
dispatch / json round-trip safety.
Four new endpoints in web_server.py — thin glue around the helpers:
GET /api/quarantine/list, DELETE /api/quarantine/<id>,
POST /api/quarantine/<id>/approve, POST /api/quarantine/<id>/recover.
Download modal status differentiates "🛡️ Quarantined" from
"❌ Failed" so recoverable files are visible at a glance — checked
against the error_message text, no schema change needed.
Pipeline changes are three minimal per-check conditionals at the
existing quarantine sites in core/imports/pipeline.py. Each
move_to_quarantine call now passes its trigger name so the sidecar
records which check fired.
Full suite: 2992 passed.
Move the remaining manual import endpoint logic out of web_server.py and into core.imports.routes behind ImportRouteRuntime. The Flask endpoints now stay as thin compatibility wrappers for album/track search, album match/process, single-file import processing, and batched singles processing.
Keep legacy test patch points intact by re-exporting build_album_import_match_payload from web_server and routing singles_process through an injected process_single_import_file callable. This preserves existing route-level monkeypatch behavior while keeping the extracted helper testable.
Add focused helper coverage for Hydrabase enqueueing, search limit clamping, album match payload forwarding, album import side effects, single-file worker outcomes, malformed manual matches, and singles aggregation/injected-worker behavior.
Verification: py_compile and git diff --check passed locally; bundled-Python smoke covered the extracted helpers. Claude reran the project tests and reported all tests passing.
Move import staging files/groups/hints/suggestions controller logic out of web_server.py and into core.imports.routes behind an ImportRouteRuntime dependency object. Keep the existing Flask routes as thin compatibility wrappers so the UI endpoint surface stays unchanged.
Add focused tests for staging file filtering, album grouping, hint generation, cached suggestions, empty missing staging paths, and error payloads from failed path/metadata reads.
Verification: py_compile passed for web_server.py, core/imports/routes.py, and tests/imports/test_import_routes.py. A bundled-Python smoke pass covered the extracted helper behavior; pytest was not available in this Windows shell because the bundled Python lacks pytest and the repo venv is WSL/Linux-only here.
Discord report: prolific artists (Bach, Beatles complete box,
deep dance/electronic catalogues) only showed ~50 entries in the
"Download Discography" modal.
`MetadataLookupOptions(limit=50, max_pages=0)` was hardcoded at
three call sites. Spotify's `max_pages=0` already paginates
through everything (per-page is clamped to 10 internally), so
Spotify-primary users were unaffected. But Deezer / iTunes /
Discogs / Hydrabase all honor the outer `limit` as a hard cap,
so non-Spotify users were silently clipped.
Bump `limit` to 200 at all three call sites — matches iTunes's
and Discogs's own internal caps and covers near-everyone's full
catalogue. Spotify behavior unchanged.
- web_server.py:9221 — discography endpoint (modal)
- web_server.py:8700 — artist-detail discography view
- core/artist_source_detail.py:129 — source-specific artist detail
- Replace the shell convenience script with a cross-platform Python launcher.
- Keep dev.sh as a Unix compatibility wrapper.
- Let the direct backend bind with host and port overrides.
- Update the root and webui README guidance for the new launcher.
- Preserve the backend startup behavior used by the old dev flow.
- Drop unused _resolve_webui_initial_* helpers from web_server.py.
- Remove template-side initial_nav_page and initial_client_page conditionals.
- Keep Vite asset injection and runtime page activation in the client.
Remove the Flask route-to-page helpers and stop passing initial active-page flags into the shell template.
The web UI now renders static page and nav markup, while the client-side shell remains responsible for establishing active page state after load. This keeps the hybrid Flask + Vite asset setup intact while reducing duplicated route/page ownership logic in the backend template layer.
Also added a previously missing /stream path to the spa exclusions
- File-based routing with tanstack router
- Persist top-level navigation state in url, even for most legacy pages
- Striving for an intuitive and simple folder structure where
route-related code is colocated, but the amount of files is still
kept to a minimum
- Replace native fetch with `ky`
- Familiar api, but more polished
Closes#572 (rhwc).
Navidrome has no API for setting an artist image — it reads
`artist.jpg` (or `folder.jpg`) from the artist folder during
library scans. SoulSync's `update_artist_poster` for Navidrome
was a no-op, so users only ever saw album-art-derived thumbnails
as the artist photo.
- new "Write Artist Image" button on artist detail page
- POST /api/artist/<id>/write-image-to-disk derives the artist
folder from any track's resolved file_path (reuses
_resolve_library_file_path so docker mount translation +
library.music_paths probes from #558 apply), fetches the photo
from the configured metadata source priority chain, downloads
with content-type validation, writes atomically via
`<filename>.tmp + os.replace`
- when active server is Navidrome, triggers a library scan
immediately so the file is picked up
- respects existing artist.jpg (frontend prompts before
overwriting) so user-supplied photos aren't clobbered
- works for plex / jellyfin too as a fallback layer — both
servers also read artist.jpg from disk
26 tests pin the pure helpers in core/library/artist_image.py:
folder derivation (trailing sep / empty / non-string), URL
picking (missing attr / whitespace / non-string), download
(non-image content-type / 404 / timeout / empty body), atomic
write (replace / temp-cleanup-on-failure / overwrite guard /
missing folder).
- new "Audit" button on each download row in the library history
modal opens a second modal visualizing the download lifecycle as
an interactive horizontal stepper (request → source → match →
verify → process → place) with click-to-expand detail cards
- hero header with album art + track title + meta line + status
pills (source / quality / acoustid result)
- three tabs: Lifecycle / Tags / Lyrics
- Tags tab reads the audio file live via mutagen at audit-open
time via new GET /api/library/history/<id>/file-tags endpoint;
file is the single source of truth so background enrichment
writes (audiodb / lastfm / genius / replaygain / lyrics fetch)
show up too. flat key/value rows stacked vertically (label-above-
value) so long MBIDs / URLs / joined genre lists wrap cleanly.
source IDs grouped per-service into 2-col sub-card grid.
- Lyrics tab renders the full transcript with dimmed timecodes.
- post-processing step infers observable changes from source-vs-
final state (format conversion, file rename via tag template,
folder template).
- "Download History" button also added to the Downloads page batch
panel header so it's reachable outside the dashboard.
- mobile responsive: tabs + stepper scroll horizontally, modal
goes full-screen, hero stacks below 480px.
19 helper tests pin the mutagen reader: id3 (TIT2/TPE1/TALB + TXXX
+ USLT + APIC), vorbis (FLAC dict + _id/_url passthrough), file
metadata (format / bitrate / duration), defensive paths (empty /
missing file / mutagen returns None / mutagen raises), stringify
edge cases (list / tuple / int / frame-with-text / whitespace).
- new track_already_owned helper wraps db.check_track_exists at
the same confidence threshold the discography backfill repair job
uses (0.7) — name+artist+album, format-agnostic so blasphemy-mode
libraries (flac → mp3 + delete original) match correctly
- endpoint runs the check after the artist + content-type filters and
before add_to_wishlist, so a second discography click on the same
artist no longer re-queues every track that already downloaded
- per-album response carries a new tracks_skipped_owned counter
alongside the existing artist/content/wishlist skip categories
Discord report (Skowl).
- drop tracks where the requested artist isn't named in track.artists
(keeps features, drops compilation / appears_on contamination)
- honor watchlist.global_include_live/remixes/acoustic/instrumentals
the same way the discography backfill repair job already does
- surface per-album skip counts in the ndjson stream (artist mismatch
+ content filter) so the ui can show what was filtered
Closes#559.
Reported: Clear History button on the Import page left zombie rows
behind. Every survivor showed "⧗ Processing" status from 2-9 days ago.
Trace: `_record_in_progress` inserts a `status='processing'` row up-front
so the UI can render the in-flight import while it runs; `_finalize_result`
updates it to `completed`/`failed` when the import finishes. When the
worker is killed mid-import (server restart, crash), the row never gets
finalized — stays at `processing` forever. The clear-history endpoint's
SQL `DELETE ... WHERE status IN (...)` listed every terminal status but
omitted `processing`, so zombies survived every click.
Fix: add `processing` to the delete list, but guard against nuking
genuinely-live imports by intersecting against the worker's
`_snapshot_active()` map — any folder hash currently registered in
`_active_imports` is excluded from the delete via an `AND folder_hash
NOT IN (...)` clause. `pending_review` deliberately left out so user
still has to approve/reject those explicitly.
One endpoint touched (`/api/auto-import/clear-completed` in
web_server.py). No worker changes — guard reuses the existing
`_snapshot_active()` method that the UI poller already calls.
5 new tests in `tests/imports/test_auto_import_clear_completed_endpoint.py`:
- Zombie `processing` rows swept, live `processing` row preserved
(folder_hash currently in `_active_imports` survives)
- Response count matches actual delete count
- Empty active-set branch (unparameterized DELETE) — pinned because
an empty SQL `IN ()` would be a syntax error
- Worker-unavailable returns 500 (pre-existing guard not regressed)
- `pending_review` rows always survive — never auto-swept
Full pytest sweep: 2758 passed (one pre-existing flaky timing test
on `test_import_singles_parallel.py` failed under full-suite CPU load,
passes in isolation in 2.95s — unrelated to this change).
Two-part fix to the Your Albums "Download Missing" flow on Discover.
Part A — UX redesign
The prior `downloadMissingYourAlbums()` ran a per-album loop that
fired direct-download tasks via `openDownloadMissingModalForYouTube`.
Reported as silently failing — "Queuing 2/2" toast with no actual
transfer activity. Even when downloads worked, bypassing the
wishlist meant no retry / dedup / rate-limit / source-fallback
handling.
Replaced with a selectable-grid modal mirroring the Download
Discography pattern from the library page. Click the download
button → opens a checkbox grid showing every missing album (cover,
title, artist, year, track count, source) → user picks what they
actually want → click "Add to Wishlist" → each album's tracks get
resolved + queued through the existing wishlist auto-download
processor. NDJSON progress stream renders ✓/✗ per album.
New JS helpers:
- `_openYourAlbumsBatchModal(missingAlbums)` — builds the modal
- `_renderYourAlbumsBatchCard(row, index)` — per-album card
- `_yourAlbumsBatchSelectAll(select)` — bulk toggle
- `_updateYourAlbumsBatchFooterCount()` — live count + button text
- `_closeYourAlbumsBatchModal()` — overlay teardown
- `_startYourAlbumsBatchAddToWishlist()` — submit handler, NDJSON
progress consumer
- `_yourAlbumsPickSource(album)` — picks the single best source-id
per row (priority: spotify → deezer → tidal → discogs)
Reuses the `.discog-*` CSS classes from the library Download
Discography modal — no new CSS. Reuses the existing
`/api/artist/<id>/download-discography` endpoint. The endpoint's URL
artist_id param is functionally unused (per-album payload carries
everything — verified by reading the endpoint body), so the modal
posts with placeholder `your-albums` and gets multi-artist
resolution for free without backend changes.
Part B — Tidal album resolution
Reported as the original bug: clicking download on Tidal-only albums
did nothing because `/api/discover/album/<source>/<album_id>` had no
`tidal` branch and `tidal_client` had no `get_album_tracks` method.
`core/tidal_client.py`: new `get_album_tracks(album_id, limit=None)`
method. Two-phase: cursor-walk
`/v2/albums/<id>/relationships/items?include=items` for track refs +
position metadata (`meta.trackNumber` + `meta.volumeNumber`),
batch-hydrate via existing `_get_tracks_batch` for artist/album
names. Returns `Track` objects with `track_number` and `disc_number`
attached. Sort by (disc, track) so multi-disc compilations render in
album order.
`web_server.py`: new `'tidal'` source branch in
`/api/discover/album/<source>/<album_id>`. Resolves album metadata
via `get_album`, tracks via `get_album_tracks`, cover art via inline
`?include=coverArt` lookup. Same response shape as Spotify/Deezer
branches.
`webui/static/discover.js`:
- `tidal_album_id` added to `trySources` for the single-album click
flow (`openYourAlbumDownload`)
- Same source picker drives the new batch modal
- Virtual-id generation includes `tidal_album_id` so Tidal-only
albums get stable identifiers across discover-album-* / your-
albums-* contexts
10 new tests in `tests/test_tidal_album_tracks.py` pin:
- Single-page walk + hydration
- Multi-page cursor chain
- Multi-disc sort order (disc 1 → 2 in track order each)
- `limit` short-circuit at page boundary
- No-token short-circuit (no API call)
- HTTP error returns empty
- 429 raises (propagates to `rate_limited` decorator for retry)
- Forward-compat type filter (skips non-track entries)
- Partial-batch hydration failure containment
- Empty-album short-circuit (no batch call)
Full pytest: 2693 passed.
Discord report (CJFC, 2026-04-26): syncing a Spotify playlist to the
server overwrote anything manually added to the server-side playlist.
The fix adds a per-sync mode picker next to the Sync button on the
playlist details modal — Replace (default, current delete-recreate
behavior) or Append only (preserves existing tracks, only adds new
ones). Useful when the source platform caps playlist size and the
user is manually building beyond it on the server.
Implementation:
* New `append_to_playlist(name, tracks)` method on Plex / Jellyfin /
Navidrome clients. Each uses the server's NATIVE append API:
- Plex: `existing_playlist.addItems(new_tracks)`
- Jellyfin: `POST /Playlists/<id>/Items?Ids=...&UserId=...`
- Navidrome: Subsonic `updatePlaylist?songIdToAdd=...`
Falls back to `create_playlist` when the playlist doesn't exist
yet (first sync). No delete-recreate, no backup playlist created
(preserves playlist creation date + metadata + non-soulsync-managed
tracks).
* Dedup-by-server-native-id (ratingKey for Plex, GUID for Jellyfin,
song-id for Navidrome) — never re-adds a track already on the
playlist. Server-native identity, not fuzzy title+artist match,
so it can't false-collide.
* `sync_service.sync_playlist` accepts `sync_mode='replace'|'append'`
kwarg. Single if/else branch dispatches to `append_to_playlist` or
`update_playlist`. Threaded through `core/discovery/sync.run_sync_task`
and the `/api/sync/start` HTTP handler. Validation on the API rejects
unknown mode strings (defaults to 'replace').
* Frontend: per-playlist `<select id="sync-mode-${id}">` rendered next
to the Sync button in both modal renderers (sync-spotify.js for
Spotify playlists, sync-services.js for Deezer ARL playlists).
`startPlaylistSync` reads the select at click time; missing select
(other callers like discover.js) defaults to 'replace' so backward
compat preserved without per-call-site updates.
* SoulSync standalone has no playlist methods at all and the modal
hides the Sync button entirely on it via `_isSoulsyncStandalone` —
dispatch never reaches that path, no defensive fallback needed.
15 new tests pin per-server append behavior:
- missing playlist → create_playlist delegation
- dedup filtering (existing IDs skipped, only new tracks added)
- empty new-track set short-circuits without API call
- failure paths return False without raising
- contract listing (KNOWN_PER_SERVER_METHODS includes
'append_to_playlist'; Plex / Jellyfin / Navidrome all implement)
Plus tests/discovery/test_discovery_sync.py fake `sync_playlist`
fixture got `sync_mode='replace'` default to match the new signature
(was breaking after the kwarg add; now passing).
WHATS_NEW entry under new '2.6.0' block (hidden by
`_getLatestWhatsNewVersion` until next release bump).
Closes CJFC discord request.
Adds the user's Tidal favorited tracks ("My Collection" in the Tidal
app) as a virtual playlist alongside their real playlists, mirroring
how Spotify's "Liked Songs" is treated.
Reporter (yug1900) located the working endpoint after the prior
`/v2/favorites?filter[type]=TRACKS` attempt returned empty data —
that endpoint is scoped to collections the third-party app created
itself, not personal favorites. Real endpoint:
GET /v2/userCollectionTracks/me/relationships/items
?countryCode=US&locale=en-US&include=items
Cursor-paginated (20 per page, follow `links.next` with
`page[cursor]=...` until exhausted). Response only carries
track-level attributes — artist + album NAMES come back as
relationship-link stubs, not embedded data.
Implementation:
* Two-phase fetch — `_iter_collection_track_ids` walks the cursor
chain to enumerate every track id (cheap, IDs only), then
`get_collection_tracks` batch-hydrates 20 IDs at a time through
the existing `_get_tracks_batch` helper which already knows how
to `include=artists,albums`. No duplication of the JSON:API
artist/album parse, no new dataclass shape.
* Virtual playlist `tidal-favorites` appended to the end of
`/api/tidal/playlists`. ID intentionally has no colon —
sync-services.js renderer interpolates IDs into CSS selectors
via template literals (`#tidal-card-${p.id} .foo`) and a `:`
would parse as a CSS pseudo-class operator.
* `tidal_client.get_playlist("tidal-favorites")` recognizes the
virtual id and dispatches to the collection path internally, so
every per-id consumer gets it for free: detail endpoint, mirror
auto-refresh automation, "build Spotify discovery from Tidal
playlist" flow.
OAuth scope expansion:
* Added `collection.read` to both OAuth flows (the
`core/tidal_client.py::authenticate` standalone path AND the
`web_server.py::auth_tidal` web flow — they were independent
scope strings that both needed updating).
* Added `prompt=consent` to both flows — without it Tidal silently
returns a token carrying only the ORIGINAL scope set even after
re-authentication, because Tidal treats the existing
authorization as still valid.
* New `disconnect()` method + `POST /api/tidal/disconnect`
endpoint + Disconnect button next to Authenticate in Settings →
Connections → Tidal — required for users whose existing token
predates the scope expansion (forces a clean grant).
Reconnect-needed UI hint:
* `_collection_needs_reconnect` flag set on 401/403 from the
collection endpoint, cleared on next successful walk, NOT set
on 5xx (transient server errors must not falsely tell the user
to reconnect).
* Listing endpoint reads the flag and surfaces a placeholder card
titled "Favorite Tracks (reconnect Tidal to enable)" with a
description pointing at Settings, so the user has something
visible to act on instead of a silently missing row.
Diagnostic logging — collection request URL + response status +
first 300 bytes of body now logged at info level so future "why
is my collection empty" reports can be diagnosed from app.log
without needing live reproduction.
22 new tests pin: cursor walk (full chain, max-ids cap mid-page +
at page boundary), auth gates (no token / 401 / 403 all bail
clean), reconnect-flag lifecycle (set on 401/403, cleared on next
successful walk, NOT set on 5xx), forward-compat type filter
(non-track entries skipped), count helper, batch hydration
delegation + chunking at the 20-per-batch cap, partial-batch
failure containment, virtual-id dispatch (real playlist ids still
flow through the normal path).
Closes#502.
Live-API verification revealed advanced-syntax queries hurt more
than they help on this endpoint. Switching the import-modal Deezer
search back to free-text + local rerank.
# What live testing showed
Hit Deezer's public API with both query forms for the issue #534
case (`Dirty White Boy` + `Foreigner`):
**Free-text (`q=Dirty White Boy Foreigner`):**
- Returns 21 results
- Real Foreigner Head Games studio cut at #1
- Live versions at #2-10
- Karaoke / cover variants at #11-15
**Advanced (`q=track:"Dirty White Boy" artist:"Foreigner"`):**
- Returns 12 results
- "(2008 Remaster)" at #1 — canonical Head Games cut MISSING from
top 8 entirely
- Live + alt-album versions follow
Advanced syntax DOES filter karaoke at the API level (none in the
12-result set vs. 5 at positions 11-15 in free-text), but it has
its own ranking bias that surfaces remasters / "Best Of" cuts
ahead of the canonical recording. Net regression for the user-
facing goal.
# Fix
1. Endpoint reverts to free-text query with local rerank applied.
2. Local rerank gains "remaster" / "remastered" / "reissue"
patterns under VARIANT_TAG_PATTERNS (soft 0.4× penalty — user
may want them but they shouldn't outrank the original).
3. Client kwarg support (`track=` / `artist=` / `album=`) preserved
for future opt-in callers (e.g. exact-match flows where API-
level filtering matters more than ranking).
# Verified end-to-end against live Deezer API
Re-ran the exact #534 case through the live API + new rerank.
Top 15 results post-rerank:
1. Dirty White Boy — Foreigner — Head Games ← REAL CUT AT TOP
2-10. Various Live versions
11-15. Karaoke / cover / tribute variants ← BURIED
Real Foreigner Head Games studio cut at #1, exactly the user's
ask.
# Tests
- `test_relevance.py` — variant tag patterns extended; existing
tests still pass (50 tests).
- `test_search_match_endpoints.py::test_joins_track_and_artist_into_free_text_query`
— replaces `test_passes_track_and_artist_as_kwargs`; verifies
endpoint sends free-text join, NOT field-scoped kwargs (the
prior test asserted the wrong direction now).
- Karaoke-burying assertion at the endpoint still pins the
user-visible behaviour.
- Client kwarg path tests untouched (still pin advanced-syntax
construction for future opt-in callers).
# Verification
- 75 relevance + endpoint + query tests pass
- 2445 full suite passes
- Ruff clean
- Live Deezer API shows real cut at #1 post-rerank
# Background
User reported (#534) that the import-modal "Search for Match" dialog
returned irrelevant results when Deezer was the metadata source.
Searching `Dirty White Boy` + `Foreigner` returned 5+ karaoke /
"originally performed by" / "in the style of" / "re-recorded" /
tribute-band results ranked above the actual Foreigner studio cut
from Head Games. User had to scroll past the junk every time, or
fall back to iTunes search which is much slower.
# Root cause — two layers
1. **Endpoint joined `track + artist` into free-text query.**
`/api/deezer/search_tracks` was passing `q=Dirty White Boy Foreigner`
to Deezer's `/search/track` API. Deezer fuzzy-matches that
string across title / lyrics / artist / album / contributors and
orders by global popularity — anything that appears across many
compilations outranks the canonical recording.
2. **No local rerank.** None of the search-modal endpoints applied
any post-filtering. Deezer's API order shipped straight to the
user.
# Fix — same architectural shape Cin would build
## Layer 1: field-scoped query at the client boundary
`core/deezer_client.py::search_tracks()` now accepts optional
`track`, `artist`, `album` kwargs. When provided, builds Deezer's
advanced search syntax: `q=track:"X" artist:"Y" album:"Z"`. Massive
relevance improvement because each term matches the right field
instead of fuzzy-matching everywhere.
Backward compat preserved: legacy free-text `query=` callers still
work unchanged. Field-scoped path takes precedence when both are
provided. Empty input fast-fails without an API call. Embedded
double-quotes stripped (Deezer's syntax has no escape mechanism).
## Layer 2: provider-neutral relevance reranker
New `core/metadata/relevance.py` module — pure-function rerank over
the canonical `Track` dataclass. Composable scoring:
- **Cover/karaoke patterns** (multiplier 0.05, effectively buries):
matches "karaoke", "originally performed by", "in the style of",
"made famous by", "tribute", "vocal version", "backing track",
"cover version", "re-recorded", "cover by", etc. across title,
album, AND artist fields. Catches the screenshot's exact junk:
artist credits like "Pop Music Workshop" / "The Karaoke Channel"
/ "Foreigner Tribute Band".
- **Variant tags** (multiplier 0.4): live / acoustic / demo /
instrumental / remix / radio edit / club mix etc. — softer
penalty since the user MAY want them. Skipped entirely when the
expected_title contains the same tag (so searching
"Track (Live)" still ranks Live versions first).
- **Exact artist boost** (multiplier 1.5): primary artist exactly
matches expected_artist after normalisation. Single strongest
signal for "this is the canonical recording".
- **Title + artist similarity** via SequenceMatcher (parentheticals
+ punctuation stripped before comparison).
- **Album-type weighting**: album=1.0 > single/ep=0.85 > compilation=0.7.
Compilations are more likely tribute / karaoke repackages.
Each component is a standalone function so tests pin them
individually without standing up the full pipeline.
## Wired at three search-modal endpoints
- `/api/deezer/search_tracks` — uses both layers (field-scoped
query + rerank).
- `/api/itunes/search_tracks` — uses rerank only (iTunes API has
no advanced-syntax search, but karaoke / cover variants still
leak through and need the local penalty).
- `/api/spotify/search_tracks` — already builds field-scoped
`track:X artist:Y` query; rerank added as the consistency safety
net so all three sources behave the same from the user's
perspective.
Other Deezer call sites (matching engine, watchlist scanner,
auto-import single-track ID) deliberately not touched in this PR
— they have their own elaborate scoring pipelines tuned to their
specific contexts and aren't surfacing the user-reported issue.
Per Cin: "don't refactor beyond what the task requires."
# Tests
71 new tests across 3 files:
- `tests/metadata/test_relevance.py` (50 tests) — every scoring
component pinned individually + the issue #534 screenshot
reproduced as a regression test (real Foreigner cut wins after
rerank, karaoke variants drop to bottom).
- `tests/metadata/test_deezer_search_query.py` (14 tests) —
advanced-syntax query construction, field-scoped wiring at the
client boundary, free-text path unchanged, kwargs win when
ambiguous, limit clamping, cache key consistency.
- `tests/imports/test_search_match_endpoints.py` (7 tests) —
end-to-end through Flask test client: Deezer endpoint passes
kwargs not joined query; karaoke buried at bottom for all three
sources; legacy query param still works without rerank.
# Verification
- 2441 full suite passes (+71 from baseline 2370)
- 0 failures (the prior watchdog flake fix held)
- Ruff clean across all changed files
- JS parses clean (`node -c webui/static/helper.js`)
# Architectural standards followed
- **Logic at the right boundary.** Query construction lives in the
client (every caller benefits from one change). Rerank lives in
a neutral module (`core/metadata/relevance.py`) over the
canonical `Track` dataclass — works for any source, not Deezer-
specific.
- **Explicit > implicit.** Every scoring rule has its own named
function. Pattern tables are module-level constants tests can
introspect.
- **Scope discipline.** Audited every Deezer search call site;
fixed the user-reported one + the consistent siblings. Did NOT
speculatively normalise every Deezer call across the codebase.
- **Backward compat.** Free-text `query=` callers untouched. Kwargs
added to existing client method signature with safe defaults.
- **Tests pin contract at correct boundary.** Pure-function rerank
tests don't mock anything; client-query tests stub at `_api_get`;
endpoint tests run through the real Flask app.
# Concurrency model
Pre-refactor concurrency was emergent + unbounded:
- The worker's `_run` thread called `_scan_cycle` every 60s,
processing candidates synchronously in a for-loop.
- The `/api/auto-import/scan-now` endpoint spawned a fresh
`threading.Thread(target=_scan_cycle)` per click — extra parallel
scan cycles on top of the timer.
- Multiple "Scan Now" clicks during in-flight processing → multiple
threads racing on `_processing_paths` / `_folder_snapshots` state,
no upper bound on concurrent scanners.
- `stop()` didn't wait for in-flight processing — could leave file
moves / tag writes / DB inserts mid-flight.
Refactor to the pattern Cin uses elsewhere (`missing_download_executor`,
`sync_executor`, `import_singles_executor` all use
`ThreadPoolExecutor(max_workers=3, thread_name_prefix=...)`):
- **One scan thread** — both timer + manual triggers go through
`trigger_scan()`, gated by a non-blocking `_scan_lock`. Duplicate
triggers no-op instead of stacking parallel scanners.
- **Bounded executor** — `ThreadPoolExecutor` (default 3 workers,
configurable via `auto_import.max_workers`) runs per-candidate
work. Each candidate runs to completion in its own pool thread;
up to N candidates run in parallel.
- `_scan_and_submit()` is fast — just enumeration + executor submit,
returns immediately, doesn't block on per-candidate work.
- `_process_one_candidate(candidate)` holds the per-candidate logic
identical to the old for-loop body, lifted into a method so the
pool can run multiple instances concurrently.
- `_submitted_hashes` set + lock dedupes candidates across the
timer + manual triggers so a candidate already queued / running
doesn't get re-submitted.
- `stop()` calls `executor.shutdown(wait=True)` — clean shutdown,
no orphaned file ops.
# Per-candidate UI state isolation
The executor refactor opened two concurrency holes that the old
sequential model masked. Both fixed in this commit:
1. **Scalar UI fields stomped across pool workers.** Pre-refactor
`_current_folder` / `_current_status` / `_current_track_*` were
safe under the sequential model — only one candidate processed
at a time, so the fields tracked the in-flight one. With three
pool workers writing the same fields, the polling UI saw garbage
like "Processing AlbumA, track 7/14: SongFromAlbumB".
Replaced with `_active_imports: Dict[hash, _ActiveImport]` keyed
on folder_hash, gated by `_active_lock`. Each pool worker owns
its own entry. Helpers `_register_active` / `_update_active` /
`_unregister_active` / `_snapshot_active` are the only API.
2. **Stats counters not thread-safe.** `self._stats[k] += 1` is
read-modify-write — under load, parallel pool workers drop
increments. New `_stats_lock` + `_bump_stat()` helper wraps every
mutation. `get_status()` reads under the same lock and returns
a copy.
# Endpoint change
`/api/auto-import/scan-now` no longer spawns its own scan thread —
calls `auto_import_worker.trigger_scan()` (which routes through the
shared lock + executor). Multiple clicks while a scan is in flight
no-op deterministically. Endpoint still wraps the call in a daemon
thread so the HTTP response returns immediately even if the staging
walk is slow.
# Backward compat
The scalar `_current_folder` / `_current_status` / `_current_track_*`
fields are preserved as **read-only properties** that resolve to the
FIRST active import. The existing `get_status()` payload still
includes those fields populated from the first entry — single-import
UIs (and the test fixture) keep working unchanged. New
`active_imports` array exposes the full multi-candidate state for
parallel-aware UIs.
# Behavior preserved
- Per-candidate identify / match / process logic byte-identical
- Live-progress state preserved (per candidate now)
- Stability gate / already-processed dedup preserved
- `_record_in_progress` / `_finalize_result` UI rows preserved
- Tag-based loose-file grouping unchanged
# Behavior changes
- Multiple albums process IN PARALLEL up to `max_workers`
- "Scan Now" while scan in progress no-ops (was: spawned another)
- `stop()` waits for in-flight pool work via `shutdown(wait=True)`
- Auto-import card now lists each in-flight album (one line per
active import) instead of a single shared progress line
# UI
`webui/static/stats-automations.js`:
- Progress widget reads `active_imports` array, renders one line
per in-flight album with per-candidate status / track index
- Falls back to the legacy summary line when payload doesn't
carry `active_imports` (older backend)
- Per-row "live processing" lookup now matches by `folder_hash`
through the array instead of by `folder_name` against scalars
# Tests added (`tests/imports/test_auto_import_executor.py`)
- Pool config: default max_workers=3, configurable via constructor
+ via `auto_import.max_workers` config, floors at 1
- Scan lock: 5 concurrent `trigger_scan()` calls run only 1 scan
while lock held; releases properly so subsequent triggers run
- Executor dispatch: 5 candidates → 5 process calls via the pool
- Bounded parallelism: max_workers=3 caps at 3 concurrent;
max_workers=2 caps at 2
- Cross-trigger dedup: candidate submitted in scan A doesn't get
re-submitted by scan B while still in-flight
- Graceful shutdown: `stop()` blocks until in-flight pool work
finishes
- Per-candidate state isolation: 2 parallel workers updating their
own candidate state don't interfere — each candidate's
track_index / track_name / folder_name reads back exactly as
written for that hash
- `get_status()` returns coherent `active_imports` array with
one entry per in-flight candidate; aggregate top-level
`current_status` is 'processing' when any entry is processing
- Unregister removes only that candidate, others stay visible
- Stats counter thread-safety: 1000 parallel bumps land at 1000
(the read-modify-write race regresses without the lock)
- `get_status()` stats snapshot is a copy, not a live reference
# Verification
- 17 new tests pass (executor + state isolation)
- 2347 full suite passes (1 pre-existing flaky test —
`test_watchdog_warns_about_stuck_workers` — passes in isolation,
unrelated)
- Ruff clean
radoslav-orlov reported every imported album landing in the soulsync
standalone library as "Unknown Artist" + the raw 10-digit album id
as the title + 0 tracks. Audit traced it to the click handler in the
import page dropping the source-of-the-album_id on its way to the
backend match endpoint.
Root cause:
`importPageSelectAlbum(albumId)` (the onclick on every suggestion /
search-result card) only passed the album_id string. The full search
response carried `source`, `name`, and `artist` per row — the
backend's `get_artist_album_tracks` needs source so it can route the
lookup to the metadata source the id actually came from. Without it,
the source chain tries each source's `get_album(id)` against an id
shaped for a different source — a Deezer numeric id against
Spotify's id format returns 404, against iTunes's collectionId range
returns 404, etc. — and falls through to the failure-fallback dict
in `get_artist_album_tracks`:
{
'success': False,
'album': {'name': album_name or album_id, 'total_tracks': 0,
'release_date': '', ...}, # no artist field at all
'tracks': [],
}
That broken album dict then flowed through `build_album_import_context`
→ post-processing pipeline → `record_soulsync_library_entry`, writing
"Unknown Artist" + album_id-as-title + 0 tracks rows into the
soulsync standalone library tables.
Why hybrid users hit it most: a Spotify-primary user searching for an
album → search returns the Spotify result PLUS Deezer fallbacks
(via `_search_albums_for_source`'s priority chain). Clicking a Deezer
fallback row then sent only the Deezer id to /album/match without
flagging that source — Spotify-first chain failed against the Deezer
id and the broken fallback got written.
Fix:
Frontend (`webui/static/stats-automations.js`):
- New `importPageState._albumLookup: { albumId: { id, name, artist,
source } }` populated by both card renderers (`_renderSuggestionCard`
+ the search-results render block) before they emit the onclick.
- `importPageSelectAlbum` reads source / name / artist from that
cache and includes them in the match POST body, so the backend
routes to the correct provider's `get_album` on the very first try.
- `_escAttr` applied to album_id in the onclick (defensive — ids
shouldn't contain quotes but `_escAttr` was already being used on
every other field interpolated into onclick attributes).
Backend (`web_server.py:import_album_match`):
- Defensive log warning when source is missing from the request body.
Catches any future regression where another caller (curl /
third-party / new UI flow) drops source again — it'll show up as
a visible warning in app.log instead of silently corrupting the
library.
Verification:
- Full pytest suite: 2264 passed, 1 skipped, 0 failed
- Ruff clean
- JS syntax clean
- Manual repro requires a real user flow (search albums on the
import page → click one → import) which isn't covered by the
existing unit tests; reviewer should verify against issue #524's
steps before merge.
Three follow-on fixes to the manual-search candidates modal once people
started actually using it:
1. NDJSON streaming. Manual search waited for every source to return
before showing anything. Now streams one event per source as each
completes — header line, source_results per source, done terminator.
Frontend appends rows incrementally via response.body.getReader().
2. Manual picks no longer auto-retry on failure. New _user_manual_pick
flag set on the task in /download-candidate. Both monitor retry
paths (not-in-live-transfers stuck + Errored state) bail on the
flag. Surfaces the failure to the user instead of silently picking
a different candidate via fresh search.
3. Non-Soulseek manual picks (youtube/tidal/qobuz/hifi/deezer/
soundcloud/lidarr) no longer stuck at "downloading 0%" forever. The
live_transfers IF branch now marks manual-pick tasks failed
directly when the engine reports Errored, instead of deferring to
the monitor (which bails on manual picks). Engine fallback in else
branch covers the rare race where the orchestrator's pre-populated
transfer lookup is missing the entry.
Plus a deadlock fix discovered along the way: the new failure path
synchronously called on_download_completed while holding tasks_lock,
which itself re-acquires the same Lock — non-reentrant
threading.Lock self-deadlocked the polling thread. While wedged, every
other endpoint that needed the lock (including /candidates → other
failed rows couldn't open modals) hung waiting. Moved completion
callbacks onto a daemon thread so the lock releases first.
Plus failed/not_found/cancelled rows are now ALWAYS clickable (not
just when the auto-search cached candidates) — the modal carries the
manual search bar, which is the user's recourse for empty results.
Plus manual download worker now runs on a dedicated thread instead of
competing with the batch's 3-worker missing_download_executor pool —
saturated batches no longer queue manual picks indefinitely.
All scoped to manual picks via the _user_manual_pick flag — auto
attempt flow byte-identical to before. Engine fallback gated on the
flag too so auto attempts in the else branch keep the original
do-nothing behavior (safety valve handles the stuck-forever case).
Also dropped _handle_failed_download from web_server.py — defined
but had no callers (dead code).
17 new unit tests pin the gate behavior:
- engine fallback: Errored/Cancelled/Succeeded/InProgress transitions,
manual-pick gate, terminal-state skip, soulseek skip, missing
download_id skip, engine returning None, orchestrator exception
- monitor: manual-pick skips not-in-live-transfers retry + Errored
retry
- IF-branch end-to-end: Errored marks failed, "Completed, Errored"
hits failure branch, auto attempts defer to monitor
Manual-search endpoint tests rewritten for NDJSON: 11 cases (validation,
single-source dispatch, parallel "all" dispatch, one-event-per-source
streaming shape, unconfigured-source skip + reject, header metadata,
per-source exception isolation).
Full suite 2259 passed, 1 skipped.
When an auto-download fails or returns "not found" with leftover
candidates, the user can already click the status cell to open a
modal showing those candidates and pick a different one. This adds
a manual search bar to that modal — type any query, hit search,
get a fresh round of results without having to bail out and start
over from the main search page.
Solves the case where the auto-query was bad (featured artist not
in title, parentheticals like "(Remastered 2019)" tripping the
matcher, slight artist-name variants, transliteration) but the
file genuinely exists on the source.
Frontend (downloads.js)
- Added a manual-search section above the existing auto-candidates
table inside the candidates modal.
- Source picker is smart per download mode:
- Single-source mode (soulseek-only / youtube-only / etc) shows
a "Searching X" label, no dropdown.
- Hybrid mode shows a dropdown with "All sources" default + every
configured source. Picking "All" runs parallel searches across
them and tags each result row with its source badge.
- Only configured sources show up; unconfigured are hidden.
- Validation: button disabled until query length >= 2, "Type at
least 2 characters" hint until threshold crosses.
- Loading state on search button while the request is in flight.
- Manual results render in a separate table above the existing
auto-candidates table, using the same row template (file /
quality / size / duration / user / ⬇ button) so the renderer
helper is shared.
- Click ⬇ reuses the existing `downloadCandidate(taskId, candidate,
trackName)` flow — same retry path, same AcoustID verification
when the file lands, no shortcut around the safety net.
- Re-running the search with a different query replaces the
previous manual results.
Backend (web_server.py)
- Extended `GET /api/downloads/task/<id>/candidates` response with:
- `download_mode` (e.g. 'hybrid', 'soulseek')
- `available_sources` (list of configured source IDs + labels)
- `source` field on each candidate (purely additive — frontend
auto-renderer ignores it on legacy code paths, manual-search
renderer uses it for the badge)
- Added `POST /api/downloads/task/<id>/manual-search`:
- Body: `{ query, source: 'all' | <source_id> }`
- Validates query length (>=2 trimmed) → 400
- Validates source against the configured-sources gate → 400
(rejects unconfigured sources even when explicitly named)
- For 'all': parallel `ThreadPoolExecutor` dispatch across every
configured download source, merged results
- For specific source: just that source
- Returns same shape as `/candidates` so the frontend renderer
is reused
- New module-level helpers: `_STREAMING_SOURCE_NAMES`,
`_infer_candidate_source`, `_serialize_candidate`,
`_list_available_download_sources`. The existing `/candidates`
endpoint also goes through `_serialize_candidate` so the source
badge is consistent across both flows.
Behavior preserved
- Existing modal layout / candidates table / ⬇ button are
byte-identical when the user doesn't use manual search.
- `downloadCandidate()` JS function untouched.
- `/candidates` and `/download-candidate` endpoints
backwards-compatible — only NEW fields added, nothing changed
or removed.
Tests
`tests/test_manual_search_endpoint.py` — 10 tests:
- `test_manual_search_validates_query_length`
- `test_manual_search_validates_source` (whitelist gate)
- `test_manual_search_handles_task_not_found` (404)
- `test_manual_search_dispatches_to_configured_source_only`
- `test_manual_search_all_dispatches_parallel`
- `test_manual_search_skips_unconfigured_sources`
- `test_manual_search_rejects_unconfigured_source_explicitly`
- `test_manual_search_returns_same_shape_as_candidates`
- `test_manual_search_single_source_mode_lists_source` (verifies
`available_sources` reflects the active mode)
- `test_manual_search_isolates_per_source_exceptions` (one source
throwing doesn't kill the merged result)
2242/2242 full suite green (was 2232 + 10 new). Ruff clean.
JS parses clean.
- `_SOULSYNC_BASE_VERSION` 2.4.2 → 2.4.3
- helper.js — flip 2.4.3 WHATS_NEW header to "May 8, 2026 — 2.4.3
release"; bump fallback default from 2.4.2 → 2.4.3
- docker-publish.yml — manual-trigger default tag 2.4.2 → 2.4.3
Drive-by — make sidebar version + version-modal subtitle dynamic.
The sidebar version button (`v2.4.1`) and version-modal subtitle
(`Version 2.4.1 — Latest Changes`) were hardcoded text in the HTML.
2.4.2 shipped without these getting bumped — silent drift, easy to
miss at every release.
Added a Flask context_processor that injects `soulsync_version` and
`soulsync_base_version` into every template, then templated the two
hardcoded values:
v{{ soulsync_base_version }}
Version {{ soulsync_base_version }} — Latest Changes
Now bumping `_SOULSYNC_BASE_VERSION` updates the UI everywhere it's
rendered. No more "I forgot to bump the sidebar" at release.
2232/2232 full suite green. Ruff clean. JS parses clean.
Owner decision: not worth shipping. The four library-driven personalized
sections were stubbed returning [] for ages because their schema
prereqs didn't exist; the prior commit re-enabled them by routing
through a new `_select_library_tracks` helper. Owner reviewed and chose
to delete the sections entirely instead.
Removed everywhere:
- `core/personalized_playlists.py` — `get_recently_added`,
`get_top_tracks`, `get_forgotten_favorites`, `get_familiar_favorites`
+ the `_select_library_tracks` helper (no other callers; verified
via grep).
- `web_server.py` — 4 route handlers
(`/api/discover/personalized/recently-added`, `top-tracks`,
`forgotten-favorites`, `familiar-favorites`).
- `webui/index.html` — 4 `<div class="discover-section">` blocks
(`#personalized-recently-added`, `#personalized-top-tracks`,
`#personalized-forgotten-favorites`,
`#personalized-familiar-favorites`).
- `webui/static/discover.js` — 4 load functions
(`loadPersonalizedRecentlyAdded`, `loadPersonalizedTopTracks`,
`loadPersonalizedForgottenFavorites`, `loadFamiliarFavorites`),
plus their entries in `loadDiscoverPage`'s Promise.all, plus
4 module-level state vars + 6 dead branches across
`openDownloadModalForDiscoverPlaylist` / `startDiscoverPlaylistSync`
and the sync-progress / rehydrate dispatchers.
- `webui/static/helper.js` — 4 tooltip / docs entries.
- `webui/static/sync-spotify.js` — 1 stale rehydrate dispatcher
branch (`discover_familiar_favorites`) caught during the global
grep pass.
- `tests/test_personalized_playlists_id_gate.py` — 3 library-method
tests + the test infrastructure that supported them
(`tracks` schema, `insert_library_track` helper). Documentation
header updated to reflect the deletion.
Net: -527 / +2 lines across 7 files.
What stays:
- Daily Mixes (also in personalized package, intentionally paused —
separate decision).
- Popular Picks + Hidden Gems + Discovery Shuffle (alive, not
affected by this deletion).
- All 14 tests in the personalized-playlists test file still pass.
- The PersonalizedPlaylistsService lift from the prior commit
(`_select_discovery_tracks` etc) — those are still in active use
by the surviving discovery_pool methods.
DISCOVER_TRACK_SELECTION_REVIEW.md at repo root contains historical
references to the four deleted endpoints. Treated as historical
context (same policy as WHATS_NEW), left alone.
2219/2219 full suite green (was 2222 - 3 deleted tests = 2219).
JS parses clean, ruff clean.
- `web_server.py` — `_SOULSYNC_BASE_VERSION` 2.4.1 → 2.4.2
- `webui/static/helper.js` — flip the 2.4.2 WHATS_NEW header from
"Unreleased — 2.4.2 dev cycle" to "May 7, 2026 — 2.4.2 release"
so the per-version block stops being filtered out by
`_getLatestWhatsNewVersion`. Also bumps the safety-net default
inside that helper from 2.4.1 → 2.4.2.
- `.github/workflows/docker-publish.yml` — manual-trigger default
tag bumped to match.
Drive-by fix: escaped a stray single quote in the `Internal: Download
Engine` 2.4.2 entry that broke `node --check` on the file
(`orchestrator.client('soulseek')` inside a single-quoted desc string
silently terminated the string mid-entry). Pre-existing, unrelated to
the bump but caught while validating JS parse for the release.
VERSION_MODAL_SECTIONS not rotated in this commit — separate
editorial pass.
Closes#513 (s66jones).
The artist detail page already showed a "Popular on Last.fm" sidebar —
list of an artist's top tracks by playcount, with a play button per row
but no download action. Issue #513 wanted a way to grab those tracks
the same way zotify let users grab "top X songs" without pulling the
full discography.
Pulls from the configured primary metadata source (Spotify
`artist_top_tracks`, Deezer `/artist/{id}/top`) when available, falls
back to the existing Last.fm display-only mode for sources that don't
expose popularity ranking (iTunes / Discogs / MusicBrainz). Source
label in the section title shifts to match.
Each row gets a hover-revealed download button that wishlists the
single track via the existing /api/add-album-to-wishlist endpoint
(preserves the track's real album metadata, so the wishlist worker
later places the file in its proper album folder).
A "Download All" footer button opens the standard download modal in
PLAYLIST context, not album context — the virtual playlist_id is
`top_tracks_<source>_<artistId>` which doesn't match any of the
album-prefix checks in `startMissingTracksProcess` (downloads.js).
That keeps `is_album_download=false`, so the master worker doesn't
inject a wrapper context as `_explicit_album_context`. Each track
downloads using its own real album metadata, files land in proper
per-album folders on disk (not a fake "Top Tracks" folder).
Backend additions:
- `SpotifyClient.get_artist_top_tracks(artist_id, country, limit)` —
wraps `spotipy.artist_top_tracks`, returns up to 10 tracks for the
market (Spotify's API cap). UI-side limit trim only.
- `DeezerClient.get_artist_top_tracks(artist_id, limit)` — wraps
`/artist/{id}/top?limit=N`, converts Deezer's raw shape to the same
Spotify-compatible dict layout (id, name, artists, album with
album_type / total_tracks / images, duration_ms, track_number,
disc_number) so downstream code doesn't branch on source.
- `GET /api/artist/<id>/top-tracks` — dispatches to whichever client
matches the primary source. Resolves per-source artist IDs from the
DB row first (matching what /discography already does) so a Spotify
ID in the URL still works when Deezer is primary, and vice versa.
Returns `{success, source, tracks, resolved_artist_id}` on hit;
`{success: False, reason: 'unsupported_source' | 'spotify_not_authenticated'
| 'deezer_unavailable' | 'no_tracks_found'}` on miss so the frontend
can decide whether to fall through to Last.fm.
Frontend:
- `_loadArtistTopTracks` tries the metadata source first, falls
through to the legacy `/api/artist/0/lastfm-top-tracks` call if the
source can't deliver. Section title and per-row UI shift based on
which source answered.
- New per-row `.hero-top-track-download` button (hover-revealed).
- New `.hero-top-tracks-download-all` footer button — only visible
when metadata-source mode rendered the list (Last.fm fallback hides
it since rows have no track IDs to download).
Tests: 10 new tests pin the client methods —
- Spotify: returns track list, honors UI limit cap, returns empty when
unauthed / artist_id missing / API throws.
- Deezer: shape conversion to Spotify-compatible dict, empty when no
data / artist_id missing, limit clamping at upper bound, default
fallback when limit=0, malformed entries skipped.
The Flask endpoint dispatcher itself isn't covered by the new test
file because importing web_server at test-collection time spins up
worker threads that race with caplog-using tests elsewhere in the
suite (specifically test_library_reorganize_orchestrator). Endpoint
verified manually; the underlying client methods (the load-bearing
logic) are covered.
2204/2204 full suite green (was 2194 + 10 new).
Catches the silent excepts the awk-based earlier sweeps missed:
- Bare `except:` followed by `pass` (also swallows KeyboardInterrupt
and SystemExit — actively wrong). Upgraded to `except Exception as
e: logger.debug("...: %s", e)`. ~14 sites across connection_detect,
soulseek_client, listenbrainz_manager, watchlist_scanner,
youtube_client, navidrome_client, jellyfin_client, web_server.
- `except Exception:` + pass that the awk pattern missed (e.g.
multi-line or unusual whitespace). ~31 sites across automation_engine,
database_update_worker, music_database, spotify_client, web_server,
others.
- 14 legitimate cleanup sites left silent with explicit `# noqa: S110`
+ comment explaining why (atexit handlers, finally-block conn.close
calls). Logging during shutdown can itself crash because file handles
get torn down before the handler fires.
Also enables `S110` rule in pyproject.toml so this pattern fails CI
going forward — drift fails at PR review instead of at runtime against
a wedged worker thread. Tests path keeps S110 ignored (test fixtures
legitimately use try-except-pass for cleanup).
Adds a WHATS_NEW entry to helper.js summarizing the full #369 sweep.
Verified: `python -m ruff check .` → All checks passed.
Verified: `python -m pytest tests/` → 2188 passed.
Closes#369
Replaces `except Exception: pass` blocks with `except Exception as e:
logger.debug(...)` so failures are inspectable in the log instead of
disappearing silently. Per JohnBaumb's request in #369.
- Pattern is consistent: `logger.debug("<context>: %s", e)` with lazy
formatter and 2-6 word context describing the operation.
- 2 atexit handlers (lines 2977, 2983) intentionally left silent — the
log file handles can be torn down before atexit fires, and a
separate `_atexit_silence_shutdown_logger_errors` already exists for
this exact reason.
- No behavior changes; control flow is unchanged. Test suite green
(2188 passed).
Refs #369
GitHub issue #505 (PopeBruhLXIX): users with multiple Plex music
libraries (e.g. one per Plex Home user, or two folder roots split
across separate library sections) only saw one library inside SoulSync
because the connection settings forced you to pick a single library
section. SoulSync's PlexClient stored exactly one ``self.music_library``
section reference and every read scanned only that one.
This change adds an opt-in "All Libraries (combined)" dropdown option
that flips the client into a server-wide read mode where every read
method (``get_all_artists`` / ``get_all_album_ids`` /
``search_tracks`` / ``get_library_stats`` / etc) dispatches through
``server.library.search(libtype=...)`` instead of querying a single
section. One Plex API call replaces N per-section iterations; Plex
handles the aggregation server-side.
Implementation:
- ``ALL_LIBRARIES_SENTINEL`` (``'__all_libraries__'``) — module-level
constant used as the saved DB preference value when the user picks
the synthetic "All Libraries" entry. Detection is one string compare
in ``_find_music_library`` / ``set_music_library_by_name``. Existing
preferences (real library names) are unaffected.
- ``self._all_libraries_mode`` (private flag) + ``is_all_libraries_mode()``
(public accessor for external callers). When True, ``music_library``
may stay None — ``is_fully_configured()`` recognizes the mode and
still returns True so dispatch sites don't bail.
- New private helpers ``_can_query``, ``_get_music_sections``,
``_all_artists``, ``_all_albums``, ``_all_tracks``, ``_search_general``,
``_search_artists_by_name``. Single dispatch point for the
section-vs-server branch — every read method funnels through them
so future drift fails at one place.
- New public helpers for downstream callers:
- ``get_recently_added_albums(maxresults, libtype)`` — used by
DatabaseUpdateWorker's deep-scan recent-content sweep
- ``get_recently_updated_albums(limit)`` — same
- ``get_music_library_locations()`` — returns folder roots, used
by web_server.py's file-path resolver
- ``trigger_library_scan`` and ``is_library_scanning`` fan out across
every music section in all-libraries mode.
- ``get_available_music_libraries`` prepends a synthetic
``{'title': 'All Libraries (combined)', 'value': sentinel}`` entry
ONLY when more than one music library exists. Single-library users
don't get the extra option. ``value`` field is the canonical
identifier the frontend submits to ``/api/plex/select-music-library``
(real libraries: title; synthetic: sentinel string). Backward-
compatible — entries without ``value`` fall back to ``title``.
Three crash points fixed in downstream consumers (would have failed
during a deep scan after the user picked all-libraries mode):
1. ``database_update_worker.py:411`` — bailed out with "No music
library found in Plex" because ``not self.media_client.music_library``
evaluated True in all-libraries mode (music_library is None there).
Now uses ``is_fully_configured()`` which recognizes the mode.
This was the root cause of the deep scan never starting.
2. ``database_update_worker.py:_get_recent_albums_plex`` — reached
``self.media_client.music_library.recentlyAdded()`` /
``.search()`` directly, AttributeError in all-libraries mode.
Now routes through the new helper methods.
3. ``web_server.py:10947`` (file-path resolver) — accessed
``music_library.locations``; gated on ``music_library`` truthy so
it didn't crash, but silently skipped all-libraries-mode locations.
Now uses ``get_music_library_locations()`` which unions across
sections.
Plus polish:
- ``/api/plex/clear-library`` also resets ``_all_libraries_mode``
so a fresh "select library" flow doesn't inherit stale mode state.
- ``/api/plex/music-libraries`` surfaces "All Libraries (combined)"
as ``current_library`` when in mode (settings UI displays correctly).
- Frontend ``loadPlexMusicLibraries`` uses ``library.value || library.title``
so the sentinel-keyed option submits the sentinel string, not the
human-readable label. Pre-select match handles both paths.
Honest tradeoffs (documented as known limitations):
- Same artist appearing in multiple Plex sections shows as separate
entries in SoulSync (no dedup). Plex returns distinct ratingKeys
for each. Cosmetic; revisit if it bites users.
- Write-back (genre / poster updates) targets one ratingKey at a time
— only updates that section's copy. Other sections' copies stay
unchanged.
- All-libraries mode includes any audiobook library that Plex
classifies as ``type='artist'``. Edge case, opt-in only.
Tests: 21 new tests in tests/media_server/test_plex_all_libraries.py
pin both single-library mode (regression guard) and all-libraries mode
for every refactored method. Existing test_plex_pinning.py fixture
updated to initialize the new flag. 63/63 media_server tests green,
2148/2148 full suite green.
Two fixes.
(1) Discography endpoint now does server-side per-source ID resolution.
When the user clicked Download Discography on a library artist, the
endpoint received whichever artist ID the frontend happened to pick
(spotify_artist_id || itunes_artist_id || deezer_id || library_db_id)
and dispatched it as-is to whichever source it queried. If the picked
ID didn't match the queried source's ID format, the lookup returned
wrong-artist results (numeric ID collisions) or fell back to a fuzzy
name search that picked a wrong artist.
Two reproducible cases:
- 50 Cent's library row had DB id 194687 — coincidentally a real
Deezer artist ID for "Young Hot Rod". When the frontend's
/enhanced fetch silently fell back to the DB id, the backend
sent 194687 to Deezer, and Deezer returned Young Hot Rod's
50 albums in 50 Cent's discography modal.
- Weird Al's library row had a stored Spotify ID. The frontend
sent that to Deezer, which rejected the alphanumeric ID and
fell back to fuzzy name search — which picked The Beatles
somehow, returning 45 Beatles albums.
The mechanism for per-source ID dispatch already exists in
``MetadataLookupOptions.artist_source_ids``, and the watchlist scanner
already uses it; the on-demand discography endpoint just wasn't wired
to it. Fix: when the URL artist_id matches a library row by ANY stored
ID (DB id, spotify_artist_id, itunes_artist_id, deezer_id, or
musicbrainz_id), pull every stored provider ID and pass them as
``artist_source_ids``. Each source gets its OWN stored ID regardless
of which one the URL carries. When the URL ID is a non-library
source-native ID and the row lookup misses entirely, behavior is
identical to before (single-ID dispatch fallback).
Logged the resolved per-source ID dict at INFO so future "wrong artist
showed up" diagnostics are immediately legible in app.log.
(2) Logger namespace fix in core/artists/quality.py and
core/metadata/multi_source_search.py.
Both modules used ``logging.getLogger(__name__)`` which resolves to
``core.artists.quality`` / ``core.metadata.multi_source_search`` —
neither under the ``soulsync`` namespace where the file handler is
wired. Result: every [Enhance], [MultiSourceSearch], and direct-lookup
INFO line was being written to a logger with no handlers and silently
dropped. App log showed the slow-request warning but no diagnostic
detail. Switched both to ``get_logger()`` from utils.logging_config so
the soulsync.* namespace picks them up. Same content, now actually
lands in app.log. Confirmed working in live test:
``[Enhance] Direct lookup matched: deezer ID 1476162252 → 'Desastre'``
No behavior change in any other caller. Empty ``artist_source_ids``
(no library row matched) reaches lookup as ``None`` → identical to
current single-ID dispatch path. Logger fix is pure routing — no
content change.
Followup on the previous Enhance refactor. Multi-source parallel text
search closed the worst case (users with no Spotify/Deezer getting
"unknown artist - unknown album - unknown track" wishlist entries),
but text search itself is still fragile against messy library tags:
"Title (Live)", featured artists in the artist field, etc. Download
Discography never had this problem because it resolves albums by stable
ID, not by name.
Enhance now does the same thing for tracks: for every metadata source
the user has configured, if the library track has the corresponding
stored ID (spotify_track_id / deezer_id / itunes_track_id / soul_id),
call client.get_track_details(stored_id) directly and convert to the
wishlist payload. First success wins. The user's configured primary
source is tried first so a Deezer-primary user gets Deezer payloads on
the wishlist entry (correct cover art / album shape) even when other
sources also have stored IDs for the same track.
Multi-source parallel text search stays as the fallback for tracks
with no stored IDs (e.g. manually imported, never enriched). Empty-
field rejection still gates the wishlist add.
Implementation:
- _STORED_ID_COLUMNS: source name → DB column mapping
(Discogs intentionally omitted — release-based, no per-track IDs)
- _enhanced_to_wishlist_payload: converts the get_track_details
intermediate "enhanced" shape (artists as [str]) to wishlist shape
(artists as [{'name': str}]). Spotify's raw_data is already in
wishlist shape, returned as-is when detected (preserves full
album.images that the enhanced top-level fields drop)
- _try_direct_lookup_all_sources: iterates sources preferred-first,
calls get_track_details on each that has both a stored ID and a
configured client, returns first complete-metadata payload
- spotify_client field removed from ArtistQualityDeps (no longer
used — Spotify direct lookup now flows through the generic
per-source loop using the entry from search_sources)
- _try_upgrade_to_rich_payload removed (was Spotify-only with broken
shape semantics for non-Spotify sources; search-fallback now uses
_build_payload_from_track consistently)
- get_primary_source() consulted to set the per-call preferred source
for direct-lookup priority
Also fixed a stale UI string: the Enhance modal toast read "Matching
tracks to Spotify and adding to wishlist..." regardless of which
sources were actually configured. Now reads "Matching tracks across
metadata sources...".
Tests:
- _build_deps mirrors web_server._resolve_search_sources: passing
spotify=spotify_obj auto-prepends ('spotify', spotify_obj) to
search_sources (Spotify is always added when configured in prod)
- 5 new tests pin the direct-lookup behavior:
- test_direct_lookup_via_deezer_id_skips_text_search
- test_direct_lookup_via_itunes_id_skips_text_search
- test_direct_lookup_prefers_user_primary_source
- test_direct_lookup_falls_through_to_text_search_when_no_stored_ids
- test_direct_lookup_failure_falls_through_to_text_search
- Reframed enhanced-format and search-fallback tests for the new
payload-build path (no album-image side call, search-fallback uses
_build_payload_from_track consistently)
- 22/22 quality tests green, 2133/2133 full suite green.
Track Redownload had been doing parallel multi-source metadata search
across every configured source the whole time; Enhance Quality was
running a single-source primary fallback that returned junk matches
with empty fields when the primary was iTunes (Discord report:
"unknown artist - unknown album - unknown track" wishlist entries
for users with neither Spotify nor Deezer connected).
Lift the redownload search into core/metadata/multi_source_search.py
and point both flows at it. Same scoring, same per-source query
optimization (Deezer's structured artist:/track: form), same
current-match flagging via stored source IDs.
ArtistQualityDeps now takes get_metadata_search_sources (returns
[(name, client), ...] for every configured source) instead of the
single-primary get_metadata_fallback_client + get_metadata_fallback_source.
Spotify direct-lookup stays as a fast-path optimization (only Spotify
exposes get_track_details(id) returning rich raw payload); when it
doesn't fire, the multi-source parallel search picks the cross-source
best match. Empty-field matches still rejected before wishlist add.
Tests: _build_deps helper updated to accept the new search_sources
contract while preserving fallback_client/fallback_source ergonomics.
Reframed tests for the new semantics — direct-lookup is no longer
gated on Spotify being the active primary; failure reason now lists
every searched source. Added a test pinning the no-sources-configured
prompt. 17/17 quality tests green, 2128/2128 full suite green.
Discord report: clicking Enhance Quality on an artist with neither
Spotify nor Deezer connected added tracks to the wishlist as
"unknown artist - unknown album - unknown track".
Root cause was structural. core/artists/quality.py had a hardcoded
Spotify-direct → Spotify-search → iTunes-fallback chain that ignored
the user's configured primary metadata source. When Spotify wasn't
connected, every track fell through to an iTunes-only fallback that
occasionally returned matches with empty fields (cleared the 0.7
confidence threshold but missing artist / album / title). Those
empty strings propagated through the wishlist payload normalizer's
truthy-check passthrough at core/wishlist/payloads.py:77-80 and the
UI rendered them as "Unknown" defaults.
Rewrote the flow source-agnostic:
- ArtistQualityDeps gains get_metadata_fallback_source. Flow resolves
the user's active primary source once up front.
- New _build_payload_from_track helper produces the Spotify-shaped
wishlist payload from any source's Track object — single place
that knows how to construct it (replaces the duplicate construction
in the Spotify-search and iTunes-fallback paths).
- New _search_match helper does generic confidence-scored search
against any client implementing search_tracks(query, limit). Same
0.7 threshold, same album-bonus weighting as before.
- New _has_complete_metadata validator rejects matches with empty
title / album / artists before they reach the wishlist.
- _spotify_direct_lookup kept as a Spotify-only optimization (only
Spotify exposes get_track_details(id) returning rich raw payload);
other sources fall through to search.
- Failure reason now names the active source: "No usable {source}
match — connect another metadata source for better coverage".
Result: Discogs users get a Discogs search. Hydrabase users get a
Hydrabase search. iTunes users get an iTunes search with empty-field
rejection. Spotify keeps its direct-lookup fast path.
6 new tests pin the architectural change:
- Primary-source dispatch routes to the configured client (Discogs,
not Spotify) when Spotify isn't primary
- Spotify direct-lookup is gated on Spotify being the active primary
(skipped when Discogs is configured even if track has spotify_track_id)
- Empty title / album / artists fields all reject the match
- Failure reason names the active source
Going line-by-line through the engine package + boot wiring. Five
small things worth fixing before Cin reads it:
(1) MediaServerEngine class docstring still claimed to be a "single
entry point for cross-server library operations" — but the prior
honesty pass cut all the cross-server dispatch wrappers because they
had no callers. Class is really lookup + small accessors now.
Docstring rewritten to match.
(2) configured_clients() had a dead `not hasattr(client, 'is_connected')`
branch. is_connected is in REQUIRED_METHODS so every client the
registry yields here implements it. Branch removed; comment notes
the reasoning.
(3) types.py imported `datetime` and `Dict` but used neither —
dead imports dropped.
(4) types.py docstring claimed "all four servers" defined an
XTrackInfo dataclass. Actually only Plex / Jellyfin / Navidrome
did; SoulSync uses richer per-track wrappers. Fixed.
(5) web_server.py boot:
- media_server_engine added to the chained `= None` declaration
so it's always defined before the try/except, defending against
the rare path where engine init AND fallback both raise.
- Outer engine init failure logger now uses exc_info=True for full
traceback (boot-time issues are rare but worth diagnosing).
- Nested fallback failure now logs explicitly instead of silently
leaving media_server_engine as None.
Tests: 2121 still pass.
Five tightening passes anticipating Cin / JohnBaumb's review nits:
(1) Engine no longer reaches into ``registry._instances`` private
attr. New public ``MediaServerRegistry.set_instance(name, client)``
method — engine constructor calls it for the ``clients=`` pre-built
case so internal storage stays encapsulated.
(2) Engine module docstring no longer overclaims. Originally said it
"Replaces the historic 33+ if/elif chains" — but only the four
uniform-shape ``is_connected`` chains were collapsed. The 19 chains
that do server-specific work (Plex raw API vs Jellyfin / Navidrome
client methods returning different shapes) stay explicit per the
"lift what's truly shared" standard. Docstring rewritten to say
exactly that.
(3) Per-method exception swallows upgraded from ``logger.debug`` to
``logger.warning``. Returning safe defaults stays the right behavior
for a read-side engine (Plex offline shouldn't crash the app), but
silent debug-level swallowing made debugging hard — JohnBaumb pushed
the download engine to surface real errors. Same treatment here:
default still safe, but the warning tells you Plex is down.
(4) ``_safe_init_media_client`` in web_server.py now logs the
exception type + traceback. Broad ``except Exception`` is still
intentional (any failure means that one server can't be used; the
others stay up) but the boot log now distinguishes config errors
(ConnectionError, AuthenticationError) from import / dependency
failures.
(5) Two new tests pin the encapsulation + fallback contracts:
- ``test_engine_with_empty_clients_dict_is_safe_to_use`` — empty
engine returns safe defaults on every method, doesn't raise.
- ``test_engine_uses_registry_set_instance_not_private_attr`` — spy
on registry.set_instance verifies engine uses the public method.
Same latent bug as add-track — replace-track and remove-track only
looked up the Plex playlist by name. Plex deletes + recreates
playlists on edit so the rating key the frontend cached can be
stale, name lookups can also fail (special chars, encoding). Both
now use the same id-first / name-fallback chain as the GET tracks
endpoint, with a diagnostic log when both lookups fail.
Pre-existing latent bug, not a refactor regression.
The /api/server/playlist/<id>/add-track endpoint only looked up the
target Plex playlist by name, but Plex deletes + recreates playlists
on edit so the rating key the frontend cached can be stale. The
companion GET /tracks endpoint already had id-first / name-fallback;
add-track now does the same.
Added a warning log on GET /tracks when BOTH lookups fail so the
"all source items show Find & Add" symptom (which happens when
server_tracks comes back empty) has a clear diagnostic in the log
instead of silently rendering an empty server column.
Not a refactor regression — the original code had the same name-only
lookup. The mass-replace of `plex_client` → `media_server_engine.client('plex')`
is byte-equivalent. Just surfacing the latent bug.
If MediaServerEngine init raised, ``media_server_engine`` was set
to None. Every downstream caller (now that the per-server globals
are gone) does ``media_server_engine.client('plex')`` style access
— which would AttributeError on the None.
Pre-refactor each per-server global had its own try/except so engine
failure didn't take down per-server dispatch sites. Preserve that
resilience by falling back to an empty MediaServerEngine — its
``client(name)`` returns None, downstream truthy checks treat that
as "not configured" exactly the same way the legacy globals did.
Per-server web_server.py globals (plex_client / jellyfin_client /
navidrome_client / soulsync_library_client) are gone. The engine now
owns the per-server client instances; web_server.py constructs them
inline into the engine init and routes everything through
media_server_engine.client('<name>').
Multi-client consumers refactored to take the engine instead of
separate per-server kwargs:
- services/sync_service.py: PlaylistSyncService.__init__ now takes
media_server_engine. Internal _get_active_media_client resolves the
active server's client through self._engine.client(name) instead of
the per-server self.X_client attributes.
- core/listening_stats_worker.py: ListeningStatsWorker takes
media_server_engine. The plex/jellyfin/navidrome dispatch in _poll
collapses to engine.client(active_server) (gated to those three
servers — SoulSync standalone has no listening data).
- core/web_scan_manager.py: WebScanManager takes media_server_engine
instead of the hand-keyed media_clients dict that drifted out of
sync with the engine.
- core/discovery/sync.py: SyncDeps holds media_server_engine instead
of plex_client / jellyfin_client. Playlist-image dispatch routes
through engine.client(name).
Web_server.py:
- Per-server globals removed from the chained `= None` init line
+ their try/except construction blocks. Replaced with a
_safe_init_media_client(factory, name) helper that captures
per-server init failures + passes the resulting clients straight
into the MediaServerEngine init dict.
- All construction sites (PlaylistSyncService, WebScanManager,
ListeningStatsWorker, SyncDeps, library_check) updated to receive
the engine instead of per-server clients.
Test fixtures (tests/discovery/test_discovery_sync.py) gain a
_FakeMediaServerEngine stub + the SyncDeps build helper passes
that instead of separate plex/jellyfin clients.
Pre-change web_server.py had ~70 direct attribute reaches against the
per-server globals (plex_client.X, jellyfin_client.X, navidrome_client.X,
soulsync_library_client.X) plus ~60 standalone refs (truthy checks,
media_client assignments, source-name tuples). The engine was wired
but only used in 4 places, so most of the codebase still hand-dispatched
— the exact "partially defeats the purpose of this refactor" critique
Cin landed on the download PR initially.
- All ~70 client.attribute reaches migrated to
media_server_engine.client('<name>').attribute. The chains in
web_server.py do server-specific work (Plex raw API, Jellyfin /
Navidrome client methods, all returning different shapes), so the
if/elif structure stays — but the per-server CLIENT REACH now goes
through the engine like Cin's POC pattern intended.
- All ~60 standalone refs migrated:
- if plex_client → if media_server_engine.client('plex')
- media_client = plex_client → media_client = media_server_engine.client('plex')
- ('plex', plex_client) tuples → ('plex', media_server_engine.client('plex'))
- Per-server globals (plex_client / jellyfin_client / navidrome_client /
soulsync_library_client) kept for now — external modules
(PlaylistSyncService, WebScanManager, ListeningStatsWorker, search
library check, discovery sync deps) still take them as kwargs.
Dropping them entirely needs a follow-up sweep across those modules.
Suite green (1961 pass).
Apply the Cin-1 / Cin-2 pattern from the download refactor PR to the
media server engine PR before review.
Cin-1 — explicit inheritance:
- PlexClient, JellyfinClient, NavidromeClient, SoulSyncClient now
explicitly inherit MediaServerClient instead of relying on
structural typing alone. Pre-change a reader of plex_client.py
had no way to know the class was supposed to satisfy the contract.
- Removed the engine + registry re-exports from
core/media_server/__init__.py to break the circular import that
the inheritance change introduced (importing the package now
triggered a chain that loaded clients before their base class
resolved). Submodules import directly: from
core.media_server.engine import MediaServerEngine, etc.
- Conformance test now also asserts isinstance() / issubclass()
against MediaServerClient — drift in any class fails at the test
boundary instead of at runtime.
Cin-2 — generic accessors + singleton:
- engine.configured_clients() — replaces the legacy per-server
`if X and X.is_connected(): clients[name] = X` chains in
web_server.py.
- engine.reload_config(name=None) — generic dispatch, so callers
pass the server name instead of reaching for plex_client.reload_config()
directly.
- get_media_server_engine() / set_media_server_engine() singleton
factory matching the get_metadata_engine() / get_download_orchestrator()
shape. web_server.py boots via set_media_server_engine(...) so
factory + global handle share state.
- 7 new tests pin the accessors + singleton behaviour.
Two findings from JohnBaumb on the engine refactor.
(1) Every download client returned None when self._engine was None,
just logging an error. The orchestrator's download_with_fallback
treated None as "source declined", so the user got no feedback —
download silently disappeared. Now each client raises a RuntimeError
on the engine-not-wired path. download_with_fallback already catches
plugin exceptions, logs a warning, and tries the next source — so
the visible behavior is "real error in logs + fallback to next
source" instead of "silent drop". Six clients touched (deezer, hifi,
qobuz, soundcloud, tidal, youtube). Pinning tests updated to expect
raise.
(2) Monitor's engine.get_all_downloads() walked every plugin
including soulseek, but the same monitor loop already pulled slskd
transfers via the transfers/downloads endpoint a few lines earlier —
soulseek's records were being fetched twice per tick. Same issue in
web_server.py's get_cached_transfer_data path. Added an exclude
parameter to engine.get_all_downloads(); both call sites now pass
('soulseek',). New test pins the exclude semantic.
Also fixed a stray 8-space over-indent on the for-loop body in
get_cached_transfer_data (cosmetic, JohnBaumb flagged the same
pattern in monitor.py earlier).
Two architectural cleanups on top of the download engine refactor.
(1) Shared dataclasses move to neutral plugin package.
TrackResult, AlbumResult, DownloadStatus, SearchResult lived in
core/soulseek_client.py for historical reasons — every other plugin
imported them from the soulseek module just to satisfy the contract,
coupling 8 clients to a sibling source for type imports only. Moved
them to the new core/download_plugins/types.py module and updated all
14 import sites across the deezer/hifi/lidarr/qobuz/soundcloud/tidal/
youtube clients, the engine, matching engine, redownload helper, and
tests. Clean break, no backward-compat re-export.
(2) web_server.py boots the orchestrator via the singleton factory.
After construction it now calls set_download_orchestrator(...) so
get_download_orchestrator() returns the same instance the global
handle points at instead of lazily building a separate orchestrator.
Matches the get_metadata_engine() pattern.
Hunted down the remaining sites where web_server.py still reached
into orchestrator per-source attributes. Most were silently broken
after Cin-5 dropped those attrs but were guarded by hasattr checks
that always returned False — empty download_clients dicts and
no-op reload paths.
- /api/library/track/<id>/redownload-search: replaced the 6 if/hasattr
per-source blocks (the exact pattern Cin called out in his review)
with a single download_orchestrator.configured_clients() call.
- Settings reload path: hasattr-guarded YouTube reload now resolves
via client('youtube') and tests for None.
- _try_source_reuse / _store_batch_source: slsk lookup gates on
hasattr(orch, 'client') instead of the dropped 'soulseek' attr.
- /api/soundcloud/status + Deezer ARL endpoints: same hasattr
swap.
The global handle in web_server.py was named soulseek_client for
historical reasons but the type has long been DownloadOrchestrator,
not SoulseekClient. Renamed the global plus every parameter/attribute
that carried the legacy name.
- web_server.py: global var renamed; all 99 references updated.
- api/, core/downloads/*, core/search/*, core/streaming/*,
services/sync_service.py: parameter names, dataclass fields, and
init() arg names renamed.
- Test fixtures (CandidatesDeps, MasterDeps, SearchDeps, etc.) and
the _build_deps helpers updated accordingly.
The core.soulseek_client module path and SoulseekClient class name
(the actual soulseek-only client) are unchanged — only the orchestrator
handle renamed. Module imports of TrackResult/AlbumResult/DownloadStatus
from core.soulseek_client preserved.
Removed the eight backward-compat attribute aliases on the orchestrator
(soulseek, youtube, tidal, qobuz, hifi, deezer_dl, lidarr, soundcloud).
External callers and the orchestrator's own internals now reach clients
through the generic alias-aware client(name) accessor.
- core/downloads/{master,monitor,validation}.py: migrated to client().
Monitor's per-source aggregation loop replaced with a single
engine.get_all_downloads() call.
- core/search/{orchestrator,stream}.py: migrated; stream.py drops the
hand-built mode-to-client dict.
- web_server.py: migrated /api/deezer/arl-* + tidal client lookup.
- core/download_orchestrator.py: internal self.soulseek /
self.deezer_dl reaches now route through self.client(); attr
assignments dropped from __init__; module docstring updated.
- Test fakes (_FakeSoulseek, _FakeSoulseekWithYT) expose client(name)
instead of stuffing per-source attributes.
- Conformance test re-pinned to the client() accessor contract.
Three correctness fixes from kettui's PR review plus the web_server
migration to generic accessors.
- Engine alias map: register_plugin accepts aliases tuple; get_plugin
+ cancel_download resolve through it. Fixes deezer_dl cancels
silently routing to soulseek.
- Orchestrator hybrid_order normalization: _resolve_source_chain
routes raw config names through registry.get_spec() so legacy
deezer_dl entries don't drop deezer from hybrid mode.
- Atomic update_record_unless_state on the engine: holds state_lock
across the check + write. Both _mark_terminal AND the success path
use it now so a Cancelled state set mid-impl can't be clobbered.
- web_server.py: 30 soulseek_client.<source> reaches migrated to
client("<source>"); shutdown-check setup migrated to generic
registry iteration; 4 hifi reload sites use reload_instances('hifi').
- 18 new tests pin every fix.
Two more sites in web_server.py replaced (tag-preview + batch
tag-preview server_type checks). Same pattern as C1: 3-way
if/elif → engine.is_connected().
Honest scope note: the recon agent counted 33 dispatch sites,
but most are deeply server-specific logic where each branch
does completely different work (playlist track replace, per-
server metadata sync, deep scan with server-specific helpers).
Lifting those would move per-server branches into engine helper
methods that route the same work — net zero LOC, more indirection.
Engine helps where the shape is TRULY uniform; the deep dispatches
stay explicit. Phase C ends here at 4 simple sites lifted.
Suite still green.
Two sites in web_server.py replaced:
- /status route's media-server connectivity check (4-way if/elif
for plex/jellyfin/navidrome/soulsync) → engine.is_connected()
- /api/playlists endpoint's server_connected check (3-way if/elif)
→ engine.is_connected()
Engine reads active_server config + dispatches to the right client
with internal connection caching preserved (the underlying clients
all cache is_connected() calls).
Engine constructor now accepts a pre-built clients={...} dict so
web_server.py wires the same instances as its existing per-client
globals — no double-init.
Suite still green. Per-server clients still accessible via
engine.client(name) for source-specific reaches.
`_create_finding` silently dedup-skipped re-discovered issues but
the caller incremented `findings_created` regardless. So a re-scan
that found the same issues as a prior scan reported 364 findings
in the badge while 0 NEW pending rows hit the db, leaving the
findings tab empty.
`_create_finding` now returns bool (True on insert, False on
dedup-skip / db error). All 16 repair jobs updated to only
increment `findings_created` on True. Added `findings_skipped_dedup`
counter surfaced in scan log: "Done: X scanned, 0 fixed, 0
findings (363 already existed), 0 errors".
Also fixed a missing `job_id` kwarg in album_tag_consistency that
was silently breaking finding creation for that scan.
Discord request: pull user's Discogs collection into the Your Albums
section on Discover, similar to how Spotify Liked Albums works.
Implementation extends the existing 3-source pipeline (Spotify /
Tidal / Deezer) to a 4-source pipeline with click-context dispatch —
Discogs-only albums open with rich Discogs release detail (vinyl/CD
format, year, label, country, tracklist). Mirrors the per-source
dispatch pattern from enhanced/global search.
Discogs client (`core/discogs_client.py`):
- New `get_authenticated_username()` resolves the username for the
configured personal token via Discogs's `/oauth/identity` endpoint.
Cached on the instance so subsequent collection page-fetches don't
re-hit it.
- New `get_user_collection(username=None, folder_id=0, per_page=100,
max_pages=50)` walks all pages of `/users/{username}/collection/
folders/{folder_id}/releases`. Returns normalized dicts ready for
upsert_liked_album. folder_id=0 = Discogs's "All" folder.
Pagination cap of max_pages*per_page = 5000 releases — bounds
runtime on heavy collections.
- New `get_release(release_id)` thin wrapper for `/releases/{id}` —
returns the raw API response so the album-detail endpoint can
render rich context.
- Both methods defensive: missing token → empty list, malformed
responses → skipped, falsy ids → None. Disambiguation suffix
stripping (`Madonna (3)` → `Madonna`) so Discogs artist names
match what Spotify/Tidal/Deezer use.
Schema (`database/music_database.py`):
- New `discogs_release_id TEXT` column on `liked_albums_pool`.
Migration uses the established `try SELECT, except ALTER TABLE`
pattern. Idempotent; safe on existing installs.
- Added the column to the canonical CREATE TABLE for fresh installs.
- `upsert_liked_album` extended with `'discogs': 'discogs_release_id'`
in BOTH the INSERT and UPDATE id-column maps so Discogs source_id
routes to the new column. INSERT statement column count + value
count updated together.
Backend (`web_server.py`):
- `/api/discover/your-albums/sources` — adds Discogs to the
`connected` list when `discogs.token` config is set.
- `_fetch_liked_albums` — new branch for Discogs. Lazy-imports
DiscogsClient, respects the `enabled_sources` config, walks the
collection, upserts each release. Same try/except shape as the
existing source branches.
- `/api/discover/album/<source>/<album_id>` — new `discogs` branch
fetches the release via DiscogsClient.get_release, normalizes the
Discogs tracklist format, parses Discogs's `MM:SS`/`HH:MM:SS`
duration strings to milliseconds, returns the same response shape
as the Spotify/Deezer/iTunes branches.
Frontend (`webui/static/discover.js`):
- `openYourAlbumsSourcesModal` — adds Discogs to `sourceInfo` with
the vinyl emoji icon. Existing toggle/save plumbing handles it.
- `openYourAlbumDownload` — restructured the per-source dispatch:
builds an ordered list of (source, id) tuples, tries each in turn,
breaks on the first successful response. Pure-Discogs albums go
straight to the Discogs detail endpoint → modal opens with Discogs
context. Multi-source albums prefer Spotify/Deezer first since
their tracklists carry proper streaming IDs ready for download.
Tests: `tests/test_discogs_collection_source.py` — 12 cases:
- get_user_collection: empty without token, normalizes response
shape, strips disambiguation suffix, handles missing year, skips
malformed releases, paginates correctly, caps at max_pages,
uses explicit username when provided.
- get_release: passes id through to /releases/{id}, returns None
for invalid ids without API call.
- liked_albums_pool: discogs_release_id round-trips through upsert
+ get; multi-source dedup carries both Spotify and Discogs IDs
on the same row.
Verified: full suite 1825 pass (12 new), ruff clean, smoke test
populating + reading the discogs_release_id column round-trips
correctly via the real DB.
WHATS_NEW entry under '2.4.2' dev cycle.
Discord request (Samuel [KC]): show how much disk space the library
takes on the Stats page. Implementation piggybacks on the existing
deep scan — Plex/Jellyfin/Navidrome all return file size in their
track API responses, so we read it during the deep scan and store
it on the tracks row. Aggregation is then a single SQL query — no
filesystem walk, no extra I/O during the scan, no separate stat
job. SoulSync standalone gets size from os.path.getsize at insert
time (different code path; the file is local when we write the row).
Schema (`database/music_database.py`):
- New `file_size INTEGER` column on `tracks`. Migration uses the
established `try SELECT, except ALTER TABLE ADD COLUMN` pattern.
Idempotent; safe on existing installs. NULL on legacy rows so
they don't contribute to totals until next deep scan refreshes.
- Added the column to the canonical CREATE TABLE so fresh installs
get it without going through the migration path.
Track-object plumbing:
- `core/jellyfin_client.py` — JellyfinTrack reads MediaSources[0].Size
alongside existing Bitrate read. None when 0 / missing.
- `core/navidrome_client.py` — NavidromeTrack reads `size` from
the Subsonic song object (int coercion + None on parse fail).
- `core/soulsync_client.py` — SoulSyncTrack does os.path.getsize
(only "server" where size has to come from disk).
- Plex needs no client-side change: track.media[0].parts[0].size
is read directly inside insert_or_update_media_track.
Persistence — TWO separate insert paths:
(a) `database/music_database.py:insert_or_update_media_track` —
Plex/Jellyfin/Navidrome flows. Reads file_size from Plex's
MediaPart OR `track_obj.file_size` wrapper attribute (defensive
Plex-attr-not-present check + > 0 type guard).
INSERT writes the new column.
UPDATE uses COALESCE(?, file_size) so a None from the server
on a re-sync (rare Jellyfin Size omission) doesn't blank an
existing value. Pinned via test.
(b) `core/imports/side_effects.py:record_soulsync_library_entry` —
SoulSync standalone flow. Completely separate code path: the
standalone deep scan moves files to staging for auto-import
rather than calling insert_or_update_media_track. After the
auto-import processes them, side_effects writes the tracks row
directly. Reads file_size via os.path.getsize(final_path) at
insert time (file is local) and includes it in the INSERT
column list. SoulSync only does INSERT-if-not-exists (no
UPDATE path), so no COALESCE concern.
Aggregator (`database/music_database.py:get_library_disk_usage`):
- SELECT COALESCE(SUM(file_size), 0), COUNT(file_size),
COUNT(*) - COUNT(file_size) for the totals.
- Per-format breakdown done in Python via os.path.splitext over
(file_path, file_size) rows — sidesteps SQLite's first-vs-last-dot
ambiguity for paths like /music/Kendrick/M.A.A.D City/01.flac.
- Defensive: skips empty paths, paths without extension, and
implausibly long extensions (>6 chars). Returns the full
empty-shape dict (NOT a partial / undefined) when the column
doesn't exist or queries fail, so the UI's `if (!data.has_data)`
branch handles fresh installs cleanly.
API + UI:
- `core/stats/queries.py` — thin pass-through get_library_disk_usage
matching the existing query-helper convention.
- `web_server.py` — new /api/stats/library-disk-usage endpoint
mirroring the /api/stats/db-storage pattern.
- `webui/index.html` — new card in System Statistics above the
Database Storage card.
- `webui/static/stats-automations.js` — _loadLibraryDiskUsage +
_renderLibraryDiskUsage. Empty state: "Run a Deep Scan to
populate (X tracks pending)". Partial: "X measured (+Y pending)".
Full: total + format bars proportional to the largest format.
- `webui/static/style.css` — .stats-disk-* styled to match the
Database Storage card.
Backward compatibility:
- Migration is additive; existing rows get NULL file_size; the
empty-shape return from the aggregator means the UI renders
cleanly without errors before any deep scan runs.
- Old installs upgrading will see "Run a Deep Scan to populate
(N tracks pending)". Running their next deep scan fills sizes —
the existing scan flow doesn't need any changes, just consumes
the new track-wrapper attribute.
Tests:
- `tests/test_library_disk_usage.py` — 13 cases covering schema
migration, NULL defaults on legacy inserts, fresh-install empty
shape, summing with mixed NULL/known sizes, per-format breakdown,
mixed-case extensions, paths with album-name dots, missing
extensions, empty file_path, implausibly long extensions,
JellyfinTrack.file_size persistence via insert_or_update_media_track,
COALESCE preservation on null re-sync.
- `tests/imports/test_import_side_effects.py` — extended the
existing record_soulsync_library_entry test to assert
track_row['file_size'] == os.path.getsize(final_path), pinning
the SoulSync-standalone path. Test fixture's tracks schema also
updated to include the file_size column.
Verified: full suite 1813 pass (13 new, 1 existing-test extension),
ruff clean, smoke test populating + reading the column round-trips
correctly.
WHATS_NEW entry under '2.4.2' dev cycle.
User: SoundCloud downloads finish correctly but the modal stays at
"Downloading... 0%" until "Processing..." flips on. Live percentage
never updates.
Root cause: my live-progress fix in 8de4a18 made the SoundCloud client
compute progress correctly via fragment_index/fragment_count — but the
percent never reached the modal because `get_cached_transfer_data` in
web_server.py iterates `[youtube, tidal, qobuz, hifi, deezer_dl,
lidarr]` to build the lookup that drives `task.progress`. SoundCloud
was missing from that loop, so `live_transfers_lookup` had no entry
for SoundCloud downloads, so `live_info` lookup at
`core/downloads/status.py:135` always missed, so `task_status['progress']`
defaulted to 0 the entire time.
Frontend was reading `task.progress` (rendered as
"Downloading... ${task.progress}%" in `webui/static/downloads.js:3142`),
which stayed at 0. The percentComplete field that the
`/api/downloads/status` endpoint includes for SoundCloud was correct;
this only affected the cached lookup used by the V2 task tracker.
Fix: include SoundCloud in the iteration. Used `getattr` fallback to
match the same pattern I used in `core/downloads/monitor.py` so older
soulseek_client snapshots without the attribute don't AttributeError.
Bonus: also wired the SoundCloud client's `set_shutdown_check` callback
in the startup block right after HiFi's. Previously the cooperative-
cancellation hook in `_progress_hook` would never fire on shutdown
because `self.shutdown_check` was None.
Verified: full suite 1732 passed, ruff clean. yt-dlp probe confirms
fragment_index / fragment_count are populated correctly during HLS
download (164 hook calls for a 19-fragment track), so the now-
exposed progress will increment smoothly from 0 to 99.9 and then
flip to Completed.
User report: switched download source to SoundCloud and noticed:
1. Download progress % stays at 0 until "suddenly done" — no live progress
2. Sidebar status indicator next to "SoundCloud" label is red
3. Dashboard service status card still shows "Soulseek" as the source name
Fix 1 — Live progress for HLS-segmented SoundCloud downloads
(`core/soundcloud_client.py`):
- yt-dlp's `total_bytes` / `total_bytes_estimate` for HLS describes the
CURRENT FRAGMENT, not the whole download. So the byte-based
percentage stayed near 0 the entire time — until 'finished' fired.
- Added `_update_download_progress_fragmented` which uses
`fragment_index` / `fragment_count` (which yt-dlp DOES populate
accurately for HLS) to compute a meaningful percentage. Total size
is extrapolated from per-fragment average for the bytes/remaining
display. Time-remaining estimate uses elapsed/index seconds-per-
fragment.
- The progress hook prefers fragment progress when both fragment_index
and fragment_count are present; falls back to byte-based for
non-fragmented (progressive MP3) downloads. Five new unit tests pin
the fragment-progress math, the 99.9% cap, and the defensive
zero-index / unknown-id paths.
Fix 2 — Sidebar status indicator stays green for SoundCloud mode
(`web_server.py`):
- The `/api/status` route's `serverless_sources` tuple decides whether
to even probe slskd. SoundCloud (and Lidarr) were missing — so when
the active source was SoundCloud, the route fell through to "test
slskd, mark not-relevant", which set `connected: False` and turned
the sidebar dot red even though SoundCloud was working.
- Added `'soundcloud'` and `'lidarr'` to the tuple. Both are
serverless from slskd's perspective, so the dot now stays green
whenever they're the active source.
Fix 3 — Dashboard service card title shows the active source
(`webui/static/shared-helpers.js`):
- The dashboard's "Download Source" card has its own
`sourceNames` map at line 3351 (separate from the sidebar map I
already updated at 3396). Missed it during the integration PR.
- Added `'lidarr'` and `'soundcloud'` so the card title now reads
"SoundCloud" / "Lidarr" instead of falling back to "Soulseek".
Bonus — Dashboard "Test Connection" button works for SoundCloud
(`core/connection_test.py`):
- The dashboard's Test Connection button on the download-source card
sends `service` based on the active source — so for SoundCloud it
was sending `service='soundcloud'`. `run_service_test` had no
branch for it, so it fell through to "Unknown service." and the
button always failed.
- Added a `soundcloud` branch that mirrors `/api/soundcloud/status`
behavior: confirms yt-dlp is installed, runs a real cheap probe,
returns a meaningful pass/fail. (HiFi has the same gap but no
user reported it; out of scope for this fix.)
Verified:
- 41 unit tests pass (5 new fragment-progress tests added)
- Full suite 1732 passed
- Ruff clean
Plug the previously-built SoundcloudClient (PR #478, the build-and-verify
phase) into every place a download source needs to appear. Follows the
same wiring contract as Tidal/Qobuz/HiFi/Deezer/Lidarr — orchestrator
routing, hybrid-mode picker, search dispatch, queue/cancel/clear,
provenance + library history, sidebar source label, settings UI all
work plug-and-play.
Backend wiring:
- `core/download_orchestrator.py` — import SoundcloudClient, _safe_init
it at startup, add to _client() lookup, get_source_status(),
check_connection's sources_to_check default, search source_names map,
search_and_download_best _streaming_sources tuple, download
source_map + source_names, and every iteration loop in
reload_settings download-path-update / get_all_downloads /
get_download_status / cancel_download (route + iterate) /
clear_all_completed_downloads / cancel_all_downloads.
- `core/downloads/monitor.py` — added SoundCloud to the per-client
loop that fetches active downloads outside the orchestrator (uses
getattr fallback for older soulseek_client snapshots).
- `core/downloads/task_worker.py` — added SoundCloud (and Lidarr,
which was missing too — bonus fix) to source_clients dict for hybrid
fallback dispatch.
- `core/downloads/validation.py` — added 'soundcloud' to
_streaming_sources so SoundCloud results go through the matching
engine validation path instead of the Soulseek quality-filter path.
- `core/imports/side_effects.py` — three call sites: source_map for
download_source label written to library_history, streaming-source
guard for the `||`-encoded stream_id parsing, and source_service
map for provenance recording. All three now include 'soundcloud'.
- `web_server.py` — five streaming-source detection tuples updated.
New `/api/soundcloud/status` endpoint returns
{available, configured, reachable} mirroring the Deezer/HiFi
status-endpoint pattern; reachability runs a real cheap yt-dlp
search so the settings Test Connection button gives a meaningful
pass/fail signal.
- `config/settings.py` — added empty `soundcloud_download` defaults
block so future tier-2 OAuth (SoundCloud Go+ session) doesn't have
to migrate existing configs.
Frontend:
- `webui/index.html` — new `<option value="soundcloud">` in the
download-source-mode dropdown, SoundCloud added to both hidden
legacy hybrid-source selects, new settings container with info
text + Test Connection button.
- `webui/static/settings.js` — HYBRID_SOURCES entry (with the
SoundCloud cloud SVG icon), _hybridSourceEnabled default,
updateDownloadSourceUI container display, allSources for legacy
hybrid picker, testSoundcloudConnection function (hits the new
status endpoint, color-codes the result), saveSettings
soundcloud_download empty block.
- `webui/static/shared-helpers.js` — sidebar source-name map
includes SoundCloud + Lidarr (Lidarr was also missing, bonus fix).
- `webui/static/helper.js` — WHATS_NEW entry under '2.4.2' dev cycle
describing the user-visible change in the chill terse voice.
Tests:
- `tests/test_download_orchestrator_soundcloud.py` — 14 integration
tests verifying the wiring: client constructed at startup, _client
lookup resolves 'soundcloud', get_source_status includes it,
download dispatcher routes username='soundcloud' to the SoundCloud
client (and unknown usernames still fall back to Soulseek), hybrid
search iterates SoundCloud when in order and skips it cleanly when
unconfigured, get_all_downloads / get_download_status / cancel /
clear walk SoundCloud, soundcloud-only mode dispatches only to
SoundCloud, _streaming_sources tuple in validation includes
'soundcloud'.
- `tests/downloads/test_download_orchestrator.py` — added
`soundcloud` to the test fixture's _build_orchestrator helper so
the new orchestrator attribute doesn't AttributeError in pre-
existing tests that bypass __init__.
Verified:
- Full suite green (1728 passed, 2 deselected for soundcloud_live)
- Ruff clean
- Live SoundCloud-only mode search returns 25 SoundCloud tracks for
"kendrick lamar luther" in <2s, returning properly-shaped
TrackResult objects with username='soundcloud' and dispatch-key
filename ready for the download path.
Out of scope (intentional deferrals):
- SoundCloud Go+ OAuth tier (256 kbps AAC) — anonymous-only for now.
Adding auth later is a settings-page extension, no orchestrator
changes needed.
- Album/playlist support — SoundCloud has playlists but they don't
map to the album model the rest of SoulSync expects. Singles only.
Reported case (Foxxify): Tidal returned error 1002 ("Invalid redirect
URI") on every authentication attempt for users accessing SoulSync
from a network IP. User had ``http://127.0.0.1:8889/tidal/callback``
registered in his Tidal Developer Portal — matching the SoulSync UI
default and docs.
Root cause: the /auth/tidal route at web_server.py:5594-5598 had a
"fallback: dynamically set based on request host" branch that fired
when ``tidal.redirect_uri`` config was empty AND the request didn't
come from localhost. That fallback overrode the TidalClient
constructor's safe default (``http://127.0.0.1:<port>/tidal/callback``)
with a uri built from request.host like
``http://192.168.x.x:8889/tidal/callback``. Tidal compares strings
exactly so this never matched the documented portal registration and
the user got 1002 before the consent screen even rendered.
The trap is the SoulSync settings UI displays the default URI as the
placeholder + "Current Redirect URI" display — but the placeholder
never gets saved to config unless the user explicitly clicks Save.
Most users who follow the docs (register the displayed default with
Tidal, then click Authenticate) hit the empty-config path and the
broken fallback.
Fix: drop the request-host fallback. Empty config falls back to the
constructor default that matches the documented portal registration.
The existing post-auth swap-step in the instructions page below
handles the Docker / remote-access case as designed:
1. SoulSync sends 127.0.0.1:8889 in the authorize URL → matches
portal → Tidal accepts.
2. User authorizes → Tidal redirects browser to 127.0.0.1:8889
(which fails locally — nothing on user's machine listens there).
3. Instructions tell user to swap 127.0.0.1 with the host they're
accessing SoulSync from.
4. Swapped URL hits the container's exposed callback port → auth
completes.
8 regression tests in tests/test_tidal_auth_redirect_uri.py:
- Configured redirect_uri sent verbatim (localhost / custom port /
explicit network IP)
- Empty config falls back to constructor default — NOT request.host
(the actual reported scenario, with explicit assertion message
warning if the bug returns)
- Empty config + localhost access uses the same default (sanity)
Full pytest 1635 passed; ruff clean.
Discord-reported (Foxxify): logging in to Qobuz via the Connect
button on Settings showed "Connected: <username> (Active)" but
underneath an error said "Qobuz not authenticated...", and the
dashboard indicator stayed yellow. Saving settings or reloading the
tab didn't help.
Root cause: SoulSync runs two QobuzClient instances side by side —
one through soulseek_client.qobuz for the /api/qobuz/auth/* endpoints,
and a second owned by the enrichment worker thread for thread safety.
The login flow only updated the auth-flow instance's in-memory state
(plus persisted to config). The dashboard's "configured" check at
web_server.py:3371 reads
``qobuz_enrichment_worker.client.user_auth_token`` — the WORKER's
instance — which still believed itself unauthenticated. The
connection-test step at core/connection_test.py:370 hits the same
worker instance for the same reason.
Fix: add ``QobuzClient.reload_credentials()`` — a public, network-free
method that re-reads the saved session from config and updates the
instance's in-memory state + session headers. Call it on the
enrichment worker's client immediately after a successful
``/api/qobuz/auth/login``, ``/api/qobuz/auth/token``, or
``/api/qobuz/auth/logout`` so the two instances stay in lockstep
without waiting for the next process restart.
Unlike the existing ``_restore_session()`` this skips the network
probe — the caller has just authenticated, so the token is known
good. A small ``_sync_qobuz_credentials_to_worker()`` helper in
web_server.py wraps the call so all three endpoints share one path.
10 new regression tests cover the populate / clear / partial-config
paths plus the actual two-instance-sync scenario from the bug report.
Full pytest 1555 passed (the one pre-existing flake in
test_tidal_auth_instructions.py is order-dependent and unrelated).
- keep existing /api/image-proxy URLs from being wrapped again
- reuse the shared metadata package instead of duplicating URL logic in web_server.py
- add regression coverage for proxy passthrough and internal URL normalization
- move Spotify status publishing onto auth, disconnect, and rate-limit transitions
- keep dashboard and debug consumers on the shared cached snapshot
- leave only the initial snapshot seed as a fallback probe
- move metadata-source and Spotify status caching out of web_server.py
- keep the public /status payload unchanged while shrinking server-side glue
- centralize invalidation and TTL handling in core/metadata/status.py
- cache Spotify auth and rate-limit status separately from the generic metadata source snapshot
- refresh Spotify status only on explicit auth/disconnect/test paths or after the TTL expires
- keep the legacy OAuth callback paths aligned with the same invalidation helper
- Keep the primary metadata provider snapshot generic and move Spotify auth/rate-limit details into a separate status object.
- Update the websocket fixture and dashboard/settings consumers to read the two buckets independently.
Followup to the enrichment-bubble registry consolidation. The
dashboard polling + click handlers all hit
/api/enrichment/<service>/{status,pause,resume} now, so the 30
hand-rolled per-service routes in web_server.py have zero callers
and can come out:
/api/musicbrainz/{status,pause,resume}
/api/audiodb/{status,pause,resume}
/api/discogs/{status,pause,resume}
/api/deezer/{status,pause,resume}
/api/spotify-enrichment/{status,pause,resume}
/api/itunes-enrichment/{status,pause,resume}
/api/lastfm-enrichment/{status,pause,resume}
/api/genius-enrichment/{status,pause,resume}
/api/tidal-enrichment/{status,pause,resume}
/api/qobuz-enrichment/{status,pause,resume}
Worker init blocks stay (they still construct the workers + persist
pause state). Section comment headers are preserved with a one-line
note pointing readers at the new generic blueprint.
Test fixtures in tests/conftest.py and
tests/metadata/test_enrichment_events.py also updated to use the
new URL paths so they reflect production reality. They were
synthetic stubs that never depended on the production routes —
purely cosmetic alignment.
Net: ~510 lines deleted from web_server.py. Full pytest 1541
passed; ruff clean.
The dashboard's enrichment-status bubbles (MusicBrainz, AudioDB,
Discogs, Deezer, Spotify, iTunes, Last.fm, Genius, Tidal, Qobuz) each
had its own copy-pasted /status, /pause, /resume route in web_server.py
— 30 routes that differed only in the worker reference and a couple
of per-service quirks (Spotify's rate-limit guard, Last.fm/Genius
yield-override behavior, Tidal/Qobuz extra status fields).
Replace them with a registry-driven blueprint:
- core/enrichment/services.py declares an EnrichmentService dataclass
with worker_getter, config_paused_key, pre_resume_check,
auto_pause_token, and extra_status_defaults — all variation captured
as data, no branching on service id.
- core/enrichment/api.py exposes a Flask blueprint with three routes
(/api/enrichment/<service>/{status,pause,resume}). Per-service
quirks are honored via the descriptor: Spotify's rate-limit ban
still returns 429 with `rate_limited: true`, Last.fm/Genius still
drop the auto-pause token and add the yield override, Tidal/Qobuz
still merge `authenticated: false` into the fallback payload.
- web_server.py registers all 10 services after their workers
initialize, wires the host-side hooks (config_manager.set,
_download_auto_paused.discard, _download_yield_override.add), and
registers the blueprint.
- webui/static/enrichment.js polling + click handlers now hit the
generic endpoints. The per-service `update<Service>StatusFromData`
functions are unchanged — they still process the same payload.
This is the cutover step. Old per-service routes are intentionally
left in place as a fallback during the soak period — they currently
have zero callers in the codebase and will be deleted in a follow-up
patch once production has run on the new pipeline for a few days.
27 new tests in tests/test_enrichment_services.py cover the registry
behavior + every quirk path through the generic blueprint (rate-limit
guard, auto-pause token cleanup, persisted-pause config keys, extra
default fields, worker-not-initialized fallback, exceptions). Full
suite 1541 passed; ruff clean.
Patch release wrapping up the 2.4.1 dev cycle. Highlights:
- Watchlist no longer re-downloads compilation/soundtrack tracks
(#458 dedup orphan cleanup + the album-match fix work in tandem
to stop the loop).
- Duplicate detector catches slskd dedup orphans via a second
filename-bucket pass.
- Beatport tab hidden temporarily — Cloudflare Turnstile blocks the
scraper and the official OAuth API is closed to public devs.
- Service worker for cover art + installable PWA manifest.
- Browser caching for static assets (1y) and discover pages (5min).
- Socket.IO same-origin default + admin-only /api/settings.
Files updated:
- web_server.py: _SOULSYNC_BASE_VERSION 2.4.0 -> 2.4.1
- webui/index.html: sidebar version button + modal subtitle
- webui/static/helper.js: WHATS_NEW dev-cycle marker -> release date,
fallback version in _getLatestWhatsNewVersion, 8 new
VERSION_MODAL_SECTIONS entries promoted from this cycle
- .github/workflows/docker-publish.yml: workflow_dispatch default
version_tag updated to 2.4.1
- Return a distinct post-auth warning page when Spotify OAuth completes but the client still does not report an authenticated session.
- Send the completion signal back to the opener so the settings UI can refresh and show the warning state immediately.
- Keep the standalone callback server and the main Flask callback path aligned on the same result-page helper.
- Make the Spotify auth completion popup notify the opener across callback origins.
- Refresh service status in the settings UI after auth completes so the button flips to Disconnect immediately.
- Keep the standalone callback instruction page and the main app flow working with the same completion signal.
- Send Spotify auth completion back to the opener so the settings page refreshes immediately
- Make the local auth flow go straight through to Spotify instead of showing the temporary instruction page
- Keep the remote/docker instruction page available for manual callback setups
- Sync Spotify status, connect/disconnect buttons, and metadata source selection after auth and disconnect
- Keep the disconnect behavior aligned with the active primary metadata source
- Hide the auth button when a Spotify session is active
- Treat disconnect as a session change, not a provider swap
- Share metadata source labels in the registry
- Tighten rate-limit copy around Spotify-specific behavior
Pytest tears down its log file handles before atexit runs. Every
"Shutting down ..." line a worker emits while stopping then crashes
Python's logger with "I/O operation on closed file" and floods CI
stderr with --- Logging error --- traceback blocks. The CI sanity
check workflow noticed once tests started importing web_server (the
Tidal-auth integration test PR + this parallel-imports PR are the
first two test files that boot the full module).
Adds a tiny atexit handler that flips ``logging.raiseExceptions =
False`` BEFORE the other shutdown handlers run. atexit's LIFO order
makes "registered last" mean "runs first", so this fires ahead of
cleanup_monitor / _atexit_shutdown / _atexit_save_history and any
log calls those make can't bubble the closed-stream traceback.
The shutdown messages themselves are best-effort debug
breadcrumbs, not data we need to preserve at process exit, so
silencing the internal handler errors costs nothing.