POSIX os.path.dirname doesn't treat '\' as separator, so the
assertion 'Drake' in result fails on Linux CI even though the
function's rstrip removes the trailing backslash correctly.
The forward-slash test already covers the trim contract.
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).
GitHub issue #558: clicking Auto-Fill / Fix Selected on the Album
Completeness findings page returned a flat "Could not determine album
folder from existing tracks" error with no diagnostic. Reporter is on
Navidrome on Docker — the path resolver in
`core/library/path_resolver.py` couldn't find any of the album's tracks
on disk because Navidrome's Subsonic API doesn't expose filesystem
library paths the way Plex's API does (probed in #476). Default
settings → `library.music_paths` empty → no base directories to probe →
silent None. User had no signal about what to configure.
Not a regression of #476 — that fix targeted Plex auto-discovery and
worked correctly for it. Navidrome was never covered because the
protocol gives the resolver nothing to probe.
Fix scoped to the diagnostic surface, not auto-magic discovery:
- Added `resolve_library_file_path_with_diagnostic` returning
`(resolved, ResolveAttempt)`. ResolveAttempt records what the resolver
tried — `raw_path_existed`, `base_dirs_tried`, `had_config_manager`,
`had_plex_client`. Pure data, no rendering opinions.
- Legacy `resolve_library_file_path` becomes a thin wrapper that
drops the attempt; every existing call site is unchanged.
- `RepairWorker._fix_incomplete_album` now uses the diagnostic helper
and renders a multi-part error via `_build_unresolvable_album_folder_error`:
names the active media server, shows one sample DB-recorded path,
lists every base directory the resolver actually probed, and points
the user at Settings → Library → Music Paths as the actionable fix.
- Distinguishes empty-base-dirs vs tried-and-failed cases so the user
knows whether to add a mount or fix the existing one.
- No auto-probing of common Docker conventions (`/music`, `/media`, etc).
Speculative — could resolve to wrong dirs on the suffix-walk if a
conventional path happens to contain a partial collision. User stays
in control.
12 new tests:
- 7 in `tests/library/test_path_resolver.py`: tuple-shape contract,
raw-path-existed short-circuit, base-dirs listed even on walk
failure, had-flags reflect caller inputs, no-base-dirs returns
None with empty attempt, legacy `resolve_library_file_path`
delegates correctly across happy / suffix-walk / failure paths.
- 8 in `tests/test_repair_worker_unresolvable_folder_error.py`:
active server name in error, sample DB path verbatim, base dirs
listed, empty-base-dirs phrased differently, Settings hint always
present, defensive against None attempt / missing sample / missing
config_manager.
Full pytest sweep: 2774 passed.
GitHub issue #476 (gabistek, Docker on Arch host): "Auto-Fill" / "Fix
Selected" on the Album Completeness findings page returned
"Could not determine album folder from existing tracks" for every album.
Reproduces on any setup where the media-server library lives outside the
SoulSync transfer/download folders — Docker is the headline case but
native installs that point Plex at a NAS via SMB hit it too.
Root cause: `core/repair_worker.py:_resolve_file_path` only probed the
transfer + download folders. Docker users have their Plex/Jellyfin
library bind-mounted at /music (or similar) — neither configured in
SoulSync. Every existing track got silently treated as missing, so
`album_folder` stayed None and the fix workflow bailed.
The same incomplete logic was duplicated four more times in the
repair_jobs/ modules, all with the same bug. Album Completeness was
just the most user-visible — the same setups were also producing false
"missing file" findings from Dead File Cleaner, silent skips in
MBID Mismatch Detector, etc.
The web server already had the correct logic at
`web_server.py:_resolve_library_file_path` (probes transfer + download
+ Plex-reported library locations + user-configured library.music_paths).
The repair workers had never been updated to match.
Fix:
- New `core/library/path_resolver.py` extracts the union logic into a
single shared function `resolve_library_file_path()`. Probes (in
order, deduped): explicit transfer/download kwargs, config-derived
soulseek.transfer_path/download_path, Plex-reported library
locations (when a plex_client is passed), user-configured
library.music_paths. Each defensive: malformed config or a flaky
Plex client degrades to the dirs that did succeed.
- `core/repair_worker.py:_resolve_file_path` becomes a delegating
wrapper preserving the legacy signature, with a new `config_manager`
kwarg. All 15 in-tree call sites updated to thread
`self._config_manager` through.
- `core/repair_jobs/dead_file_cleaner.py`,
`mbid_mismatch_detector.py`, and `lossy_converter.py` get the same
treatment: duplicate function replaced with a thin wrapper, call
sites pass `context.config_manager`.
- `core/repair_jobs/acoustid_scanner.py` and
`unknown_artist_fixer.py` (which used to import from repair_worker)
now call the shared resolver directly with `context.config_manager`.
Side benefit: every other repair job (Dead File Cleaner, MBID
Mismatch Detector, Lossy Converter, AcoustID Scanner, Unknown Artist
Fixer) also stops missing files in the media-server library mount.
Single fix unblocks five user-visible features.
Tests: `tests/library/test_path_resolver.py` — 20 cases covering all
four base-dir sources, suffix-walk algorithm, dedup, defensive paths
(None plex client, malformed config entries, raising config_manager.get,
broken plex attribute access), Docker path translation. Full suite
1677 passed locally.
WHATS_NEW entry under '2.4.2' dev cycle.
Pulls the 258-line retag worker out of `web_server.py` into a new
`core/library/` package. Pure 1:1 lift — wrapper keeps the original
entry-point name so the retag-trigger endpoint continues to work
without changes.
What `execute_retag` does:
1. Fetch album + track metadata for the new `album_id` (Spotify or
iTunes — the Spotify client transparently falls back).
2. Load existing files in the retag group from the DB.
3. Match each existing track to a new Spotify track:
- Priority 1: same disc + track number.
- Priority 2: title similarity >= 0.6 (SequenceMatcher).
4. For each matched pair:
- Re-write metadata tags via `_enhance_file_metadata`.
- Compute the new path via `_build_final_path_for_track` and move
the audio file (plus .lrc / .txt sidecars) if the path changes.
- Drop an orphaned cover.jpg if it's left in an empty directory.
- Clean up empty parent directories left behind.
- Download the new cover art into the new album dir.
5. Update the retag group record with new artist / album / image /
total_tracks / release_date and the appropriate Spotify-or-iTunes
album ID (numeric → iTunes, alphanumeric → Spotify).
6. Mark the retag state 'finished' (or 'error' on exception).
Strict 1:1 byte parity:
The original mutated `retag_state` as a module global (the function
declared `global retag_state` even though it only mutates in place).
Here `retag_state` is exposed through the `RetagDeps` proxy as a Python
property so the lifted body keeps `name[key] = value` /
`name.update(...)` syntax. The property setter rebinds the
web_server.py reference if the function ever reassigns it (currently
it doesn't, but the setter is wired for parity with the watchlist lift).
Diff vs original after `deps.X` → global X normalization is **zero
differences** apart from the dropped `global retag_state` decl and the
inline `from database.music_database import get_database` (replaced by
deps.get_database()). 258 lines orig = 258 lines lifted, byte-identical
body otherwise.
Dependencies injected via `RetagDeps` (13 fields) — config_manager,
retag_lock, spotify_client, plus 8 callable helpers
(get_audio_quality_string, enhance_file_metadata,
build_final_path_for_track, safe_move_file, cleanup_empty_directories,
download_cover_art, docker_resolve_path, get_database) and 2 property
delegates (_get_retag_state / _set_retag_state).
Tests: 11 new under tests/library/test_retag.py covering setup error
paths (no album data, no album tracks, no existing tracks),
track-number priority match, title-similarity fallback, no-match skip,
missing file skip, file move when path changes, group record update
(spotify vs iTunes ID branching by alphanumeric vs numeric album_id),
multi-disc total_discs computation.
Full suite: 1330 passing (was 1319). Ruff clean.