- _SOULSYNC_BASE_VERSION → 2.6.3
- helper.js WHATS_NEW unreleased flag → 'May 27, 2026 — 2.6.3 release'
Note: .github/workflows/docker-publish.yml default version_tag was
also bumped to 2.6.3 locally, but .github is gitignored in this
repo — workflow updates need to land via the GitHub UI separately.
The workflow_dispatch input is overrideable at trigger time
regardless of the default, so this isn't blocking.
Two related leaks in ``storage/album_bundle_staging/<batch_id>/``:
1. **Soulseek bundle cleanup was excluded.** The per-batch cleanup
at the end of a bundle download gated on:
(album_bundle_source or '').lower() in ('torrent', 'usenet')
The comment justified it as "slskd keeps its own completed
folders" — but the Soulseek bundle path ALSO copies completed
files into the private staging dir (``soulseek_client.py:1599``,
``copy_audio_files_atomically(completed, Path(staging_dir))``)
for the per-track workers to claim. Those copies persisted
forever; long-running installs accumulated stale GB. Extended
the cleanup gate's allow-list to include ``soulseek`` so the
per-batch dir is removed on bundle completion — same code path
that already worked for torrent / usenet.
2. **No sweep for orphan dirs.** Any leftover ``<batch_id>``
subdir from a previous-session crash, an errored batch, or a
pre-fix Soulseek bundle stayed on disk forever. Added
``sweep_orphan_album_bundle_staging(staging_root, active_batch_ids)``
that runs ONCE at server startup, before any batch can register
a staging dir. Removes every ``<batch_id>``-shaped subdir
whose id isn't in the active set. Safe by construction:
- Only touches subdirs of the configured staging root.
- Name-shape check (``entry.name == _safe_batch_dirname(entry.name)``)
rejects hand-placed dirs like ``.git`` or stray docs.
- ``shutil.rmtree`` errors log + continue — sweep must not
crash app startup over a permission glitch.
- active_batch_ids normalised through ``_safe_batch_dirname``
so colon-bearing batch_ids match their on-disk form.
Wired into the web_server startup right after the stuck-flags
diagnostic so it fires before anything else touches batches.
Tests
- ``test_downloads_lifecycle.py`` gained one regression test
pinning that Soulseek bundles now have their staging dir
cleaned (sibling to the existing torrent test).
- ``test_album_bundle_staging_sweep.py`` (NEW, 11 tests)
covers: orphan removal with no actives, active dirs preserved,
special-char batch_id normalisation, no-op on missing /empty
/empty-string staging root, non-dir entries skipped, unsafe-
name dirs preserved (.git etc.), partial rmtree failure doesn't
abort the rest, listdir failure returns 0 cleanly, default
None active set, defensive against empty / None entries in
the active set.
488 downloads tests pass.
For users with an existing "clean up old files" automation pointed
at this dir: stop pointing it there if you want — the auto-cleanup
+ startup sweep cover it now. Or leave it as belt-and-suspenders
with a relaxed (1h+) mtime threshold so it can't race a mid-batch
download.
The sync-tabs row had 14 sources jostling for horizontal space —
labels wrapped to 2 lines, the active pill ate disproportionate
room, the whole strip felt cramped and would only get worse as
more sources get added.
Restyled the strip as circular brand-logo chips. Inactive tabs
are 40px discs that show only the source's icon; the currently-
active tab swells into a pill that reveals its label inline.
Hover surfaces the source name as a native tooltip via the
title attr. Each chip carries its source's brand color as a
hover ring + active fill (Spotify green, Tidal orange, Qobuz
blue, Deezer purple, iTunes coral, YouTube red, Beatport green,
LB orange, Last.fm red, SSD teal).
Three sources share a logo with another source (Spotify Link
/ Spotify, Deezer Link / Deezer, iTunes Link / no native iTunes
but same logo family). Each "Link" variant carries a small
chain-link badge bottom-right so the chip disambiguates without
forcing the label to always be visible.
CSS-only swap — same JS handlers, same .active class, same
data-tab routing. HTML edit wraps each tab's label in a
``<span class="sync-tab-label">`` and adds ``data-link="true"``
to the Link variants so the CSS can target them.
Responsive: chips collapse to 36px on laptop / tablet and 32px
on mobile; the divider hides on mobile and gap tightens.
finished the release (#715)
Symptom (user @pavelcreates / @IamGroot60 on 2.6.2):
- Click Download on an album in the search modal
- slskd starts + completes every track of the release
- 22+ minutes after the last completed download, batch flips
to "failed" with no clear log line explaining why
- Per-track Soulseek downloads on the same machine were fine
Root cause: ``core/soulseek_client._resolve_downloaded_album_file``
probed three hard-coded candidate paths to locate each downloaded
file in the slskd download dir:
candidates = [
download_path / remote_filename,
download_path / basename,
download_path / *normalized_path_parts,
]
On the common slskd config ``directories.downloads.username = true``
slskd writes files at ``<download_dir>/<username>/<filename>`` —
none of the three candidates carry a username segment, so the
resolver returned None for every file even though the file was
physically present in a subdir one level deeper. ``_poll_album
_bundle_downloads`` saw 0 completed_paths, kept spinning, and
hit the master deadline (~30 min) before bailing the batch.
Why per-track worked: ``web_server._find_completed_file_robust``
already does a recursive walk-by-basename + path-confirm against
the remote directory components, so any layout slskd writes ends
up resolved. The bundle path didn't go through it.
Fix
- Lifted the robust finder into ``core/downloads/file_finder.py``
as a pure function ``find_completed_audio_file(download_dir,
api_filename, transfer_dir=None) -> (path, location)``. Zero
globals; recursive walk; handles slskd dedup suffix
``_<10+digit-timestamp>``, YouTube / Tidal ``id||title`` encoded
filenames, the AcoustID-quarantine subdir skip, basename
collisions disambiguated by remote-path components, and a
fuzzy-basename fallback above 0.85.
- ``_resolve_downloaded_album_file`` keeps the three-candidate
fast path (cheap probe for the slskd-flat default) but now
delegates to the new helper when none hit, instead of giving up.
- ``_poll_album_bundle_downloads`` tracks "slskd reports
Completed but local resolver returns None" per key. When every
remaining key has been in that state past a 45-second grace
window, the poll exits early with an explicit error pointing at
the likely ``soulseek.download_path`` mismatch instead of
silently spinning until the master deadline.
- ``web_server._find_completed_file_robust`` becomes a thin
delegate so both callers share one finder. Legacy inline impl
kept as ``_find_completed_file_robust_legacy`` for reference;
to be removed next release.
- Fixed misleading ``"(0 tracks, quality=)"`` log on the preflight-
reuse path — was reading attrs off a None ``picked`` object.
Tests (17 new in tests/downloads/test_file_finder.py)
- Flat slskd layout
- Username-prefixed (the #715 case)
- Full remote tree preserved
- Deeply nested username + tree
- File genuinely missing returns None
- Basename collision disambiguated by remote dirs
- Single basename match wins regardless of dirs
- slskd dedup suffix match
- Short ``_<digits>`` (year) not treated as dedup
- AcoustID quarantine subdir skipped
- YouTube / Tidal ``id||title`` encoded filenames
- transfer_dir fallback
- Both dirs miss → (None, None)
- Non-audio files ignored
- Empty api_filename
- Fuzzy match on punctuation variant
- Fuzzy rejects below threshold
475 downloads tests pass after the lift.
The sidebar source-group headers (Spotify / Tidal / Qobuz / Deezer /
YouTube / Last.fm Radio / ListenBrainz / iTunes Link / SoulSync
Discovery / Spotify Link) only showed the source name in caps —
the dashboard equalizer + connections panels both render the
actual brand logo, so the sidebar reading as text-only felt
disconnected.
Added a small (18px) circular brand-logo chip to the left of
each source-group title, sourced from the same URLs the
dashboard equalizer avatars use. Dark glass backdrop + accent
ring + drop-shadow on the logo so the chip stays legible
against either light or dark marks; brightness(0) invert(1)
applied to Tidal / Qobuz / iTunes-Link so their dark-foreground
marks render as white silhouettes against the disc (same
recipe the equalizer overrides use). Last.fm's square avatar
PNG clips to a circle via object-fit: cover.
Sources without a publicly available logo (Beatport, file
imports) fall through to no-chip — the <img onerror> swap
hides the broken image so the header still renders cleanly.
The Auto-Sync manager modal had been carrying its original visual
treatment forward unchanged while the rest of the app moved
toward the glassy / accent-radial / gradient-border aesthetic
the dashboard now sets. Restyled every surface inside the modal
to match.
Strategy: selector-based override layer appended at the end of
``webui/static/style.css`` — every selector in the new block
already exists in the original CSS above; the new block wins on
cascade order. Zero HTML / JS changes; functionality untouched.
Delete the v2 block to revert.
Surfaces restyled
- Modal shell: glass + thin accent border + corner radial wash
+ inner top-edge highlight, matching the dashboard ``.dash-card``
architecture
- Header: gradient-clipped title, accent-tinted eyebrow, hairline
accent separator below, spinning-X close button
- KPI summary tiles: dashboard-style gradient tiles, accent
top-edge glow on hover, gradient stat numbers
- Live monitor strip: accent-tinted glass card, status-colored
borders (running = green, error = red)
- Refresh / intro buttons: pill primary with accent fill + glow
on hover (replaces the bare ghost button)
- Tabs: underline-style with accent fill + soft radial glow on
the active tab (replaces the pill-tab look)
- Sidebar: glass panel, source groups as collapsible-feel cards,
accent border on scheduled playlist tiles, accent ring on the
filter input focus
- Board: subtle accent radial spotlight backdrop; columns are
glass cards with gradient headers + accent drag-over glow
- Drop zones: animated dashed pill with accent radial wash;
accent-tinted text on drag-over
- Scheduled cards: accent left-edge stripe, gradient pill timing
badges, pill "Run now" primary + rotating ghost X — health
variants (failing / warning) re-tint the left-edge stripe
- Run history rows: dashboard recent-activity aesthetic, accent
hover lift, pill status badges with colored borders
- Bulk schedule popover: glass card with accent border, pill
buttons, red ghost for unschedule
- Weekly editor: glass modal matching version-modal vibe,
day-toggle pills (accent fill when active), pill save button
- Empty / monitor-empty states: dashed glass card with subtle
vibe
- Soft accent-tinted scrollbars throughout the modal
When the Weekly Board shipped, its scheduled-card visual diverged
from the hourly board's: weekly cards showed only the playlist
name + weekly label + timezone, while hourly cards already
carried a full action row (Run-now button, unschedule X,
next-run countdown, health badge). Two boards looking like
different apps.
Standardised the weekly card on the hourly shape so a day-column
drop produces the exact same affordances as an interval-bucket
drop:
- Health badge (warning ⚠ / failing !) when recent runs errored
- Source + track-count meta line under the name
- Timing line: weekly label + tz pill + next-run countdown
- Run-now button (disabled while pipeline running, same gating
logic the hourly card already had)
- Unschedule X — calls the weekly-specific helper, leaving
hourly schedules untouched
Click anywhere outside the buttons still opens the weekly editor
for changing days / time / tz. Weekly cards also become
draggable between day columns now — drop on a new column appends
the day to the schedule (matches the multi-day editor flow).
Last.fm ships a square Twitter avatar; clip it to a circle so the
disc reads as a uniform chip. Tidal / Qobuz / Discogs / Amazon
ship dark-foreground marks that disappear against the dark glass
avatar backdrop — invert to a white silhouette so the logo
actually reads. The per-service accent drop-shadow still applies
so the brand color cue is preserved as a glow around the white
silhouette.
Initial-letter glyphs (SP / AM / DZ / ...) read as placeholder
once the brand-logo equalizer disc was visualised — each chip
should carry the service's actual mark. Wired the same logo
URLs the header-action worker orbs already load (Spotify press
asset, iTunes Wikimedia SVG, Deezer brandfetch symbol, Last.fm
avatar, Genius logo, MusicBrainz Wikimedia SVG, AudioDB local
PNG, Tidal / Qobuz / Discogs SVGRepo marks, Amazon local SVG)
into a new _RATE_GAUGE_LOGOS map and rendered as an ``<img>``
inside the avatar disc.
Visual details
- Disc backdrop switched from a solid accent-gradient fill to a
dark glass radial + accent-tinted ring + accent drop-shadow
on the logo. The service color still anchors the chip without
competing with the logo for contrast.
- Logo sized at 75% of the disc for breathing room. Drop-shadow
pops dark / multi-tone marks against the dark backdrop.
- Avatar bumped to 34px / 28px / 26px across desktop / tablet /
mobile so logos read clearly at every breakpoint.
Resilience
- ``<img onerror>`` swaps in an initial-letter glyph span on
load failure (CDN drop, network blip). The ``.rate-eq-avatar
--fallback`` variant restores the original accent-gradient
disc look so the fallback chip still reads as branded.
Asset
- AudioDB ships no public logo URL — saved the existing header-
action base64 PNG (~30 KB) to ``webui/static/audiodb.png`` so
the equalizer can reference it as ``/static/audiodb.png`` like
Amazon already does.
Four upgrades that take the equalizer row from clean to vibey.
All tied together by the same --eq-accent / --eq-glow CSS
variables so future tweaks stay coherent across the four
animation layers.
1. Brand-color avatar disc above each bar. Circular chip with a
2-3 letter glyph (SP / AM / DZ / LF / GN / MB / ADB / TD /
QB / DC / AZ) and a radial gradient using the service's
accent. Inner highlight + drop-shadow for depth; slow halo
pulse when the worker is running. Anchors each capsule to
its identity so the row reads as "these are your services"
not "these are 11 anonymous bars."
2. Peak-flash detector. When ``cpm`` actually steps upward
between socket updates (above a small jitter floor so
near-zero noise doesn't trigger), the peak tip briefly
flares white-hot, the fill flashes brighter, and the
reflection puddle ripples — all on a 650ms one-shot the JS
removes after fire. Mimics a hardware VU meter's peak-
detect LED. Sells the "alive" feeling by tying bar
movement to real call activity, not just continuous
animation.
3. Rolling-counter number animation. The live count under
the bar digit-animates from old→new with easeOutCubic
over 520ms instead of snapping. Per-element animation
handles tracked in a WeakMap so a fast second update
cancels the prior RAF loop instead of fighting it.
Premium-counter feel.
4. Glass-surface reflection puddle. Soft accent-colored
blurred ellipse under each bar; opacity scales with the
real (unclamped) rate via the --eq-glow variable so idle
bars don't pollute the row with permanent ground-light.
Rate-limited bars get a red puddle. Peak-flash briefly
intensifies the puddle so the surface "ripples" with the
call burst. Mounted on the host button (not the track) so
it escapes the track's overflow clipping.
Responsive: avatar disc shrinks to 26px at laptop/tablet,
24px at mobile.
The rate monitor on the dashboard used a 10-column grid of circular
SVG speedometers. With 11 services configured (Amazon was the
straw), the grid produced 10-in-row-1 + 1-orphan-in-row-2, breaking
the dashboard's tile symmetry. Speedometers also wasted ~80% of
their pixels on empty arc — most services sit at 0 cpm most of
the time, so the row visually read as a wall of empty gauges.
Replaced with a VU-meter / equalizer row: one vertical capsule
per service, brand-color gradient filling from the bottom, bar
height tracks ``calls/min ÷ limit``. Music-app native aesthetic,
fits the existing accent-heavy glassy vibe, and symmetric by
design at any service count — services slot into the flex row.
Visual details
- 4% sliver floor on idle bars so the row reads as "everything
alive" instead of "8 dead gauges" — vibe over literal zero
- Continuous shimmer scan when worker is running (vertical wash)
- Slow breathing pulse on idle bars
- Red gradient + faster pulse when rate-limited
- White-hot peak tip glows in the service's accent color
- Status pill below each bar (Running pulses green, Paused amber)
- Big count number floats top-center of the track
Behavior
- Click any bar opens the same detail modal the speedometer used —
no data-flow changes, no API changes, drop-in visual swap.
- Renderer auto-detects the dashboard context (data-card="enrichment")
and routes through the equalizer path; legacy speedometer code
still ships for any non-dashboard mount.
- Responsive: tightens at laptop/tablet breakpoints, wraps to
5-per-row on phones.
Pipeline-driven Auto-Sync runs against any ListenBrainz playlist
(Weekly Jams, Weekly Exploration, Top Discoveries, etc.) would sit
on ``Refreshing: "<name>"`` with no UI updates for 5-7 minutes
before the pipeline progressed. Two real bugs stacked:
1. **Double discovery.** The refresh handler called
``_maybe_discover`` (matching engine, per-track Spotify/iTunes/
Deezer matches) inline for any source returning
``needs_discovery=True`` tracks. Phase 2 of the pipeline then
ran the SAME matching engine via ``run_playlist_discovery_worker``
on the same tracks. The refresh-side run blocked the loop with
zero progress emission; Phase 2's already has the timed
progress-poll pattern. So LB tracks discovered twice, the first
time silently.
Pipeline now sets ``skip_discovery=True`` on its refresh config.
The handler honors the flag and lets Phase 2 handle discovery
end-to-end. Standalone callers (Sync-page tab, registration
action) leave the flag unset so they still get matched_data
on refresh.
2. **No targeted LB refresh.** The LB adapter's ``refresh_playlist``
called ``manager.update_all_playlists()`` — the only refresh
entry-point the manager exposed — which re-pulls every cached
LB playlist's details from the API (~12+ round-trips) even
when only one playlist needed refreshing. Wasteful;
tax-on-everyone for one-playlist work.
Added ``LBManager.refresh_playlist(mbid)`` — reads the cached
playlist_type, fetches just that playlist's details, runs the
normal ``_update_playlist`` upsert path. Defaults type to
``user`` for un-cached mbids so new-playlist discovery still
works. Skips ``_cleanup_old_playlists`` and
``_ensure_rolling_mirrors_from_cache`` (wasted work for a
single-playlist refresh).
Also: killed a silent ``except Exception: pass`` in the LB
adapter's old refresh wrapper that was masking every LB API
failure as a stale-cache hit. Refresh errors now log with full
traceback at warning level and propagate ``None`` so the outer
handler at ``refresh_mirrored.py:104`` counts the error and
surfaces it to the run-history error tally.
Pinned with 12 new unit tests across:
- ``tests/test_listenbrainz_manager.py`` (8): targeted refresh
happy path, unauthenticated guard, empty-mbid guard, upstream
``None`` return, default playlist_type for unknown mbid,
exception propagation, cost guard skipping cleanup, skipped-
when-unchanged signal
- ``tests/test_playlist_sources_adapters.py`` (3): adapter uses
targeted call (not legacy), adapter returns ``None`` on manager
error (not silent swallow), adapter resolves synthetic series
ids before calling the manager
- ``tests/automation/test_handlers_playlist.py`` (1):
skip_discovery flag bypasses ``_maybe_discover`` end-to-end
Residual per-track wishlist downloads (single tracks from different
albums, below the album-bundle threshold) were producing folders
without a year subfolder whenever the wishlist row carried a stale
``track_number=1`` from an older payload default.
Why: ``core/downloads/candidates.py`` had a single API-fetch branch
that served two concerns — resolving the track position AND
hydrating the lean ``spotify_album_context`` (release_date /
total_tracks / cover image) — gated entirely on track_number being
unresolved. When the wishlist row's ``track_number`` happened to
be 1 (a poisoned default rather than a real value), the gate
short-circuited and the album hydration the same call would have
done was skipped. Deezer-sourced discovery matches don't ship
release_date in their search-result album shape, so without the
backfill the folder lost its year.
The two concerns split:
- track_number resolution keeps its track_info → track object →
API precedence chain. track_info defaults still win.
- album hydration runs whenever release_date or total_tracks are
missing, independent of where (or whether) track_number was
resolved.
The single API round-trip still serves both — the cost contract
is preserved. The side-effect coupling is gone.
Lifted into ``core/downloads/track_metadata_backfill.py``
(``hydrate_download_metadata``) so the precedence chain is pinned
in isolation. 24 unit tests cover the precedence chain, the
poisoned-tn=1 regression case, defensive non-dict/None inputs,
the cost guard (API called at most once per invocation), and
disc_number resolution.
Also lands the upstream piece: ``core/wishlist/routes.py:_build_track_data``
no longer defaults ``track_number=1`` / ``disc_number=1`` /
``total_tracks=1`` / ``release_date=''`` when the library-modal add
payload omits them. Missing values now flow through as ``None`` so
the downstream pipeline can detect-and-recover instead of locking
to a fake position.
Real-world regression triggered by the album-bundle work earlier in
2.6.3. Tracks with full Spotify metadata were importing as
``01 - <title>`` under ``Artist - Album/`` (no year), even when the
source filename carried the correct track number and Spotify's
release_date was available.
Investigation via DB inspection of stored wishlist rows:
```
"Never Gonna Give You Up" → track_number=None, release_date=""
"idfc" → track_number=1, release_date=""
"No Sleep Till Brooklyn" → track_number=1, release_date=""
```
Source-of-truth Spotify metadata had release_date AND real track
positions, but the wishlist row was poisoned. Three regressions
compounded the loss:
**Fix A — ``track_object_to_dict`` (``core/wishlist/payloads.py:295``)
preserved only album.name during Track→dict conversion.**
Pre-fix:
```python
album_name = "Unknown Album"
if hasattr(track_object, "album") and track_object.album:
if hasattr(track_object.album, "name"):
album_name = track_object.album.name
else:
album_name = str(track_object.album)
result = {
...
"album": {"name": album_name}, # ← release_date / images / etc. all dropped
...
}
```
When a wishlist payload arrived as a Track dataclass instead of a
raw spotify_data dict, the Track→dict conversion stripped
release_date, images, album_type, total_tracks, id, and album-level
artists. Every wishlist row added through this path landed in the
DB with ``album={'name': X}`` only.
Post-fix: three branches handle the three album shapes
- ``album_attr`` is a dict → ``dict(album_attr)`` preserves every key
- ``album_attr`` is a sub-object → pull all common Album-dataclass
attrs (id, release_date, album_type, total_tracks, images, ...)
- ``album_attr`` is a bare string → build a dict from the track
object's adjacent attrs (release_date, album_id, album_type, ...)
and surface ``image_url`` as ``album.images``
**Fix B — ``core/discovery/playlist.py:309`` only added
``track_number`` / ``disc_number`` keys when truthy.**
Pre-fix:
```python
matched_data = { 'id': ..., 'name': ..., ... } # no track_number / disc_number
if track_number:
matched_data['track_number'] = track_number
if disc_number:
matched_data['disc_number'] = disc_number
```
Deezer-sourced matches always hit this branch with ``track_number=None``
because the cache enrichment at line 304 reads ``_raw.get('track_number')``
literally, but Deezer's raw shape uses ``track_position``. So the key
was omitted from ``matched_data``, downstream consumers couldn't
distinguish "missing key" from "value is 1", and the chain silently
filled 1.
Post-fix: keys are ALWAYS present (None when unknown). Also adds a
``best_match.track_number`` fallback so the Track-dataclass-mapped
value (which DOES include ``track_position``→``track_number``
mapping) gets used when the cache lookup misses.
**Fix C — Pipeline only consulted ``album_info.track_number`` before
falling to the filename (``core/imports/pipeline.py:645``).**
VA-collection source files like ``417 Fountains of Wayne - Stacys
Mom.flac`` have a leading playlist-position number that isn't the
album track number. The previous chain (album_info → filename →
floor-1) couldn't recover the real position because the filename
extractor either returned 417 (wrong) or None (caught by the floor).
But the wishlist payload's ``track_info.spotify_data.track_number``
HAD the right answer all along — Spotify says Stacy's Mom is track
3 on Welcome Interstate Managers.
Post-fix: resolution chain extracted into ``core/imports/track_number.py:resolve_track_number``
as a pure function:
1. ``album_info.track_number`` (album-bundle dispatch authoritative)
2. ``track_info.track_number`` (per-track flow payload)
3. ``track_info.spotify_data.track_number`` (nested fallback)
4. ``extract_explicit_track_number(file_path)`` (filename, returns
0 when no numeric prefix — vs the default helper that returns 1)
5. Caller (pipeline) applies the final >=1 floor
Each step coerces to a positive int or falls through to the next.
Pure function = unit-testable in isolation = single place to fix
the rule.
**Test coverage (37 new tests):**
- ``tests/wishlist/test_payloads.py`` (+4) — Track→dict conversion
preserves full album dict (dict / object / string album shapes) +
None-track-number stays None.
- ``tests/discovery/test_discovery_playlist.py`` (+2) — matched_data
always includes track_number/disc_number keys (None when unknown)
+ falls back to best_match attrs when cache misses.
- ``tests/imports/test_track_number_resolver.py`` (+16) — every
resolution-chain branch pinned: album_info-wins, track_info
fallback, spotify_data nested, JSON-string parsing, garbage-string
fall-through, zero / negative / non-numeric / string-numeric
coercion, filename fallback, explicit extractor vs default
extractor semantics, defensive None inputs, VA-collection
filename behaviour, all-sources-missing → None.
1571 wider-suite tests pass (wishlist + imports + discovery +
downloads + metadata). Ruff clean.
**Migration note:** existing wishlist rows that were saved under
the OLD ``track_object_to_dict`` (with stripped album metadata) still
have ``release_date=''`` in the DB blob. Those won't self-heal — the
next attempt loads from the poisoned blob. Users can remove + re-add
those tracks to refresh, or wait for the next sync run that
re-discovers them with full metadata. No automatic migration shipped
in this PR (scope creep — the forward path is fixed, backfill is a
separate concern).
PR 4 of 4 in the wishlist-album-bundle issue series. UI fix only —
zero behavior change.
User's 26-track wishlist run rendered all 26 sub-batches as
"Analyzing..." simultaneously. Pre-fix the rows were created with
``phase='analysis'`` BEFORE being submitted to ``missing_download_executor``
(max_workers=3 by default), so 23 batches sat in the executor queue
visually identical to the 3 actually running. Misled users into
thinking SoulSync was processing 26 in parallel; really only 3 ever
ran at once with the rest waiting their turn.
Fix:
- Wishlist auto-flow submission sites now create batch rows with
``phase='queued'``.
- The master worker (``core/downloads/master.py:328``) already flipped
phase to ``'analysis'`` as its first action on entry — that
transition becomes the real signal that the executor picked the
batch up.
- ``core/downloads/status.py`` surfaces ``analysis_progress`` for
the ``queued`` phase too so the UI has the track count to render
"Queued — N tracks" instead of an empty card.
- Frontend (``webui/static/pages-extra.js``, ``downloads.js``) renders
"Queued ⏳" for ``phase='queued'`` distinct from the spinner-laden
"Analyzing..." for ``phase='analysis'``.
Scope choices:
- Only the auto-wishlist submission sites flipped this PR
(``core/wishlist/processing.py:860`` album sub-batches +
``core/wishlist/processing.py:907`` residual). The manual-wishlist
sites at ``:451`` and ``:627`` use the same executor + worker, but
those create a caller-allocated batch_id that the frontend polls
immediately — wanted to verify the manual-poll path handles
``queued`` cleanly before flipping those. Trivial follow-up.
- Other submission sites in album_bundle_dispatch / web_server.py /
task_worker.py left untouched — they don't go through the
executor-queue pattern that causes this UI confusion.
Tests:
- Updated ``test_process_wishlist_automatically_creates_batch_for_matching_tracks``
to assert ``phase='queued'`` on creation (was ``'analysis'``); explanatory
comment names the executor-pool reason.
- New ``test_queued_phase_surfaces_analysis_progress_for_ui_count`` in
``tests/downloads/test_downloads_status.py`` pinning the new
``queued ⊂ analysis_progress`` rendering contract.
- 884 tests pass across wishlist + downloads + imports suites.
- Ruff clean on changed Python files; JS syntax OK on changed
webui files.
PR 3 (sibling-completion gate) was investigated and dropped — the
"1/26 finalized" symptom turns out to be downstream of the
staging-match bug (PR 2's instrumentation will catch it on the
user's next reproduction run), not an independent sibling-gate bug.
The gate logic itself is correct.
Real-world wishlist case the original c3b88e69 design missed: user with
26 missing tracks from 26 different albums. Each item used to promote
to its own album-bundle sub-batch (``min_tracks_per_album=1``), which
downloaded the ENTIRE album (5-42 files) to claim one track. Confirmed
in app.log:
- "Licensed To Ill" downloaded 3 times across cycles (3-4 files each)
- "The Understanding" 17 files for 1 wishlist track
- "Alright, Still" 42 files for 1 wishlist track
- ~85% wasted bandwidth, slskd hammered with 26 concurrent searches
PR 1 of a 4-PR fix series — see commit body footer for the other PRs.
Default ``min_tracks_per_album`` 1 → 2. Single-track wishlist items
fall to ``residual_tracks`` → classic per-track batch (already works,
already efficient). Album-bundle kept for the case it was designed
for: user has 2+ tracks missing from the same album.
Override via the new ``wishlist.album_bundle_min_tracks`` config key:
- 1 = previous behaviour (bundle every item)
- 2 = new default
- 3+ = stricter, for users who want bundle only on bigger gaps
Helper ``_resolve_album_bundle_threshold`` lives in
``core/wishlist/processing.py``. Defensive shape mirrors the existing
config-driven knobs (``get_poll_interval`` / ``get_transient_miss_threshold``):
non-numeric, non-positive, or config-manager-raise all fall back to
the safe default. Three test cases pin the fallback chain.
Both wishlist entry points wired through the same helper:
- ``process_wishlist_automatically`` (auto cycle, line 812)
- ``start_manual_wishlist_download_batch`` (manual run, line 539)
Tests:
- ``tests/wishlist/test_album_grouping.py`` — old ``test_default_threshold_promotes_solo_albums`` flipped to ``test_default_threshold_demotes_solo_albums`` with explanatory docstring naming the real-world cause. New ``test_default_threshold_promotes_multi_track_albums`` pins the 2+ promotion. New ``test_explicit_threshold_one_restores_solo_promotion`` pins that the kwarg still works for opt-back-in.
- ``tests/wishlist/test_processing.py`` — 3 new tests for ``_resolve_album_bundle_threshold``: default-when-config-missing, honors-config-override, falls-back-on-garbage.
- ``tests/wishlist/test_automation.py`` — ``test_wishlist_albums_cycle_splits_into_per_album_batches`` updated to use 2+ tracks per album (5 tracks across 2 albums instead of 3 across 2 with 1 solo). ``test_wishlist_albums_cycle_residual_for_orphan_tracks`` updated to include 2 tracks from Album One so it still promotes.
- ``tests/wishlist/test_manual_download.py`` — same shape update for the manual path test.
- ``tests/wishlist/test_album_grouping.py:test_multiple_albums_emit_separate_groups`` updated to reflect new default (alb1 with 2 tracks promotes, alb2 with 1 track goes residual).
- ``tests/wishlist/test_album_grouping.py:test_nested_track_data_payloads_normalized`` pinned with explicit ``min_tracks_per_album=1`` so the test stays focused on payload-shape parsing, not the threshold rule.
114 wishlist tests pass; 866 across wishlist + automation + downloads +
album_bundle + album_bundle_dispatch suites still green. Ruff clean.
Sibling PRs queued in TaskCreate:
- PR 2 — investigate post-process staging-match miss (the second-order
bug that causes the same album to redownload every cycle when the
staging step doesn't claim the requested track).
- PR 3 — fix sibling-completion gate that fires on first sibling
instead of last (log evidence: run a4945c88 finalized 1/26 batches).
- PR 4 — UI distinguish Queued from Analyzing for batches waiting
on the executor (23/26 batches sit at "Analyzing..." while really
queued at max_workers=3).
PR 3 of the schedule-types feature — see
``memory/project_auto_sync_schedule_types.md``. Backend
``next_run_at`` + ``weekly_time`` trigger handler landed in PRs 1-2.
This PR exposes them in the Auto-Sync manager so users can finally
schedule playlists by day-of-week + time instead of only hourly
intervals.
**UI layout:**
The Auto-Sync modal grows a ``Weekly Board`` tab between
``Hourly Board`` (renamed from ``Schedule Board``) and
``Automation Pipelines``. Same sidebar (mirrored playlists grouped
by source, with filter). Main panel is 7 day columns Mon-Sun
instead of 10 hour buckets. Drag a playlist onto a day column →
creates a single-day weekly schedule at the default time
(09:00 in the browser's IANA tz from
``Intl.DateTimeFormat().resolvedOptions().timeZone``). Click any
scheduled card → opens an editor popover for time, multi-day
toggles, tz override, and unschedule.
Multi-day schedules render under every matching column (Mon-Wed-Fri
schedule appears as three cards, one per column) — matches how
users think about "this playlist runs on Mon AND Wed AND Fri".
**Mutual exclusion:** one schedule per playlist. The save path on
either tab deletes any existing schedule of the OTHER kind before
installing the new one. Backend can technically run both as two
separate automation rows, but two cards under the same playlist
would surprise users and the engine has no merge semantic for
"daily-and-hourly".
**Pure-function helpers** (testable via node:test, matching the
existing ``tests/static/test_auto_sync.mjs`` pattern):
- ``detectBrowserTimezone()`` — Intl tz with UTC fallback for
browsers where Intl is absent.
- ``autoSyncWeeklyTrigger({time, days, tz})`` — defensive payload
builder: garbage time → 09:00, unrecognised days dropped,
missing tz → browser tz.
- ``autoSyncWeeklyFromTrigger(config)`` — inverse parser with
the same defensive shape. Empty days expands to every weekday
(matches ``next_run_at`` engine semantic). Returns null for
non-object configs so ``buildAutoSyncScheduleState`` can route
broken rows to automationPipelines instead of silently
bucketing them as every-day weekly.
- ``autoSyncWeeklyLabel(parsed)`` — sorted "Mon, Wed, Fri @
09:00" / collapses to "Daily @ HH:MM" for full-week / "Unscheduled"
for null. Canonical Mon-Sun ordering regardless of input order.
**Tests:** 26 new node:test cases across ``detectBrowserTimezone``
x1, ``autoSyncWeeklyTrigger`` x6, ``autoSyncWeeklyFromTrigger`` x6,
``autoSyncWeeklyLabel`` x5, and ``buildAutoSyncScheduleState``
weekly bucketing x5 (covering owned weekly_time → weeklySchedules,
hourly stays in playlistSchedules, non-owned falls through to
automationPipelines, legacy-named auto-sync rows still recognised,
garbage trigger_config falls through). All 62 node:test cases pass;
261 across the automation pytest suite still green (zero regression
on PRs 1-2's plumbing). Python wrapper at
``tests/test_auto_sync_js.py`` shells out cleanly.
**CSS** (themed to the existing Auto-Sync gradient + accent
variables):
- 7-column grid for the weekly board, narrower than the 10
hour-bucket layout.
- Editor popover with backdrop-blur, accent-tinted save / delete
buttons, hover states that pick up the user's accent color.
- ``scheduled-elsewhere`` state for playlists with an hourly
schedule visible on the weekly board (dashed border + opacity)
so the user knows a drop will replace, not stack.
**WHATS_NEW entry** under 2.6.3 unreleased — first user-visible
slice of the schedule-types feature.
PR 4 (Monthly UI tab) deferred until weekly proves wanted.
User reported usenet album downloads getting stuck on "downloading
release" while SABnzbd reported the job as complete. Container restart
did not help; reproducible on every usenet album download.
Three independent issues all causing the same symptom — the download
modal freezes mid-flow with no error surfaced to the user:
1. SAB queue → history transition window
SAB removes a slot from its queue BEFORE adding it to the history,
and on a busy server (par2 verify, unrar, multi-file move) that
window can span several poll iterations. The poll treated a single
None status as terminal failure ("disappeared from client") and
gave up. Now the poll tolerates up to ~10s of consecutive misses
(5 polls at the default 2s interval) before declaring the job gone.
2. SAB queue states like `Pp` were unmapped
`_SAB_QUEUE_STATE_MAP` didn't cover SAB's `Pp` (post-processing
summary), `Unpacking`, `Trying`, `Deleted`, or the `Prop_paused`
/ `Prop_failed` variants. Unmapped states fell through to the
default-'error' fallback, and the poll loop only treated explicit
'failed' / 'completed' as terminal — 'error' was neither, so the
loop spun until the 6-hour timeout. Map now covers every Status
value from SAB's `sabnzbd/api.py`, and the poll treats the default-
'error' fallback as a transient miss (warn-logged, retry within
the same tolerance window) so a brand-new unmapped state can't
infinite-loop the way `Pp` did here.
3. No terminal failure emit
The poll only logged on failure / timeout / disappeared — never
called the progress callback with 'failed', so the download modal
stayed at the last 'downloading' emit forever. Plumb a 'failed'
emit through every failure exit path so the UI flips out of the
downloading state when the poll gives up.
Plus:
4. SAB direct nzo_ids lookup instead of paging all-history
`_get_status_sync` was fetching the latest 50 history entries on
every poll and iterating to find the target nzo_id. On busy
servers (many recent downloads), the target job could roll past
the 50-entry window and look like a "disappeared" job. Replaced
with a targeted `mode=queue&nzo_ids=<id>` → `mode=history&nzo_ids=<id>`
chain. Falls back to the bulk path for SAB versions that pre-date
the nzo_ids filter — the transient-miss tolerance covers any
short-lived gap there too.
Implementation:
Lifted the album-bundle poll loop out of `usenet.py` and `torrent.py`
into `core/download_plugins/album_bundle.py:poll_album_download` —
near-duplicate implementations are now a single function with deps
injected so it's testable in isolation (kettui's extract-don't-AST-parse
standard; can't unit-test a `time.sleep` loop inside a plugin method).
The lifted helper takes:
- `get_status` callable bound to job_id, so the same loop works for
usenet UsenetStatus and torrent TorrentStatus shapes
- `complete_states` set so torrent's `{'seeding', 'completed'}` and
usenet's `{'completed'}` both Just Work
- `failed_states` set so torrent's `{'error'}` is terminal while
usenet's default-'error' fallback is transient
- `transient_miss_threshold` (default 5 ≈ 10s at 2s poll)
- `sleep` / `monotonic` injectables for deterministic tests
Per-track flows in both plugins gained the same transient-miss
tolerance inline — they don't use the emit pattern (update an
`active_downloads[id]` row dict via lock instead), so reusing the
helper would have required threading a no-op emit through. Inline
fix is small enough.
Tests:
- 11 new tests in `tests/test_album_bundle.py:poll_album_download`
cover the happy path, transient-miss tolerance with recovery,
hard-failure threshold, explicit-failed surface, timeout-emit,
default-'error' transient treatment, shutdown clean exit,
torrent's `seeding`-counts-as-complete, save_path captured across
iterations, and adapter-exception treated as transient miss.
- 521 download-suite tests pass (33 in test_album_bundle, others
pin existing torrent + usenet contracts).
- Ruff clean.
Closes#706.
Discogs uses two disambiguation conventions for duplicate artist names:
- legacy `(N)` numeric suffix: "Bullet (2)", "Madonna (3)"
- newer `*` asterisk suffix: "John Smith*", "Foo*"
Both were leaking through to the UI on artist search and album search,
and worse — through the import path into folder names on disk
(reported: importing yielded folders literally named `Foo*`).
The pre-existing cleanup only handled `(N)` and only at ONE site —
`get_user_collection` (line 469) and one path inside
`extract_track_from_release` (line 448 — `re.sub(r'\s*\(\d+\)$', '',
artist_name)`). Every other surface (artist search, album search,
album-track lookups, get_artist_albums feature matching) returned the
raw Discogs string.
Centralized into `_clean_discogs_artist_name(name)` at module top,
with regex covering both suffixes including repeated forms (`Baz**`,
`Foo (3)*`). Applied at six sites:
- `Artist.from_discogs_artist` (artist search)
- `Album.from_discogs_release` (album search — three fallbacks: array,
string, title-split)
- `Track.from_discogs_track` (track lookup — track-level + release-level
fallback)
- `extract_track_from_release` (replaces the inline `(N)`-only re.sub)
- `get_user_collection` (existing site, now also strips `*`)
- `get_artist_albums` (artist_name used for primary-vs-feature matching;
cleaning prevents `Beyoncé*` from failing equality vs `Beyoncé`)
- `get_album` (artists_list + per-track artists in the tracklist projection)
Tests:
- New `test_clean_discogs_artist_name` parametrized over 14 cases
covering `(N)`, `*`, repeated `**`, combined `(N) *`, whitespace
handling, empty/None defensive returns.
- New `test_get_user_collection_strips_discogs_asterisk_disambiguation`
pinning the asterisk path end-to-end through the collection import
flow (sibling to the existing `(N)` test).
- Existing 37 discogs tests still pass.
Out of scope (separate issue): the same #634 report flagged track-count
and year fields rendering as 0 / empty in Discogs album search. Both
are inherent to Discogs `/database/search` response shape — search
results don't carry `tracklist` (only release detail does) and `year`
is often `0` in search payloads. Fixing requires lazy-fetching release
detail per row, which hits the 25 req/min unauth limit hard. Not
bundled here.
Self-review pass on the prior three commits — kettui-style cleanup
that should have landed first time.
**Length-preference sort ordering (real bug):**
The `search_tracks_with_artist` stable sort that promoted length-known
recordings ran in `core/musicbrainz_search.py`, but the MB endpoint in
`web_server.py:search_musicbrainz_tracks` runs `rerank_tracks` after
it — which re-sorts by relevance score and dropped the length-pref
ordering down to tiebreaker-only. For canonical-same-song MB duplicates
that all score identically the tiebreaker survived, but the
order-of-operations was wrong.
Moved into `rerank_tracks` itself via a new `prefer_known_duration`
flag. Sort key sits between relevance score and the stable-order
tiebreaker so relevance still wins (length only decides ties, never
overrides a higher-relevance match). The MB endpoint opts in via
`prefer_known_duration=True`; Spotify / iTunes / Deezer callers stay
on the default-off path since their search results always include
length. Pinned with three new `TestRerankTracks` cases:
ties-promote-length, relevance-still-wins, default-off-unchanged.
**Route logic lifted to `core/discovery/manual_match.py`:**
Two pieces lived as inline route logic in `web_server.py` — the
`derive_manual_match_provider` fallback chain (payload.source →
active source → 'spotify') used by `update_youtube_discovery_match`,
and the `is_drifted_for_redo` predicate (cached provider differs from
active AND not manual_match) used by `prepare_mirrored_discovery`.
Per kettui's "extract logic from web_server.py, don't AST-parse it"
standard, both helpers now live in `core/discovery/manual_match.py`
with 12 dedicated unit tests covering fallback resolution order,
non-dict payload defenses, manual_match exemption from drift,
absent-provider legacy default, and edge cases.
Side benefits from the lift:
- `match_source` now derived once before the cache-save try block
instead of being duplicated in try + except (the except block existed
only because the original used `match_source` later — pre-computing
killed the duplication).
- `prepare_mirrored_discovery`'s `has_cached` check now reuses
`is_drifted_for_redo` with inverted polarity instead of restating
the field whitelist inline, so a future schema change only has to
land in one place.
- The mirrored-DB persist block now gates on `matched_data is not None`
to avoid a pre-existing latent NameError if the cache-save block
raised before matched_data construction.
**Enhanced toggle localStorage key now profile-scoped:**
`soulsync-library-view-mode` was global — two admin profiles would
share one preference. Wrapped in `_libraryViewModeKey()` which appends
`:${currentProfile.id}` when a profile is loaded, falls back to the
unsuffixed key otherwise (preserves pre-multi-profile saved values).
Tests:
- 12 new in `tests/discovery/test_manual_match.py` pinning both helpers.
- 3 new in `tests/metadata/test_relevance.py` pinning the
`prefer_known_duration` semantics.
- `test_search_tracks_with_artist_prefers_results_with_known_length`
renamed to `_does_not_resort_by_length` since the sort moved out of
this method. 664 tests pass across discovery + metadata suites.
User feedback: the Enhanced view toggle on the artist detail page reset
to Standard on every artist click, so admins who prefer Enhanced had to
re-flip the toggle every single time. Persist the choice in
localStorage and reapply on every artist navigation + page reload.
- `toggleEnhancedView()` writes `soulsync-library-view-mode` to
localStorage on every change.
- `navigateToArtistDetail()` reads the saved value after the standard
reset block runs; if `enhanced` AND `isEnhancedAdmin()` it calls
`toggleEnhancedView(true)` after `loadArtistDetailData` kicks off.
The brief Standard render is hidden as soon as the toggle flips.
- Gated on `isEnhancedAdmin()` so non-admin profiles (which never see
the toggle) can't end up with a stale Enhanced preference being
applied silently.
- Wrapped in try/catch since localStorage is unavailable in some
private-browsing modes.
No backend change; no DB migration needed.
User reported that manually mapping a mirrored-playlist track via the
Fix popup (either by search or by pasting an MBID) worked end-to-end
once — match saved, library track downloaded — but the next Playlist
Pipeline run flipped the track back to "Provider Changed" and forced
them to re-do the manual map every cycle.
Three independent issues were combining to cause this:
1. Hardcoded `provider: 'spotify'` on manual-fix save
`update_youtube_discovery_match` (the endpoint the Fix popup posts
to, also used by mirrored playlists since the frontend routes
`platform === 'mirrored'` through the YouTube endpoint) always
stamped the cached match as Spotify-provided. The Fix-popup cascade
actually queries the user's primary metadata source first and falls
back to Spotify / Deezer / iTunes / MusicBrainz — so a user on
MusicBrainz primary picking an MB result still had it saved as
`provider: 'spotify'`. The next prepare-discovery call (which
compares cached_provider to the active source) then immediately
classified the match as drifted and pending re-discovery. Fixed by
deriving `match_source` from `spotify_track.get('source')` (every
*_search_tracks endpoint stamps `source` on results) with a fallback
to `_get_active_discovery_source()` for the MBID-paste path (which
uses the lean flat shape that doesn't carry source). `matched_data['source']`
and the mirrored `extra_data['provider']` both now use the derived
value. `match_source` is also recomputed in the cache-save except
handler so the downstream mirrored-DB save still has it.
2. Discovery worker re-queueing manual matches as "incomplete"
`run_playlist_discovery_worker` in `core/discovery/playlist.py`
re-adds any track to `undiscovered_tracks` when its `matched_data`
lacks `track_number` or `album.id` / `album.release_date`. The
check was designed as a legacy-fix backfill for old discoveries
that lost those fields to a Track-dataclass stripping bug. But
manual fixes from the popup are *intentionally* lean — search-
result rows don't include `track_number` (none of the search
endpoints return it), and the MBID-lookup flat shape doesn't
carry `album.id` / `release_date` (the recording lookup returns
only `album.name`). So every manual match looked "incomplete" and
got re-discovered every pipeline run, overwriting the user's pick
with whatever the auto-search ranked first. Manual matches now
short-circuit ahead of the incomplete-data branch.
3. `prepare_mirrored_discovery` ignored the `manual_match` flag
Independent of the provider-stamping fix above, the prepare-
discovery endpoint that powers the mirrored-playlist UI did its
own `cached_provider != current_provider` check and didn't honour
manual_match either. Defence in depth — even if a future code
path stamps the wrong provider on a manual match, the flag now
anchors it as cached. `has_cached` also extended so manual
matches with off-provider stamps still count toward the cached
tally for phase classification.
Tests:
- new `test_manual_match_skipped_even_when_matched_data_incomplete`
in `tests/discovery/test_discovery_playlist.py` pins the worker
short-circuit using a realistic MB-shape matched_data (album dict
without id / release_date, no top-level track_number). 16 existing
tests still green; 848 across discovery / metadata / automation
suites pass.
`/api/musicbrainz/search_tracks` powers the Fix popup's auto-search
cascade for users on MusicBrainz as primary. When both track + artist
fields were filled, `search_tracks_with_artist` always took the bare
keyword path (`<track> <artist>` joined as one query string). MB's
recording-search scorer weights title matches far above artist matches,
so for "Coffee Break" + "Zeds Dead" the top results were Emapea / The
Vidalias / West One Orchestra's "Coffee Break" — three unrelated cover-
title collisions ahead of the canonical Zeds Dead recording. The
endpoint's `rerank_tracks` pass can't fix this when the right answer
is below the API's 50-result cutoff.
Both-fields mode now uses a strict field-scoped Lucene query first
(`recording:"<t>" AND artist:"<a>"`) which anchors the artist and
prunes title-collision covers at the source. `min_score=0` because the
field-scoped query is itself precise; rerank still does final ordering.
Bare query stays as the fallback when strict returns nothing — covers
the diacritic / alias cases the original `strict=False` path was added
for ("Bjork" query vs canonical "Björk" artist where Lucene phrase
match never hits the recording).
Single-field mode (track-only or artist-only) is unchanged: still bare-
query directly, since there's no artist value to anchor.
Also stable-sort results to prefer entries with non-zero `duration_ms`.
MB has multiple recordings per song (single release, album release,
remasters, compilations) and not every recording carries length data.
Without the preference sort, the user sees a 0:00 row first while a
sibling recording with the real 3:04 sits two rows below — matches the
report where MBID-paste lookup of the canonical recording (length 3:04)
contradicted the search-result's 0:00 row for the same song.
Tests:
- new `test_search_tracks_with_artist_strict_first_when_both_fields`
pins the strict=True call when both fields present
- new `test_search_tracks_with_artist_falls_back_to_bare_when_strict_empty`
pins the Björk-style fall-through path
- new `test_search_tracks_with_artist_prefers_results_with_known_length`
pins the length-preference sort
- existing `..._keeps_low_score_for_rerank` updated to side_effect so
the bare-fallback path is exercised; behaviour pinned identically
- existing `..._uses_bare_query_mode` renamed + repurposed for strict-
first; old name's behaviour no longer accurate
The sibling-merge aggregator from 7f751202 used "least-complete
phase wins", which made the modal appear frozen during parallel
album bundle downloads. The task table is phase-gated to
downloading/complete/error in downloads.js — so whenever any
sibling was still in album_downloading, the merged phase stayed
there and tasks for the sibling that had advanced past its bundle
never rendered. User reported: both albums downloading on slskd,
modal blank until one completes fully.
Flip the rule: surface the most-advanced live phase so the modal
renders task progress as soon as any sibling reaches it. The
all-siblings-in-album_downloading case still surfaces
album_downloading (bundle progress UI is correct there); error
stays sticky.
Updated WHATS_NEW under 2.6.3 to describe the corrected behavior.
Two new tests pin the regression:
- downloading + album_downloading → downloading
- album_downloading + album_downloading → album_downloading
Phase 1c.2.1 splits each wishlist run across multiple
``download_batches`` rows (per-album bundle dispatch). The
download-missing modal opens against the original batch_id
allocated by ``start_manual_wishlist_download_batch`` /
``process_wishlist_automatically``. Pre-fix that batch_id was
just one sibling among N, so the modal went stale as soon as the
primary sub-batch finished — subsequent albums downloaded fine
but no live status reached the UI.
Fix: backend merges every sibling sub-batch's tasks +
analysis_results into the response keyed under the originally-
requested batch_id. Modal sees one unified view of the whole run
without knowing about the split. Frontend untouched.
Architecture (Kettui standards):
- ``core/downloads/wishlist_aggregator.py`` — pure
``merge_wishlist_run_status(primary, siblings)`` helper.
No IO, no runtime state, no globals. Lifted out of
``status.py`` so the merge contract can be pinned via unit
tests without standing up the live ``download_batches`` /
``download_tasks`` state.
- ``core/downloads/status.py``'s ``build_batched_status`` now
pre-indexes ``download_batches`` by ``wishlist_run_id`` inside
the existing ``tasks_lock`` snapshot, then runs the merge
helper whenever a requested batch has a sibling.
Merge rules pinned by 12 tests:
- ``track_index`` re-indexed globally 0..N-1 across the merged
``analysis_results`` so the modal's ``data-track-index`` DOM
keys don't collide between siblings. Tasks' ``track_index``
follows the same remap so the analysis-results ↔ tasks
cross-reference stays intact.
- ``task_id`` is uuid per task — no collision concern.
- Phase: error is sticky; otherwise the LEAST-complete
pre-terminal phase wins (analysis < album_downloading <
downloading). All-complete returns ``complete``; mixed
complete + active returns ``downloading`` so the modal stays
alive until every sibling lands.
- ``album_bundle``: picks whichever sibling currently has an
active bundle download (state in
``{searching, downloading, downloading_release, staging}``).
Falls back to the first non-empty bundle so a completed run
still shows a progress bar.
- ``analysis_progress`` summed across siblings.
- ``active_count`` summed; ``max_concurrent`` keeps primary's
value as the representative.
- ``playlist_id`` + ``playlist_name`` preserved from the primary
(the row the modal originally opened against).
Legacy single-batch wishlist runs (no ``wishlist_run_id`` on the
batch) skip the merge entirely — passthrough. Back-compat by
absence.
1108 tests across downloads + wishlist + automation + imports +
playlist-sources + lb-series suites green. 12 new aggregator
tests pin the merge contract.
Closes the open UX gap from the Phase 1c.2.1 ship — modal now
tracks every sibling sub-batch's progress for the full duration
of the wishlist run.
Phase 1c.2.1 splits each wishlist invocation into per-album sub-
batches so the album-bundle dispatch can engage once per album.
Side effect: the completion handler ``finalize_auto_wishlist_completion``
ran end-of-run logic (cycle toggle + state reset + automation
event emit) once per BATCH, so a 2-album run fired the cycle
toggle twice + emitted two ``wishlist_processing_completed``
events. The cycle landed at the right value either way but the
state machine had become per-batch instead of per-run.
Fix: reify "wishlist run" as a first-class concept via a shared
``wishlist_run_id`` UUID. Generated once per wishlist invocation
in both the auto- and manual-wishlist paths, stamped on every
sub-batch row in ``download_batches``.
``finalize_auto_wishlist_completion`` now reads the completing
batch's ``wishlist_run_id`` and, when present, scans
``download_batches`` for siblings still in pre-terminal phases.
If any sibling is still active, the per-batch summary records
but the cycle toggle + state reset + automation emit are
deferred. Only the last completing sibling fires the run-level
finalization. Legacy single-batch runs (no run_id field) keep
their toggle-immediately behavior — back-compat by absence.
The run_id also lays groundwork for frontend grouping (one
logical row in the Downloads view per wishlist run instead of N
sibling rows), but that UX work is deferred.
3 new tests in ``test_processing.py`` pin: defer-when-siblings-
active, toggle-when-last-sibling-done, back-compat-without-run_id.
1 new assertion in ``test_automation.py`` confirms all sub-batches
of one auto-wishlist invocation share the same run_id. 309 tests
across wishlist + automation suites green.
Notes: dispatch concurrency unchanged — sub-batches still run via
the shared download worker pool. Slskd serializes per-uploader at
its own layer (same uploader = automatic queue, different
uploaders = legit parallel), so SoulSync-side serial enforcement
would duplicate work the right layer already handles.
Auto-wishlist's "albums" cycle used to dump every missing album
track into one batch and run per-track Soulseek / Prowlarr searches
for each (~50 searches for a typical scan). The album-bundle
dispatch (introduced in 2.5.9 for explicit album downloads) was
gated on ``is_album_download=True`` + populated
``album_context``/``artist_context``, none of which the wishlist
batch ever set — so wishlist runs always took the per-track flow
even when 12 missing tracks all belonged to the same album.
Fix: split wishlist albums-cycle tracks into per-album sub-batches
at submission time. Each sub-batch carries its own album context,
trips the existing dispatch gate, and engages one slskd / torrent
/ usenet album-bundle search per album. Tracks the helper can't
group (no album metadata, no artist) fall through to a residual
per-track batch.
- New ``core/wishlist/album_grouping.py``:
``group_wishlist_tracks_by_album(tracks)`` returns
``WishlistGroupingResult(album_groups, residual_tracks)``.
Pure function — extracts album_id (or name-normalized fallback)
+ primary artist + album context from each track's nested
spotify_data, buckets, and threshold-promotes. Independent of
runtime state so it can be unit-tested without the wishlist
executor.
- ``core/wishlist/processing.py``: when ``current_cycle ==
'albums'``, run the grouping helper, submit one batch per album
with ``is_album_download=True`` + the group's album/artist
context, then a single residual batch for orphans. Singles
cycle path unchanged.
- 9 new tests in ``test_album_grouping.py`` pin the bucketing
contract (empty / single album / multi album / orphan / threshold
/ nested payloads / no-id fallback / no artist).
- 2 new tests in ``test_automation.py`` exercise the per-album
split end-to-end through ``process_wishlist_automatically``:
multi-album batch → two sub-batches each with album context;
mixed orphan + real album → one bundle batch + one residual.
1099 tests across wishlist + imports + downloads + automation +
playlist-sources + staging-provenance + track-number-repair
suites green. WHATS_NEW entry added under 2.6.3.
Now when an auto-wishlist scan finds 12 missing tracks from
Ryoto's "Cha-La Head-Cha-La", it runs ONE slskd / Prowlarr
album-bundle search for the release instead of 12 per-track
searches.
Soulseek album-bundle (and any other release-staging path) was
importing every file with ``track_number=1`` because the staging
metadata reader used the auto-import-flavor filename extractor:
``extract_track_number_from_filename`` returns 1 when the basename
has no ``NN -`` prefix. That's the right default for the loose
auto-import flow (single file in, no upstream metadata to lean
on), but completely wrong for staging-cache reads:
- For an album-bundle download the user has authoritative track
numbers in the Spotify track list flowing through to
``track_info`` for each task.
- ``try_staging_match`` in ``core/downloads/staging.py`` was
meant to use those numbers when the staged file's own metadata
doesn't have them.
- But the staging cache populated ``track_number=1`` for every
untagged bare-title file (e.g. ``Cha-La Head-Cha-La.flac``), the
album-bundle resolution branch reads file-side first, sees 1,
and short-circuits the rest of the chain.
Fix:
- New ``extract_explicit_track_number`` in
``core/imports/filename.py`` — strict variant that returns
``0`` when no numeric prefix is visible. Docstring explicitly
contrasts with the legacy 1-defaulting helper so future
callers pick the right one.
- ``read_staging_file_metadata`` in ``core/imports/staging.py``
now uses the strict extractor, so the staging file dict
carries ``track_number=0`` ("unknown") instead of ``1`` for
untagged bare-title files.
- The legacy ``extract_track_number_from_filename`` keeps its
1-default behavior so auto-import callers + the post-process
template fallbacks are unchanged; it's now implemented in
terms of the strict variant.
- Tag-side parsing also tightened to require ``> 0`` before
overriding the filename-derived value.
3 new tests pin the contracts:
- ``test_extract_explicit_track_number_returns_zero_when_no_prefix``
- ``test_read_staging_file_metadata_returns_zero_track_when_unknown``
- existing ``test_extract_track_number_from_filename_handles_common_patterns``
now explicitly comments why bare filenames keep returning 1.
758 tests across imports + downloads + repair + staging-provenance
suites green. WHATS_NEW entry added under 2.6.3.
Reported against an album-bundle download of Ryoto's
"Cha-La Head-Cha-La" where slskd staged 15 untagged FLAC files
named after the song titles only.
The mirrored-playlist cards in the Auto-Sync schedule modal's
sidebar were truncating long names with ellipsis on a single line
+ rendering meta info at 10px, which made entries like
"Top Missed Recordings of 2024 for Nezreka" or "ListenBrainz
Weekly Exploration" unreadable.
- Name wraps to multiple lines instead of ellipsis-truncating
(sidebar is narrow; truncation hid critical disambiguating
text like the year / week / username).
- Bumped name 12px → 13px, meta 10px → 11px with brighter color
(0.4 → 0.55 alpha).
- Bumped card padding 10px/12px → 12px/14px + spacing 6px → 8px
so multi-line entries have breathing room.
- Pinned the leading status dot to the first text line via
``margin-top`` so multi-line names flow underneath rather than
push the dot off-center.
Phase 1c.3 left the click flow at "card shows 'mirrored' + toast",
which felt incomplete — Tidal / LB / Last.fm all open a follow-up
modal after their discovery flow so the user can act on the
results (sync to server playlist, queue downloads, etc.). SoulSync
Discovery skips the discovery phase (tracks pre-matched), so the
natural analog is the mirrored-playlist detail modal — same one
the Mirrored tab opens when you click a row.
- Inline ``fetch('/api/mirror-playlist', ...)`` in place of the
fire-and-forget ``mirrorPlaylist`` helper so we can capture
the returned ``playlist_id`` from the response.
- After successful mirror creation, call
``openMirroredPlaylistModal(playlist_id)`` (exposed by
stats-automations.js) to surface the tracks view.
The card itself keeps the ``♪ N / ✓ N / mirrored`` progress text
so a quick second click can re-refresh without re-opening the
modal each time (just re-runs the generator + re-upserts the
mirror).
Last of the three unified-tab phases. Surfaces the user's
persisted personalized playlists (decade mixes, hidden gems,
popular picks, daily mixes, discovery shuffle, etc.) on the
Sync page so they participate in the mirrored-playlist +
Auto-Sync pipeline like every other source.
Different shape from the LB / Last.fm tabs:
- Tracks already carry Spotify / iTunes / Deezer IDs (matched
at generation time from the discovery pool), so there is NO
MB-style "needs discovery" hop. The mirror is created with
fully-populated ``matched_data`` JSON inline, downstream
consumers (sync, wishlist) see canonical extra_data
immediately.
- Click on a card runs the kind's generator
(``POST /api/personalized/playlist/<kind>/<variant>/refresh``)
+ grabs the fresh track snapshot + mirrors under a synthetic
id of the form ``ssd_<kind>_<variant>`` (e.g. ``ssd_decade_1980s``,
``ssd_hidden_gems``). Re-clicks UPSERT the same row, so the
Auto-Sync schedule survives every refresh.
- Sub-tabs / archive concept don't apply here — each personalized
playlist is already a singleton per (profile, kind, variant);
the manager handles its own rotation.
New file: ``webui/static/sync-soulsync-discovery.js`` (~210 lines).
``initializeSyncPage`` learns a new tab branch. CSS adds
``soulsync-discovery-icon`` (star SVG, teal ``#14b8a6``) +
``.soulsync-discovery-playlist-card`` joins the unified card
selector group with a matching teal accent.
WHATS_NEW entry added under 2.6.3.
236 tests still green; no Python paths touched.
Last.fm Radio playlists are seed-track-specific similar-tracks
snapshots — they don't update on the Last.fm side once generated,
so scheduling one for auto-refresh would just re-discover the
same 25 tracks every interval. The mirror still exists (visible
in the Mirrored tab) so the user can pull the downloads, but it
doesn't belong on the schedule board.
``autoSyncCanSchedulePlaylist`` now rejects ``source='lastfm'``
alongside the existing ``file`` + ``beatport`` exclusions.
Cosmetic-only on the frontend; backend mirror creation +
Mirrored tab listing are unchanged.
ListenBrainz publishes "Weekly Jams for X" / "Weekly Exploration
for X" with a fresh MBID every week, and "Top Discoveries of YYYY
for X" / "Top Missed Recordings of YYYY for X" with a fresh MBID
every year. Auto-mirroring those per-period yielded one mirrored-
playlist row per week/year — useless for Auto-Sync schedules
because the underlying LB playlist never updates, only a brand new
playlist replaces it. The user accumulates 100+ dead Weekly Jams
rows per year if they discover regularly.
This commit collapses each family into a single ROLLING mirror
keyed by a synthetic ``source_playlist_id`` (e.g.
``lb_weekly_jams_Nezreka``). Each new period UPSERTs into the same
row, so the user gets one stable Auto-Sync schedule per series
that automatically picks up the latest period's tracks on every
refresh. Non-series LB playlists (user-created, collaborative,
Last.fm radios for a specific seed) continue to mirror under
their per-playlist MBID as before. Per-period LB playlists are
still visible + usable on the LB Sync tab — only the mirror layer
collapses.
- ``core/playlists/lb_series.py`` (new) — series-detect helper
with regex patterns + canonical-name + LIKE-pattern template
for each known LB family. Exposes
``detect_series(title)``, ``is_series_synthetic_id(id)``, and
``list_series_synthetic_ids()`` so both the JS auto-mirror hook
and the LB adapter can speak the same language.
- ``GET /api/listenbrainz/series-detect?title=...`` — thin HTTP
shim around ``detect_series`` so the auto-mirror JS doesn't
duplicate the regex.
- ``ListenBrainzPlaylistSource.get_playlist`` now recognizes
synthetic series ids — it queries the LB cache for the newest
cache row whose title matches the series' LIKE pattern and
resolves to that row's MBID before fetching tracks. The mirror's
meta keeps the synthetic id so refreshes always re-resolve to
the latest period.
- ``_mirrorListenBrainzAfterDiscovery`` (sync-services.js) calls
the new detect endpoint when discovery completes — if a match
comes back it swaps the per-period MBID for the synthetic id +
the canonical name. Existing Last.fm radio routing logic stays
intact (Last.fm radios aren't a series).
- ``ListenBrainzManager._cleanup_per_period_series_mirrors`` —
one-shot consolidation sweeper runs in ``_cleanup_old_playlists``
+ deletes any legacy per-period mirror rows so the consolidated
rolling mirror is the only one left. Idempotent — only matches
per-period titles ("Weekly Jams for ..., week of ...") and never
the canonical rolling-mirror titles ("ListenBrainz Weekly
Jams").
- 11 new tests pin the detector + synthetic-id helpers; 236 total
across adapter + automation + lb-series suites green.
Two-part fix for Last.fm Radio playlists showing up in the
ListenBrainz group of the Auto-Sync manager + Mirrored tab
instead of their own Last.fm group:
1. **Mirror-creation hook** (sync-services.js): the
``_mirrorListenBrainzAfterDiscovery`` helper hardcoded
``source='listenbrainz'`` on every auto-mirror call, even for
Last.fm Radio playlists (which share the same MB-track shape +
discovery worker but should land under ``source='lastfm'``).
``save_lastfm_radio_playlist`` always prefixes the playlist name
with "Last.fm Radio: <seed>", so the helper now keys on that
prefix to pick the right mirror source + owner fallback. Going
forward, new Last.fm radios mirror correctly the moment
discovery completes.
2. **Backfill** (listenbrainz_manager.py): legacy mirror rows
created before the fix above are stuck under
``source='listenbrainz'``. Added
``_retag_misrouted_lastfm_radio_mirrors`` to ``_cleanup_old_playlists``
so the next LB refresh re-tags any row whose name starts with
"Last.fm Radio:" but is still on ``source='listenbrainz'``.
Idempotent — UPDATE only matches misrouted rows.
``autoSyncSourceLabel`` was missing entries for the post-Phase-0
sources, so any mirrored playlists with ``source='listenbrainz'``
or ``'lastfm'`` rendered their raw lowercase identifier in the
sidebar's group heading instead of a friendly brand label. Added
the four newer sources. Also added ``itunes_link`` which the iTunes
link tab has been able to create for a few releases now.
Cosmetic only — the existing ``autoSyncCanSchedulePlaylist`` gate
already accepts everything except ``file`` and ``beatport``, so
these sources were always schedulable; the group heading just had
no human label.
Sibling to the ListenBrainz Sync tab from Phase 1c.1. Last.fm Radio
playlists already live in the same ``listenbrainz_playlists`` table
as LB ones (``playlist_type='lastfm_radio'``) and run through the
same MB-track discovery worker, so this tab is intentionally thin
— list + render + delegate. Card click hands straight off to the
LB Sync-tab click handler since the downstream modal + state
machine are identical.
- ``webui/index.html``: new ``<button data-tab="lastfm-sync">``
+ tab content container between the LB tab and the existing
Import / Mirrored tabs. Plus a ``<script>`` tag for the new
module.
- ``webui/static/sync-lastfm.js`` (new): ``loadLastfmSyncPlaylists``
hits the existing ``/api/discover/listenbrainz/lastfm-radio``
endpoint, ``renderLastfmSyncPlaylists`` mirrors the LB card
shape with a ``📻`` icon + a ``.lastfm-playlist-card`` brand
class, click handler forwards to
``handleListenBrainzSyncCardClick``.
- ``webui/static/sync-listenbrainz.js``: the shared 500ms refresh
loop now iterates LB + Last.fm cards in one pass and treats
either tab as "active" for liveness. No second loop needed.
- ``webui/static/sync-services.js``: new tab-activation branch in
``initializeSyncPage`` mirrors the LB pattern.
- ``webui/static/style.css``: ``.lastfm-icon`` SVG (Last.fm "as"
logo, red), and ``.lastfm-playlist-card`` joins the unified
card selector group with the Last.fm-red accent
(``rgba(213, 16, 7, ...)``).
- ``web_server.py``: the lastfm-radio endpoint now includes
``track_count`` in its JSPF payload (same fix as the LB
endpoints last commit).
- WHATS_NEW entry added under 2.6.3.
Mirrors created from Last.fm radios participate in the same auto-
trim Phase 1c.1's cascade-delete hook does — when the LB manager
rotates a stale ``lastfm_radio`` row out of its 5-most-recent
window, the matching ``source='lastfm'`` mirror row is removed
along with it. Library files stay on disk.
225 tests across adapter + automation suites still green; this
commit adds no Python paths to test.
Two follow-ups to the LB Sync tab work:
1. **Track counts all showed 0.** The
``/api/discover/listenbrainz/*`` endpoints assemble a JSPF-shaped
payload but drop the cached ``track_count`` field from the
underlying ``listenbrainz_playlists`` row — the JSON the frontend
sees only carries ``title`` / ``creator`` / ``annotation`` / an
empty ``track`` array. The Discover-page renderer worked around
it by hard-coding a fallback of 50; the Sync-page renderer had
no such fallback, so every card displayed "0 tracks". Backend
now includes ``track_count`` directly in each playlist payload
(it's already in the cached row) so any frontend can render an
accurate count without resorting to a default. JS still falls
back to ``annotation.track_count`` and then ``track.length`` for
older callers.
2. **LB playlists never landed in Mirrored Playlists.** The
existing ``/api/listenbrainz/sync/start/<mbid>`` endpoint runs
the converted Spotify tracks through ``_run_sync_task`` — i.e.
it pushes them to the user's media server (Plex / Jellyfin /
Navidrome / SoulSync) as a server-side playlist. It does NOT
call ``database.mirror_playlist``. So no ``mirrored_playlists``
row gets created and the playlist can't be picked up by the
Auto-Sync scheduler, can't show up under the Mirrored tab,
doesn't participate in pipeline automations — the whole point
of the Sync-tab unification.
Tidal works because Tidal mirrors on tab load with raw tracks
then enriches via discovery. LB tracks only have provider IDs
*after* discovery, so the equivalent moment for LB is "discovery
complete". Added ``_mirrorListenBrainzAfterDiscovery(mbid)``
that pulls the matched ``spotify_data`` out of
``discovery_results`` and posts to ``/api/mirror-playlist`` via
the existing ``mirrorPlaylist`` helper. Hooked into both the
WebSocket and HTTP-poll completion handlers of
``startListenBrainzDiscoveryPolling``. UPSERT-keyed on (source,
source_playlist_id, profile_id), so re-running discovery is a
safe no-op refresh.
Result: any LB playlist the user discovers (from either the
Discover page or the new Sync tab) now lands in
``mirrored_playlists`` with ``source='listenbrainz'`` + matched
tracks carrying canonical ``extra_data`` JSON, ready for the
Auto-Sync refresh + sync pipeline wired up in Phase 1a + 1b.
Two interacting bugs that left LB Sync-tab cards rendering with a
solid orange gradient background instead of the dark glass style
every other Sync-page card uses:
1. **Duplicate element id** ``listenbrainz-tab-content``: the new
Sync-tab content div reused the same id the Discover page's
pre-existing LB section already owned. Two elements with the
same id is invalid HTML, and ``getElementById`` in the refresh
loop was hitting the Sync version first while ``initialize
SyncPage``'s ``${tabId}-tab-content`` lookup could race against
it. Renamed the Sync-page tab id + ``data-tab`` attribute to
``listenbrainz-sync`` (matches the existing ``${tabId}-tab-
content`` convention so the lookup becomes
``listenbrainz-sync-tab-content``). Discover-page LB tab
keeps its original id untouched.
2. **Dead ``.listenbrainz-playlist-card`` rule** at style.css
L36155 painting a solid ``linear-gradient(#eb743b → #d26230)``
over the card. That class was orphaned — no JS or HTML
instantiated it before Phase 1c.1 — but it sat at higher
source order than my unified ``.youtube-playlist-card,
.tidal-playlist-card, ...`` rule, so the bare-class selector
won the cascade and overwrote the dark glass background.
Also removed the matching dead ``.listenbrainz-icon { font-
size: 48px }`` rule and its local ``@keyframes pulse`` copy
(the keyframes are defined in four other live blocks).
3. **Missing LB selectors in unified inner-element rules**:
``.listenbrainz-playlist-card`` was only added to the OUTER
card selector group in the first pass — the inner
``.playlist-card-icon`` / ``.playlist-card-content`` /
``.playlist-card-name`` / ``.playlist-card-info`` /
``.playlist-card-action-btn`` (+ ::before, :hover, :disabled)
selector groups were left out, so the inner elements lost all
their styling. Bulk-added LB to every group so the card
inherits the full glass shell the other sources get, with a
brand-orange ``rgba(235, 116, 59, ...)`` accent matching the
Tidal / Deezer / Spotify-public pattern.
The initial LB Sync tab (a7053a60 + df31d42b) rendered cards once
and never updated them as the discovery / sync flow progressed —
phase text stayed "Ready to discover", action button kept saying
"Discover", no progress counts. Tidal's cards by contrast update
phase + button + progress live throughout the entire flow because
Tidal's polling code calls ``updateTidalCardPhase`` /
``updateTidalCardProgress`` at every state transition.
Rather than patch the existing LB polling in sync-services.js with
parallel update hooks at every transition (4–6 injection points
across discovery + sync paths), this commit takes the lighter
route: a single 500ms refresh loop that reads the canonical
``listenbrainzPlaylistStates`` dict the polling code already
owns and updates the on-screen cards from it. The loop only ticks
while the LB tab is the active Sync tab — auto-stops the moment
the user switches away.
- ``_refreshOneLbSyncCard(card)`` — updates phase text + color
(via the shared ``getPhaseText`` / ``getPhaseColor`` helpers),
action button label (via ``getActionButtonText``), and the
per-card progress text in the same shape Tidal uses:
``♪ <total> / ✓ <matched> / ✗ <failed> / <percent>%``. Switches
to the sync-progress payload during syncing / sync_complete.
- ``_startLbSyncCardRefreshLoop`` — idempotent; kicked on tab
activation (in ``initializeSyncPage``) and right after the initial
``renderListenBrainzSyncPlaylists`` render if the tab is already
visible.
- Added the ``.playlist-card-progress`` slot to the LB card
template; hidden initially when phase=fresh, populated by the
refresh loop once discovery/sync begins.
Two bugs from the initial LB tab commit (a7053a60):
1. **All cards showed identical "ListenBrainz Playlist / 0 tracks"
defaults.** The /api/discover/listenbrainz/* endpoints wrap each
entry in JSPF shape — ``{playlist: {identifier, title, creator,
annotation, track}}`` — but renderListenBrainzSyncPlaylists was
reading ``p.title`` / ``p.creator`` / ``p.track_count`` directly,
so every field hit its fallback. Now unwraps the inner playlist
object, extracts the MBID from the identifier URL via
``.split('/').pop()`` (matches buildListenBrainzPlaylistsHtml on
the Discover page), and reads track_count from
``annotation.track_count`` with a fallback to ``track.length``.
2. **The tab looked too orange.** The initial commit gave the
sub-tabs a saturated orange surface that clashed with the rest
of the app, and the new ``.listenbrainz-playlist-card`` class
wasn't in the unified ``.youtube-playlist-card,
.tidal-playlist-card, ...`` selector group — so the card lost
its dark glass base and inherited only my override CSS. Two
fixes:
- Added ``.listenbrainz-playlist-card`` to the unified card
selector group (base + ::before + hover + hover::before + icon)
so it picks up the dark glass background. The brand accent
stripe + hover glow use ``rgba(235, 116, 59, ...)`` matching
the other source cards' subtle accent pattern.
- Sub-tabs reverted to a neutral dark surface (``rgba(255,
255, 255, 0.04)``) with the orange used only as a thin
accent on the active state's border + inset shadow.
- Dropped the ``.refresh-button.listenbrainz`` override so the
refresh button falls back to the user's chosen accent like
the Spotify / Qobuz refresh buttons do.
First user-facing slice of the Discover-to-Sync unification. Adds a
ListenBrainz tab on the Sync page alongside Tidal / Qobuz /
Spotify Public / Beatport / etc. so users can mirror + auto-sync
ListenBrainz playlists from the same surface as every other source,
without detouring through the Discover page.
The Discover-page LB flow already owns all the heavy lifting
(state machine, discovery polling, sync → mirror creation). This
commit adds the Sync-page entry point only — list cached LB
playlists, render cards, pre-fetch tracks on click, hand off to
``openDownloadModalForListenBrainzPlaylist``. Zero backend changes.
- ``webui/index.html``: new ``<button data-tab="listenbrainz">`` +
tab content container with "For You / My Playlists /
Collaborative" sub-tabs and a refresh button.
- ``webui/static/sync-listenbrainz.js`` (new): ``loadListenBrainz
SyncPlaylists`` fetches all three LB cache categories in parallel,
``renderListenBrainzSyncPlaylists`` renders cards in the standard
``.youtube-playlist-card`` shell with the existing phase-state
helpers (so card colors / button text stay consistent with Tidal
/ Qobuz / etc.). Click handler populates the
``listenbrainzTracksCache`` from
``/api/discover/listenbrainz/playlist/<mbid>`` if not already
primed, then defers to the shared modal opener.
- ``webui/static/sync-services.js``: one new branch in
``initializeSyncPage`` to lazy-load the tab on first activation.
- ``webui/static/style.css``: ``.listenbrainz-icon`` SVG (orange
play-button in circle for inactive, white for active),
``.listenbrainz-sub-tab-btn`` styling for the sub-tabs,
``.refresh-button.listenbrainz`` accent.
- ``webui/static/helper.js``: WHATS_NEW entry under 2.6.3.
Auth-not-connected case is surfaced as a friendly placeholder
pointing the user at Settings → Connections instead of an empty
list.
Adds ``discover_tracks(tracks) -> List[NormalizedTrack]`` to the
PlaylistSource interface. Sources whose tracks already carry
provider IDs (Spotify, Tidal, Qobuz, YouTube, Deezer, Spotify
public, iTunes link, SoulSync Discovery) inherit a no-op default;
ListenBrainz + Last.fm override to run the matching engine.
This closes the last gap before LB / Last.fm / SoulSync Discovery
can land as Sync-page mirror sources: the refresh handler now
calls ``source.discover_tracks(...)`` whenever a source returns
tracks with ``needs_discovery=True``, so mirrored LB rows arrive
already discovered + ready for the sync pipeline. Previously, LB
playlists ran through a separate state-machine worker tied to the
Discover-page UI, with results stored in ``discovery_cache``
instead of ``mirrored_playlist_tracks.extra_data``.
Changes:
- ``core/playlists/sources/base.py`` — PlaylistSource switches from
Protocol to ABC so a concrete default for ``discover_tracks``
can live on the base class. The four real-work methods stay
``@abstractmethod``; instantiating an adapter that forgets one
fails loudly at construction.
- ``core/discovery/matching.py`` (new) — pure ``match_mb_tracks``
helper that runs Strategy-1-only matching-engine queries against
Spotify (primary) or iTunes (fallback). No state machine, no
discovery-cache writes, no wing-it stub — that richer flow stays
in ``core/discovery/listenbrainz.py`` for the Discover-page UI.
- ``ListenBrainzPlaylistSource`` + ``LastFMPlaylistSource`` take
an optional ``discover_callable`` constructor arg. Last.fm reuses
the LB implementation since the track shape is identical.
- ``bootstrap.build_playlist_source_registry`` accepts a
``discover_callable`` kwarg and wires it into LB + Last.fm
adapters.
- ``web_server.py`` boot constructs the discovery callable from the
existing matching engine + ``_discovery_score_candidates`` +
Spotify / iTunes clients, passes through to the registry.
- ``refresh_mirrored.py`` adds a small ``_maybe_discover`` helper
that calls ``source.discover_tracks(...)`` between fetch and
``to_mirror_track_dict`` projection — only fires when at least
one track has ``needs_discovery=True``, so the normal Spotify /
Tidal / etc. refresh path stays a zero-cost pass-through.
Tests:
- 5 new adapter tests: default no-op pass-through, LB discovery
with mixed matches/misses, LB no-callable fallback, Last.fm
shares the LB implementation, mirror-dict spotify_hint emit.
- 1 new automation test: end-to-end LB refresh with a stub
discover_callable proves the matched_data lands in
``mirror_playlist_tracks.extra_data`` after the registry
refresh + discover hop.
225 tests across adapter + automation suites green.
Phase 1a of the Discover-to-Sync unification. The mirrored-playlist
refresh handler used to branch per-source through a ~190-line
if/elif chain (Spotify, Spotify public, Deezer, Tidal, YouTube).
Each branch hand-built its own ``extra_data`` JSON for the matched-
data block. With every new source we considered for Sync-page mirror
support (ListenBrainz, Last.fm radio, SoulSync Discovery, iTunes
link), that chain would have grown a new elif.
This commit lifts the per-source logic into the existing adapter
layer and collapses the dispatch to a registry lookup:
- ``core/playlists/sources/deezer.py`` — new adapter so the registry
covers every source the refresh handler previously branched on.
- ``core/playlists/sources/bootstrap.py`` — single helper that builds
a populated registry from injected getter callables. Both
``web_server.py`` boot and the automation test fixtures call it,
so the two construction paths can't drift.
- ``core/playlists/sources/base.py`` — ``to_mirror_track_dict``
projection helper centralises the NormalizedTrack → DB-row
conversion (including the discovered/matched_data and
spotify_hint extra_data shapes the downstream sync + wishlist
consumers already expect).
- Spotify adapter now populates ``extra['discovered']`` + an
``extra['matched_data']`` block when fetching via the authed API,
so Spotify mirrors keep landing pre-discovered (matches the
pre-refactor contract pinned by
``test_spotify_refresh_writes_to_db``).
- Spotify-public adapter populates ``extra['spotify_hint']`` so the
discovery worker can skip its search step and jump straight to
enrichment for the known track ID.
- All artist-name fields now project to first-artist-only across
every adapter — matches the pre-refactor mirror_playlist DB shape
(``t.artists[0]``).
``refresh_mirrored.py`` shrinks ~190 → ~80 lines and keeps:
- the file/beatport unrefreshable-source filter,
- URL extraction from ``description`` via ``require_refresh_url``
for spotify_public + youtube,
- the Spotify-public → authed-Spotify fallback when the user is
signed in (handler-level branch, not in any adapter),
- the Tidal-not-authenticated soft-skip log (skip, not error),
- existing-extra_data preservation across refreshes,
- the ``playlist_changed`` automation event emit on track-set delta.
Test scaffolding:
- ``_build_deps`` in ``tests/automation/test_handlers_playlist.py``
now builds a default registry from the passed clients via
``build_playlist_source_registry``, so existing refresh tests
exercise the same path without per-test changes. New tests cover
Tidal-not-authed soft-skip, Deezer refresh writes plain tracks,
YouTube refresh reads URL from description, and Spotify-public
uses authed Spotify when signed in.
- 4 new adapter tests for Deezer projection +
``to_mirror_track_dict`` (minimal track, Spotify matched_data,
Spotify-public spotify_hint).
- ``playlist_source_registry`` field on ``AutomationDeps`` defaults
to ``None`` so the other 5 automation test files (which don't
exercise refresh_mirrored) keep working unchanged.
220 tests across automation + adapter suites green.
Groundwork for unifying Discover-page playlists (ListenBrainz, Last.fm
radio, SoulSync Discovery) with Sync-page playlists (Spotify, Tidal,
Qobuz, YouTube, Spotify public, iTunes link). All nine sources now
expose the same `PlaylistSource` Protocol so callers stop having to
branch per-source.
This commit only adds the abstraction — no dispatch sites collapse to
the registry yet, no DB or UI changes. Adapters wrap existing clients
via injected getter callables to avoid eager imports of web_server.py
globals.
- core/playlists/sources/base.py — PlaylistMeta, NormalizedTrack,
PlaylistDetail dataclasses + PlaylistSource Protocol with
supports_listing / supports_refresh / requires_auth capability
flags. needs_discovery flag on NormalizedTrack marks tracks that
carry raw MB metadata (LB, Last.fm) vs tracks already matched to a
provider ID (everything else).
- core/playlists/sources/registry.py — thread-safe lazy-factory
registry with instance caching + re-register invalidation.
- nine adapters in core/playlists/sources/ wrapping SpotifyClient,
TidalClient, QobuzClient, spotify_public_scraper, the YouTube +
iTunes-link parsers (via injected callables), ListenBrainzManager,
Last.fm radio rows in the ListenBrainz cache, and
PersonalizedPlaylistManager.
- tests/test_playlist_sources_adapters.py — 18 tests covering each
adapter's field projection with fake backing clients, plus
registry lazy-construct + cache + re-register invalidation.
Phase 1 will collapse refresh_mirrored.py's per-source if/elif chain
to a registry lookup and surface ListenBrainz as a Sync-page tab.
The iTunes Link tab was reusing the generic `import-file-icon` (a
blue document glyph), which read as "import a file" rather than
"iTunes / Apple Music link". Added a dedicated `.itunes-icon`
inline-SVG matching the iTunes 11+ / Apple Music aesthetic —
pink-red circle with a white double-stem note glyph — and switched
the tab button to use it. Stays consistent with the rest of the
tab icons in the file (all inline data URIs, no external fetches).
Also moved the Qobuz tab from between Deezer and Deezer Link to
between Tidal and Deezer, so the Deezer / Deezer Link pair sits
adjacent and the lossless-streaming services (Tidal / Qobuz) group
naturally. Updated the Qobuz Playlist Sync modal-section feature
line to drop the now-stale "between Deezer and Deezer Link"
position claim.
When a task failed AcoustID verification and got quarantined, opening
the candidates modal and manually picking a different file would just
re-quarantine it. The manual-pick path through
`_attempt_download_with_candidates` ran full post-processing with no
quarantine bypass — so if the alternate file disagreed with AcoustID's
stored metadata too (common for live versions, remasters, regional
title differences, fingerprint coverage gaps) the file landed right
back in quarantine. User got stuck in the loop.
The Approve button on quarantined rows already handles the "I want
this exact file" case via `_skip_quarantine_check='all'`. The
candidates modal handles the "I want a different file" case — same
user intent, opposite direction, but the bypass plumbing didn't carry
through.
`/api/downloads/task/<id>/download-candidate` already sets
`task['_user_manual_pick'] = True`. `attempt_download_with_candidates`
now reads that flag under tasks_lock alongside `used_sources` and,
when set, injects `_skip_quarantine_check='acoustid'` plus
`_user_manual_pick=True` into the stored `matched_downloads_context`
entry. The acoustid-only scope is deliberate: integrity + bit-depth
gates still run because those check the new file's actual condition
(corruption, sample rate) rather than its identity — only the
metadata-mismatch gate is the user-override case.
Auto-search picks (the normal task-worker path) leave the flag unset
and continue to run full AcoustID verification, preserving the
existing safety net for non-user-initiated downloads.
Tests:
- positive: manual-pick task → stored context has
`_skip_quarantine_check='acoustid'` and `_user_manual_pick=True`
- negative: auto-search task → stored context has neither key,
AcoustID still runs as before
Full suite 3976 pass.
Root cause (#700): the Soulseek album-bundle path downloads whole
releases into a private staging dir, then per-track workers claim
those files via the staging-match shortcut. When slskd files arrived
without ID3 tags (common for FLAC rips), the staging cache fell back
to the filename stem as the title — and stems shaped like
"Artist - Album - 03 - Title" could not clear the 0.80 title-
similarity threshold against the clean Spotify track name. Every
track in the album went not_found, the batch ended "failed" in the
Downloads UI with an empty queue, and the bundle-downloaded files
just sat unused in staging.
Fix: in _staging_title_variants, add a trailing-title variant by
extracting the segments after a bare track-number block (e.g. "03")
between " - " delimiters. Conservative — only fires when a clear
digit segment is present, so real song titles with dashes like
"Hold Me - Live" are left intact. Generated as an additional variant
alongside the existing raw/compacted/feat-stripped/bonus-stripped
forms, so behavior on already-matching files is unchanged.
Downstream (#698): the album-bundle staging miss pushed every failed
track to the wishlist labelled as a playlist track, and a couple of
fallback paths in ensure_wishlist_track_format and the slskd-result
reconstruction hardcoded album_type='single' / total_tracks=1 on the
stored album dict. On wishlist requeue the path builder saw
album_type='single' and routed the download through single_path,
dumping the file in the Singles tree even though it belonged to an
album. (Running Reorganize would fix it because the DB album linkage
was still correct, but the file landed in the wrong place first.)
Fixes:
- new resolve_wishlist_source_type_for_batch() returns 'album' for
is_album_download batches; wishlist_failed.py now calls it instead
of hardcoding 'playlist'
- build_wishlist_source_context() threads album_context /
artist_context / is_album_download from the batch into the wishlist
row so future requeue logic has authoritative routing data
- the non-dict-album fallback in ensure_wishlist_track_format and
the slskd-result reconstruction default album_type='album' (and
total_tracks=0 = unknown) instead of lying with 'single'/1; the
existing setdefault chain handles dict-shaped album data unchanged
Tests:
- 2 staging-match tests pin the new tail-extraction behavior against
a realistic untagged slskd stem, plus a negative test that confirms
a dash-in-title without a digit segment still does NOT extract a
variant
- 2 payload tests pin the album_type='album' default for both
fallback paths
- 4 processing tests pin resolve_wishlist_source_type_for_batch()
and the album-context threading in build_wishlist_source_context()
3974 pass; no behavioural change on already-working flows.
The Redownload button on the enhanced artist-view album row was
calling redownloadLibraryAlbum(album, artistName, btn), but the
function body was dropped from the source tree when commit a66c4d06
split the 78K-line script.js into 17 domain modules. The onclick
threw ReferenceError silently — no toast, no log, no popup, no
visible failure for the user.
Function restored verbatim from a66c4d06~1:webui/static/script.js
into library.js next to deleteLibraryAlbum, since it depends on
artistDetailPageState and the existing
openDownloadMissingModalForArtistAlbum / registerArtistDownload
helpers in shared-helpers.js.