soulsync/webui
Broque Thomas 79ad4d885d fix(quarantine): drop already-quarantined sources from candidate picker (#652)
When a file failed AcoustID verification and got quarantined, the next
auto-wishlist cycle would search for the same track, the deterministic
quality picker would re-select the same (uploader, filename) source,
re-download it, and re-quarantine it. Users woke up to hundreds of
duplicate .quarantined entries from a single bad upload — same source
URL repeatedly, byte-for-byte identical files.

Root cause: `SoulseekClient.filter_results_by_quality_preference` ranks
candidates by quality + bitrate density only. Quarantine history wasn't
consulted, so a high-bitrate FLAC upload with a wrong-track AcoustID
fingerprint kept winning the picker against every other candidate.

Fix shape:

- New helper `core/imports/quarantine.py::get_quarantined_source_keys`
  reads every quarantine sidecar's `context.original_search_result`
  and returns the set of `(username, filename)` tuples for O(1)
  membership checks. Sidecars missing the context field (legacy thin
  sidecars written pre-Feb 2026, or orphaned files) and corrupt JSON
  are skipped silently — defensive against transient FS / encoding
  issues.

- `SoulseekClient._drop_quarantined_sources` runs the membership
  filter against incoming TrackResults, drops matches, logs a single
  INFO line with the skip count. Called first inside
  `filter_results_by_quality_preference` so all four callers
  (search-and-download, master worker, validation, orchestrator)
  benefit transparently.

- Approving or deleting a quarantine entry removes its sidecar, so
  the dedup key disappears from the set on the next search — gives
  the user a way to opt back in to a previously-quarantined source
  without restarting the app.

7 helper tests cover: missing dir, empty dir, well-formed sidecars
collected as tuples, legacy sidecars skipped, empty source fields
skipped (so empty-string keys can't accidentally drop unrelated
results), corrupt JSON tolerated, duplicate quarantines collapse.

5 integration tests pin: clean candidates pass, known-bad candidates
drop, missing quarantine dir returns input unchanged, filesystem
errors swallowed (defensive), full `filter_results_by_quality_preference`
runs the dedup BEFORE the quality picker — so a high-quality
quarantined source can't win on bitrate.

692 existing download + import tests still green. Cosmetic surface
of the fix is invisible — same UX as today when no quarantine entries
exist; loop only kicks in once a sidecar has been written.

Out of scope: bulk-select / multi-delete UI for the quarantine tab —
S-Bryce mentioned this as a separate pain point in the issue, but
it's its own UX work, not a one-commit drive-by.
2026-05-19 21:19:50 -07:00
..
src refactor(webui): simplify similar artists cleanup 2026-05-19 10:40:41 +03:00
static fix(quarantine): drop already-quarantined sources from candidate picker (#652) 2026-05-19 21:19:50 -07:00
tests Keep Issues and artist detail history stable 2026-05-13 22:26:24 +03:00
.gitignore Initial Vite app scaffolding & issues page impl 2026-05-13 22:24:46 +03:00
.oxfmtrc.json Split webui tooling into separate configs 2026-05-13 22:26:25 +03:00
.oxlintrc.json Split webui tooling into separate configs 2026-05-13 22:26:25 +03:00
index.html refactor(webui): link artist detail navigation 2026-05-19 10:22:59 +03:00
package-lock.json Unify issues validation and metadata 2026-05-13 22:26:26 +03:00
package.json Unify issues validation and metadata 2026-05-13 22:26:26 +03:00
playwright.config.ts Initial Vite app scaffolding & issues page impl 2026-05-13 22:24:46 +03:00
README.md Move shared shell chrome into bridge 2026-05-13 22:26:26 +03:00
tsconfig.json Split webui tooling into separate configs 2026-05-13 22:26:25 +03:00
vite.config.ts Split webui tooling into separate configs 2026-05-13 22:26:25 +03:00
vitest.config.ts Split webui tooling into separate configs 2026-05-13 22:26:25 +03:00
vitest.setup.ts Add MSW-backed issue API tests 2026-05-13 22:26:24 +03:00

WebUI Hybrid Rendering

SoulSync's web UI is in a transition phase:

  • most pages still render through the legacy vanilla JS shell
  • /issues is rendered by the new React app
  • a small shell bridge keeps both runtimes aware of the active page, profile context, and navigation state

How It Fits Together

flowchart LR
    Browser["Browser parses /webui/index.html"]
    Legacy["Legacy shell scripts\n(core.js -> ... -> init.js)"]
    Bridge["shell-bridge.js\nwindow.SoulSyncWebShellBridge"]
    React["Vite React app\nsrc/app/main.tsx"]
    Router["TanStack Router\nwindow.SoulSyncWebRouter"]

    Browser --> Legacy
    Browser --> React
    Legacy --> Bridge
    React --> Router
    Router --> Bridge
    Bridge --> Legacy

Runtime Roles

  • webui/static/init.js

    • boots the legacy shell
    • selects the active profile
    • handles the legacy page loading flow
  • webui/static/shell-bridge.js

    • owns the browser-side bridge object
    • exposes window.SoulSyncWebShellBridge
    • owns the shared page chrome and route handoff helpers
  • webui/src/app/main.tsx

    • mounts the React app
    • binds window.SoulSyncWebRouter
  • webui/src/platform/shell/route-controllers.tsx

    • listens for bridge readiness
    • keeps React pages aligned with the shell

Load Order

The current order in index.html matters:

  1. legacy shell scripts load first
  2. init.js sets up the shell runtime
  3. shell-bridge.js publishes the bridge and shared chrome helpers after the shell state exists
  4. the Vite React app is injected through {{ vite_assets('body') }} and boots as a module after parsing

That order avoids load-time references to missing globals and keeps the React side able to react to bridge readiness events. The React entry can start fetching early, but the shell bridge and legacy globals are already available by the time the React runtime starts acting on them.

Notes

  • The bridge is intentionally small and browser-only.
  • This is the start of the migration, not a full replacement of the legacy shell.
  • When adding another React page, check whether it needs:
    • a route entry in webui/src/platform/shell/route-manifest.ts
    • bridge typings in webui/src/platform/shell/globals.d.ts
    • a legacy fallback path in webui/static/init.js
    • bridge glue or handoff logic in webui/static/shell-bridge.js

Folder Layout

The React webui uses a small set of predictable folders so route slices stay easy to extend, test, and understand.

webui/src/
  app/         React bootstrap, router, query client, shared API client
  components/  Shared UI primitives
  platform/    Shell bridge and browser/platform integration
  routes/      Route-local code and TanStack Router pages
  test/        Shared test utilities and setup helpers

Route Slices

  • Keep route-specific code inside webui/src/routes/<route>/.
  • Put the routing entry in route.tsx.
  • Put route-local UI in a -ui/ folder.
  • Prefix non-routing files with - so TanStack Router ignores them.
  • Keep the route slice small and cohesive.
  • Prefer a few files with clear responsibilities over many tiny files with overlapping names.

Example:

webui/src/routes/issues/
  route.tsx
  -issues.types.ts
  -issues.api.ts
  -issues.helpers.ts
  -issues.api.test.ts
  -issues.helpers.test.ts
  -ui/
    issues-page.tsx
    issue-detail-modal.tsx
    issue-domain-host.tsx

The initial issues slice is the model to follow:

  • -issues.api.ts holds request code and query options
  • -issues.helpers.ts holds pure normalization and formatting
  • -issues.types.ts holds shared types
  • -ui/ holds the page, modal, and legacy handoff UI

Shared Code

  • Put reusable UI in webui/src/components/.
  • Put shell integration in webui/src/platform/.
  • Put bootstrap and app-wide wiring in webui/src/app/.
  • Move code up a level only when it is genuinely shared.
  • Avoid creating new conventions that overlap with existing ones.

Testing Choices

We have a lot of testing tools available, but we do not need all of them for every feature.

  • Use plain unit tests for pure functions and small transforms.
  • Use React component or route tests when the behavior lives in the UI or router.
  • Use MSW-backed tests when request shape, response handling, or error handling matters.
  • Use Playwright when the behavior is best proven end-to-end with the server and browser together.
  • Prefer the smallest test setup that still proves the thing that can regress.

Development

The repo root now owns the full local-dev instructions. Start there for the portable launcher and backend/frontend setup:

  1. README.md for the end-to-end dev flow
  2. npm run check and npm run fix for React-side linting and formatting