bc8b512b564951fecfbe8e7c3fb0fad98b605ddf
7 Commits
| Author | SHA1 | Message | Date | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
878cbe9439 |
test(manager-core): schema snapshot guardrail
Boots a fresh Postgres via sqlx::test, applies every migration in
order, dumps the resulting public schema (tables, columns with type
+ nullability + default, indexes, constraints, applied migration
manifest), and compares against a checked-in golden text file.
What this catches:
* Someone edits a committed migration — schema diverges from the
snapshot, test fails with a precise diff.
* Someone adds a migration but forgets to update the snapshot —
same divergence; test reminds them.
* Two migrations drift apart in any other way — snapshot is the
source of truth about the post-replay schema.
Update workflow when adding a migration intentionally:
BLESS=1 DATABASE_URL=postgres://... \
cargo test -p picloud-manager-core --test schema_snapshot \
-- --include-ignored
Review the snapshot diff in the same PR. The header comment makes
it clear the file is not for hand-editing.
* Snapshot dump uses information_schema.columns + pg_indexes +
pg_constraint with pg_get_constraintdef. Output is sorted on
every dimension so cosmetic differences (insertion order,
etc.) never cause spurious diffs.
* #[ignore]'d by default for the same reason as the integration
tests — needs DATABASE_URL pointing at a writable Postgres.
* Initial expected_schema.txt blessed from the current
migrations/ contents (3 tables, 9 indexes, 12 constraints).
Wires up enforcement item (4) from docs/versioning.md.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
|
||
|
|
07e2a62d98 |
feat: custom routing — bind scripts to your own URLs
Scripts can now answer at user-chosen paths (e.g. /greet, /greet/:name,
/webhooks/*), on user-chosen hosts (strict or *.example.com wildcards),
on user-chosen methods. The internal /api/v1/execute/{id} endpoint
stays as the always-available ID-based bypass.
Routing rules (decided in design with the user; see chat history):
Path kinds:
exact /greet literal
prefix /greet/* strict-subtree; stored as "/greet/";
does NOT match bare /greet (add an
exact route for that case)
param /users/:id :name captures one whole segment;
mid-segment colons are rejected;
{name} is reserved for a future SDK
Host kinds:
any no Host header constraint
strict sub.example.com literal match (case-insensitive)
wildcard *.example.com suffix match; multi-level subdomains OK
Within-kind uniqueness:
two routes of the same kind that could match the same request
conflict at config time. Algorithm (orchestrator_core::routing::
conflict):
exact: literal equality
prefix: literal equality (longer-prefix coexists; longer wins
at request time)
param: same segment count + same literals at every
literal-vs-literal position (the user's example:
:id vs :userId at same shape is a conflict)
Request-time precedence:
exact > param > prefix
among non-exact: more leading-literal segments wins
tie: param > prefix (more constrained)
within prefix: longest matching prefix wins
host bucket: strict > wildcard (longer suffix) > any; fall through
to less specific buckets when path doesn't match
Reserved path prefixes: /api/, /admin/, /healthz, /version
Routes that look invalid at config time return 422 with the precise
parse error; conflicting routes return 409 with the conflicting route
in the body (so the dashboard can render the conflict inline).
What landed:
* 0003_routes.sql — routes table (host_kind, host, host_param_name,
path_kind, path, method, script_id) with UNIQUE index on the
literal binding tuple. Schema 2 → 3.
* shared::Route / HostKind / PathKind — flat storage shape that
crosses wire boundaries cleanly.
* orchestrator_core::routing — four sub-modules, all unit-tested:
pattern.rs (16 tests) parse + validate + display
conflict.rs (12 tests) within-kind overlap predicate
matcher.rs (12 tests) runtime dispatch (specificity-aware)
table.rs Arc<RwLock<Vec<CompiledRoute>>>
shared by manager (writes) and
orchestrator (reads); atomic replace
after each admin write
* manager-core::route_admin — five new admin endpoints under
/api/v1/admin:
POST /scripts/{id}/routes create
GET /scripts/{id}/routes list per script
DELETE /routes/{route_id} delete (refreshes table)
POST /routes:check pre-flight conflict check
(powers the dashboard's
live conflict warning)
POST /routes:match synthetic URL → matched
route + extracted params
(powers the dashboard's
match-preview tool)
Stored path strings stay raw (user-typed); normalization
happens only in the in-memory CompiledRoute so re-parses are
idempotent.
* orchestrator_core::api::user_routes_router — fallback handler
mounted in picloud after the system routes. Reads Host /
method / path / query from the request, dispatches via the
table, builds an ExecRequest with params/query/rest filled,
calls the executor, writes to the log sink. 10 MiB body cap.
* executor-core::ctx (SDK 1.0 → 1.1) — adds
ctx.request.params (map of named-param captures)
ctx.request.query (parsed query string)
ctx.request.rest (suffix for prefix routes; "" otherwise)
All three are always present (empty when not applicable) so
scripts can read them unconditionally.
* picloud::build_app — now async; loads routes at startup,
populates the shared table, mounts route_admin_router under
/api/v1/admin alongside the script CRUD, and the user-routes
fallback at the app root.
* caddy/Caddyfile + Caddyfile.prod widened: anything not
/healthz, /version, /api/v1/admin/*, /api/v1/execute/*,
/api/* (404 sunset), or /admin/* (dashboard) → picloud.
* Dashboard moves to /admin/* via SvelteKit paths.base. Its
internal Caddy strips the prefix and serves with SPA fallback.
All in-app links use $app/paths. The dashboard URL is now
http://localhost:8000/admin/ — one-time break for the new
URL freedom users gained.
* PICLOUD_PUBLIC_BASE_URL env var, exposed via /version so the
dashboard renders full URLs for routes regardless of the
operator's external port / TLS setup.
* memory_limit_mb stays in the schema, still v1.3+ advisory.
Verified live through Caddy:
/version → schema 3, sdk 1.1, public_base_url
GET /admin/ → 200, dashboard HTML containing "PiCloud"
POST /api/v1/admin/scripts → 201
POST .../scripts/{id}/routes (path=/greet/:name) → 201
GET /greet/alice?lang=en → 200 {"name":"alice","q":"en"}
POST conflicting route → 409 with conflicting_route body
POST /admin/foo route → 422 "reserved"
POST /api/v1/admin/routes:match → matched + params extracted
GET /unbound-path → 404 JSON
Tests:
* 40 routing unit tests (pattern + conflict + matcher tables)
* 14 executor-core unit tests (one new for ctx.request.params/
query/rest exposure)
* 32 integration tests (10 new for routing CRUD + dispatch +
conflict + reserved + specificity tie-break + match preview +
delete invalidation + /version returns public_base_url)
* default cargo test --workspace stays green; opt-in via
DATABASE_URL + --include-ignored for the integration suite
Bumps: schema 2 → 3; SDK 1.0 → 1.1; product 0.3.0 → 0.4.0.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
|
||
|
|
f51924fdbc |
feat: per-script Rhai sandbox overrides with admin ceiling
Adds optional per-script overrides for the six Rhai sandbox knobs
(max_operations, max_string_size, max_array_size, max_map_size,
max_call_levels, max_expr_depth). The executor merges its defaults
with each script's overrides on every call; the manager validates
overrides against an admin-set ceiling at write time, so the
executor trusts whatever is stored.
Storage chose JSONB on the existing scripts table over six new
columns: lets future knobs land as code-only changes, keeps the
sparse common case (most scripts override nothing) cheap to store
and serialize, and matches how the manager + executor pass the
config across the wire.
* 0002_sandbox.sql — ALTER TABLE scripts ADD COLUMN sandbox
JSONB NOT NULL DEFAULT '{}'
* shared::ScriptSandbox — six Option<u64> fields with
deny_unknown_fields so typos surface as 422
* Script.sandbox + ExecRequest.sandbox_overrides — typed end
to end; cluster mode just serializes the same struct
* executor-core::Limits::with_overrides — field-by-field
replacement; tests cover the override actually tightening
the live engine
* manager-core::SandboxCeiling — built-in conservative
defaults (10M ops, 1 MiB strings, 100k array/map, 128
call/expr depth); env vars override per knob, invalid
values warn-and-skip rather than blocking boot
* manager-core admin API — POST/PUT accept `sandbox`; values
above the ceiling return 422 with the specific field +
requested + ceiling; absent or `{}` keeps platform defaults
* picloud all-in-one — wires SandboxCeiling::from_env() into
AdminState
* memory_limit_mb stays in the schema, marked v1.3+ advisory
(no enforcement until OS-level isolation lands with
cluster-mode executors)
Verified live through Caddy:
* /version reports schema 2, product 0.3.0
* Script with max_operations: 500 → 507 on a 10k-iteration loop
* Same script after PUT raising to 1M → succeeds, returns 10000
* POST with max_operations: 1_000_000_000 → 422 (exceeds ceiling)
Tests:
* 13 executor-core unit tests (added 2 for override semantics)
* 20 integration tests (added 6 for sandbox CRUD + ceiling +
unknown-field rejection + executor honoring overrides)
* default cargo test --workspace stays green (integration tests
remain #[ignore]'d until DATABASE_URL is set)
Bumps:
* schema 1 → 2
* product 0.2.0 → 0.3.0
* SDK unchanged (scripts see nothing new)
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
|
||
|
|
0473d295af |
feat: versioning scheme — lockstep crates + four independent surfaces
Establish how versions are assigned, bumped, and checked across the
five things that actually change for users: the product itself, the
Rhai SDK, the HTTP API, the database schema, and the inter-service
wire (reserved for cluster mode). Crates ship in lockstep — drift
between picloud-shared and picloud-manager-core is fiction since
they always release together — but surfaces are versioned and
checked at their natural boundaries.
* docs/versioning.md is the authoritative reference: what gets a
version, the per-surface compatibility rules, how each surface
bump cascades to the product version (loose pre-1.0, strict
post-1.0), and the five enforcement mechanisms (lockstep at
compile time, /version at runtime, golden SDK contract tests,
migration replay, CI guardrail).
* shared::version exposes four constants — PRODUCT_VERSION (from
CARGO_PKG_VERSION), SDK_VERSION ("1.0"), API_VERSION (1),
WIRE_VERSION (1). Scripts read SDK_VERSION as ctx.sdk_version
and can feature-detect against it.
* Workspace inheritance: `[workspace.package] version = "0.2.0"`
is the single point of truth; every crate uses
`version.workspace = true`. dashboard/package.json mirrors.
* Routes move to /api/v1/* — both control plane
(/api/v1/admin/*) and data plane (/api/v1/execute/{id}).
Picloud composes them via a single `/api/v{API_VERSION}` nest,
so the next major is a copy-paste-and-bump. Caddyfile (dev and
prod) routes /api/v1/* to picloud and 404s any other /api/*
so old clients fail loudly instead of getting the SPA shell.
Dashboard client + integration tests updated.
* /healthz remains a plain "ok" string (k8s probes); /version is
the new JSON endpoint returning every surface version in one
place — product, sdk, api, schema (from
manager-core::migrations::latest_version), wire.
* Reasonable bump rationale: API path changes are breaking by
definition, so 0.1.0 → 0.2.0 (pre-1.0 license to bump minor on
any breaking change). SDK starts at 1.0 because scripts depend
on it more strictly than the product depends on its internals;
we'd rather promise SDK stability early than pull the rug.
Verified live:
* /healthz → "ok" (plain text)
* /version → {product:"0.2.0",sdk:"1.0",api:1,schema:1,wire:1}
* /api/v1/admin/scripts → 200
* /api/admin/scripts → 404 with error JSON (sunset major)
* Script can read ctx.sdk_version → "1.0"
* All 14 integration tests pass against new paths
* 11 executor-core unit tests pass (added one for sdk_version
exposure with the major.minor format invariant)
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
|
||
|
|
777f4af628 |
feat: persist execution logs + dashboard detail view + integration tests
Three threads landing together because they share a public surface
(the new execution_log shape) and verifying any one in isolation
would mean re-doing the work later.
== (A) execution log persistence ==
* shared::ExecutionLog + ExecutionStatus carry the audit-trail
shape that flows from the orchestrator through the sink and
back out via the manager's logs endpoint.
* shared::ExecutionLogSink trait — abstraction the orchestrator
writes through. In single-process MVP mode the manager's
Postgres-backed impl is plugged in directly; in cluster mode
(v1.3+) the orchestrator's impl will post over HTTP to the
manager. Trait lives in `shared` so neither *-core crate has
to know about the other.
* manager-core::PostgresExecutionLogSink writes to the
execution_logs table (already in the initial migration);
PostgresExecutionLogRepository reads them back, paginated.
AdminState now carries both a script repo and a log repo, so
`admin_router` exposes `GET /scripts/{id}/logs?limit=&offset=`
capped at 200 rows per page to keep the dashboard responsive.
* orchestrator-core::DataPlaneState gains `log_sink`. The
execute handler builds an ExecutionLog on every outcome —
success, error, timeout, budget-exceeded — and awaits the
sink. Sink failures are logged at warn and DO NOT mask the
user-facing result, since "we couldn't write the audit row"
is a separate concern from "the script ran".
* picloud binary refactored into a lib (`build_app(pool)` is
the seam) + thin bin shell. Same Postgres pool backs the
script repo, the log repo, and the sink — no double pool.
== (B) dashboard ==
* Typed API client extended with `scripts.logs(id, opts)`,
`scripts.update/remove`, and `execute(id, body, headers)`.
Plain `fetch` wrapper now surfaces server-side error
messages via a typed ApiError so the UI can render them.
* `/` — create-script form now actually creates; on success
the list reloads. List entries link to detail.
* `/scripts/[id]` — new detail route: source editor with save
(calls update, version bumps); Test invoke panel that sends
arbitrary JSON body + headers to /api/execute and shows the
response; Recent executions panel reading from /logs with
expandable per-row request/response/script-log views.
Delete button with confirm. SPA-routed; Caddy serves
`build/` with the same index.html fallback.
== (C) integration tests ==
* crates/picloud/tests/api.rs — 14 sqlx::test cases driving
`build_app` through an axum_test::TestServer against a fresh
Postgres DB per test. Covers: health, full script CRUD,
duplicate-name conflict, invalid-source rejection on both
create and update, execute echoing the body, status+header
passthrough, 404 on missing scripts, error-path executions
landing in the audit log with the right status.
* Tests are `#[ignore]` by default so plain `cargo test
--workspace` stays green without infrastructure. Opt-in via:
`docker compose up -d postgres && \
DATABASE_URL=postgres://picloud:picloud@127.0.0.1:15432/picloud \
cargo test -p picloud --test api -- --include-ignored`
Verified live through Caddy on :8000: three logged invocations
land in the logs endpoint with the right structured `data` on
each `log::info`/`log::warn`, error-path executions are still
captured with status=error, dashboard list + SPA detail route
both reachable.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
|
||
|
|
4f044e7b81 |
feat: end-to-end script CRUD + Rhai execution
Brings the MVP feature set online: upload a Rhai script, get an HTTP
endpoint that runs it sandboxed in-process, list/update/delete it, and
have invalid sources rejected at upload time. Verified live through
Caddy with a full lifecycle (`create → list → get → execute → update
→ delete`) plus error paths (syntax error, duplicate name, deleted).
Layout — every concern lands behind the trait seam its layer owns, so
cluster-mode in v1.3+ is a swap of two impls, not a rewrite:
* shared::ScriptValidator — manager calls into validation without
a hard dep on executor-core; executor-core impls the trait on
`Engine`. Pinned in shared so neither crate has to know about
the other.
* executor-core::Engine — real Rhai engine: sandbox limits (max
operations / string size / map size / call depth), disabled
`print`, blocked `import` (DummyModuleResolver), `log::trace
/info/warn/error` registered as a static module with shared
log-capture buffer (no `log::debug` because `debug` is a Rhai
reserved keyword — `log::trace` covers the same need).
- `ctx` is pushed as a Scope constant exposing
execution_id, script_id, script_name, request_id,
invocation_type, request.{path,headers,body}.
- Response convention: a Map with `statusCode` is the
structured shape (`{statusCode, headers?, body}`); any
other return value is a 200 with the value as the body.
- Engine::execute is now synchronous (pure compute); the
async wrapper + wall-clock timeout live in
LocalExecutorClient, which spawns_blocking and applies a
300s hard ceiling regardless of per-script config.
- 10 unit tests cover validate, exec, structured response,
ctx exposure, log capture, op-budget enforcement, runtime
errors, blocked imports, JSON round-tripping.
* manager-core::repo — full sqlx CRUD over the `scripts` table,
with proper unique-violation handling for duplicate names.
Embedded migrations via `sqlx::migrate!` (one initial
`0001_init.sql` for pgcrypto + scripts + execution_logs).
* manager-core::api — `admin_router` mounts `/scripts` and
`/scripts/{id}`. Create + Update validate source through the
injected `ScriptValidator` before persistence. Returns proper
422/409/404 status codes via `ApiError::IntoResponse`.
* orchestrator-core::api — `data_plane_router` mounts
`/execute/{id}`: resolves the script through `ScriptResolver`,
constructs the `ExecRequest` from headers+body, awaits
`ExecutorClient::execute(..., timeout)`, translates the
`ExecResponse` to an axum `Response` with header passthrough.
Maps `ExecError` variants to 422/504/502/507.
* picloud all-in-one — opens the pool, runs migrations, builds
one engine, nests both routers under `/api/admin` and `/api`,
enables structured JSON tracing and graceful shutdown on
SIGTERM. Single `PostgresScriptRepository` Arc is shared by
the admin router (writes) and the resolver (reads).
Other changes:
* Workspace axum bump 0.7 → 0.8 for the `{id}` path syntax
matching the route definitions.
* Workspace clippy: allow `needless_pass_by_value` and
`boxed_local` to keep API ergonomics over pedantic noise.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
|
||
|
|
b8b544816d |
chore: initial scaffold — workspace, docs, blueprint
Sets up the PiCloud monorepo as a Cargo workspace organised around the
three-service architecture (manager / orchestrator / executor), each
backed by a *-core library crate so the same logic powers both the MVP
all-in-one `picloud` binary and the future split-process cluster mode.
* crates/shared, executor-core, orchestrator-core, manager-core
define the library surface and trait seams between the three
services (`ExecutorClient`, `ScriptResolver`, `ScriptRepository`).
* crates/picloud is the MVP entrypoint; serves /healthz on 8080
(override via PICLOUD_BIND).
* crates/picloud-{manager,orchestrator,executor} are skeleton
binaries that keep the crate boundaries honest until cluster
mode is built out in v1.3+.
* docs/git-workflow.md defines the trunk-based workflow:
short-lived branches, Conventional Commits, separate hotfix
flow with mandatory reproduction tests.
* CLAUDE.md captures the working rules for future Claude sessions.
Workspace passes `cargo fmt`, `cargo clippy -D warnings` (with
pedantic enabled), and `cargo test --workspace`. The all-in-one
binary responds on `/healthz` and `/`.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
|