A new "Members" tab is rendered between Domains and Settings for callers whose `my_role` on the app is `app_admin` (owners always; explicit member-app_admins; admins do not see it — they're only implicit editors and can't manage memberships). The tab lets the caller: - See every explicit member of the app with username, email, instance- role chip, app-role chip, and joined date. Inactive users render greyed-out so admins know the row exists. - Pick a `member`-instance user from a dropdown and grant viewer / editor / app_admin access. The dropdown is populated from `/admin/admins` filtered to active members not already on the app. - Promote / demote / remove existing members via the shared `ActionMenu` kebab. Removal goes through `ConfirmModal`. Member-with-app_admin callers see a disabled add form with an explanatory message — they have authority to manage memberships but can't browse the user directory (gated on `InstanceManageUsers`), which is a known phase-3.5 caveat to revisit in a follow-up. Also extends `RoleChip` with an `appRole` prop and palette for app roles, and adds an `appMembers` namespace to api.ts mirroring the `domains` shape. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
PiCloud
A lightweight, self-hosted, event-driven serverless compute platform. Upload a Rhai script, get an HTTP endpoint. Designed to run on a single modest server with no idle CPU cost, and to scale out to a small cluster when you need it.
Status: Phase 1 — MVP scaffolding in progress.
The authoritative design lives in
serverless_cloud_blueprint.md.
Why
Existing serverless platforms are either cloud-locked, heavyweight, or both. PiCloud aims for the opposite end of the spectrum: one binary, one database, one reverse proxy — running on hardware you already own.
Architecture (one paragraph)
PiCloud splits into three logical services — manager (control plane: scripts, schedules, dashboard), orchestrator (per-node event ingress and dispatch), and executor (per-node Rhai sandbox) — each backed by a *-core Rust library. In MVP they run in a single process; in cluster mode they run as three binaries with one manager and one orchestrator + executor per node. Caddy fronts everything; PostgreSQL is the single source of truth.
See CLAUDE.md for working notes and serverless_cloud_blueprint.md for the full design.
Quick Start
Coming as scaffolding lands. For now:
# Rust toolchain (pinned via rust-toolchain.toml)
cargo check --workspace
# Run the all-in-one MVP binary (once main.rs is wired up)
cargo run -p picloud
Repository Layout
crates/
shared/ cross-cutting types
executor-core/ Rhai engine + sandbox
orchestrator-core/ event ingress, dispatch
manager-core/ control plane
picloud/ MVP all-in-one binary
picloud-{manager,orchestrator,executor}/ cluster-mode binaries (skeleton)
dashboard/ SvelteKit
caddy/ Caddyfile
docker/ Dockerfiles
docs/
git-workflow.md Trunk-based workflow
Contributing
See docs/git-workflow.md for the branching and commit conventions. TL;DR: trunk-based, short-lived branches, Conventional Commits, no force-pushing main.
License
TBD.