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1a4d2cee97
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feat: inline query strings in CLI and HTTP server (#110)
* feat(MR-656): inline query strings in CLI and HTTP server
CLI:
- Add -e / --query-string <STRING> to omnigraph read and omnigraph change
- Exactly one of --query, --query-string, --alias is required (3-way XOR)
- Empty --query-string is rejected with a clear error
HTTP:
- New POST /query (read-only, clean field names: query/name/params/branch/snapshot)
- Mutations on /query are rejected with 400 -- use POST /change instead
- ChangeRequest fields polished: query (alias query_source), name (alias query_name)
- POST /read and POST /change remain byte-compatible for existing clients
Tests:
- cli.rs: -e happy-path on read/change, mutex error vs --query, empty -e rejected
- system_local.rs: inline -e read and -e change exercise the local flow
- system_remote.rs: inline -e read/change over HTTP plus direct /query 200/400
- server.rs: /query 200, /query 400 on mutation, /change legacy field alias
- openapi.rs: new /query path, QueryRequest schema, ChangeRequest field-name polish
Docs: cli.md (-e examples), cli-reference.md (read/change rows), server.md (/query)
Co-Authored-By: Ragnor Comerford <ragnor.comerford@gmail.com>
* feat(MR-656): rename read/change to query/mutate with deprecation signals
HTTP server:
- Add POST /mutate as canonical write endpoint (pairs with POST /query).
- Mark POST /read and POST /change as deprecated. Three-channel signal:
* OpenAPI: `deprecated: true` on the operation (every codegen flags
the generated SDK method).
* RFC 9745: response `Deprecation: true` header on every response.
* RFC 8288: response `Link: </successor>; rel="successor-version"`
pointing at /query and /mutate respectively.
- Share business logic across /mutate and /change via run_mutate(); the
/change wrapper is the only place that adds the deprecation headers.
- ChangeRequest field aliases (query_source/query_name) preserved.
- AliasCommand serde now accepts `query`/`mutate` alongside `read`/`change`.
CLI:
- Promote `omnigraph query` / `omnigraph mutate` to top-level canonical
subcommands (clap visible_alias keeps `omnigraph read` / `omnigraph
change` working forever).
- Promote `omnigraph lint` / `omnigraph check` to top-level (was nested
under `omnigraph query lint`, which is now a deprecated argv shim that
rewrites to the canonical form).
- Argv-level preprocessing prints a one-line deprecation warning to
stderr when any legacy spelling is used. Canonical names are silent.
Tests:
- Server: /mutate works, /change emits Deprecation+Link headers, /read
emits Deprecation+Link headers, /query carries no deprecation signal.
- OpenAPI: /read and /change flagged deprecated; /query and /mutate not.
- CLI: canonical `lint` matches deprecated `query lint` / `query check`
output; `read` / `change` print deprecation warnings.
Docs:
- cli.md: new canonical examples; "Deprecated names" migration table.
- cli-reference.md: top-level table updated; aliases.<name>.command
accepts both legacy and canonical spellings.
- server.md: endpoint inventory shows /query and /mutate as canonical
and /read and /change as deprecated; dedicated section explains the
three-channel deprecation signal.
- og-cheet-sheet.md: use new `omnigraph lint` / `omnigraph check`.
- openapi.json regenerated.
Migration is purely cosmetic — every deprecated form continues to work
indefinitely; only the spelling changes.
Co-Authored-By: Ragnor Comerford <ragnor.comerford@gmail.com>
* fix(MR-656): address Devin Review findings on /query and /change
Two issues raised by Devin Review on PR #110:
1. `POST /query` mutation-rejection error pointed at the deprecated
`/change` endpoint instead of the canonical `/mutate`. Fixed in
three places: the runtime error message in `server_query`, the
utoipa 400-response description, and the handler doc comment. The
`QueryRequest` schema docstrings in `api.rs` got the same update so
the openapi.json bodies match. Server and openapi tests updated.
2. `execute_change_remote` serialized `ChangeRequest` directly, which
emits the new canonical field names `query` / `name` on the wire.
`#[serde(alias = "query_source")]` only affects deserialization, so
a newer CLI talking to an older server would have its `/change`
POST body fail with "missing field: query_source". Fixed by
extracting a `legacy_change_request_body` helper that hand-rolls
the JSON with the legacy keys (`query_source` / `query_name`), the
same byte-stable contract `execute_read_remote` already uses
against `/read`. Added two unit tests on the helper to lock the
wire shape in.
Co-Authored-By: Ragnor Comerford <ragnor.comerford@gmail.com>
* docs(dev): RFC 001 — inline + stored queries, envelope, MCP
Tracked artifact consolidating the design across MR-656 (this branch),
MR-976 (Phase 1 envelope hardening parent, with MR-977/978/979/980
sub-issues), and MR-969 (stored queries + MCP).
Sections:
* Two paths, one engine — inline `/query` + `/mutate` (this PR) coexist
with stored `/queries/{name}` (MR-969). Same `run_query` / `run_mutate`
backend (the fold-in landed in the previous commit).
* Request envelope ("before") — Idempotency-Key, If-Match, X-Deadline,
X-Trace-Id, expect, dry_run, fields. Phase 1 ships the load-bearing
subset on `/mutate`.
* Response envelope ("after") — audit_id, snapshot_id, commit_id, stats,
warnings. Closes the provenance loop today's `ChangeOutput` leaves
open.
* `.gq` pragmas — `@description`, `@returns`, `@mcp`. Source-of-truth
for the stored-query agent contract; no separate YAML registry.
* Multi-graph MCP — per-graph `/graphs/{id}/mcp/tools` + `/mcp/invoke`.
Token binds to one graph by default; cross-graph agents loop.
* Cedar split — `read`/`change` for inline, `invoke_query` for stored.
Operators deny ad-hoc for agent groups while keeping curated tool
list open.
* Rejected alternatives — per-env override files, compiled bundles,
tool-name prefixing across graphs, body-field graph dispatch.
Index entry added under "Active Implementation Plans" so future agents
land on the RFC before touching queries / mutations / envelope code.
`scripts/check-agents-md.sh` clean (35 links, 34 docs).
* docs(server): clarify why run_query lacks AppState parameter
run_mutate takes state for workload admission; run_query doesn't because
reads aren't admission-gated today. Mark the asymmetry as intentional and
flag the two future events that would grow the signature: Phase 1's
`expect: { max_rows_scanned: N }` budget (MR-976) or per-actor admission
extending to stored-read invocations (MR-969). Prevents the natural
"make these symmetrical" follow-up.
* refactor(server): run_query / run_mutate take &ResolvedActor
Replace `Option<Extension<ResolvedActor>>` in the helpers with
`Option<&ResolvedActor>`. Saves MR-969's stored-query handler from
wrapping a bare actor in axum's `Extension(...)` before calling.
Handler signatures (`server_query`, `server_read`, `server_mutate`,
`server_change`) keep `Option<Extension<ResolvedActor>>` because that
is what axum injects, and unwrap at the call site with
`actor.as_ref().map(|Extension(actor)| actor)`.
Net: -13/+10 LOC, 89/0 server tests pass.
* docs(releases): v0.6.0 — describe inline + canonical-named queries (MR-656)
Extend the v0.6.0 release notes to cover the third piece of work landing
alongside the graph terminology rename and multi-graph server mode:
canonical-named `POST /query` and `POST /mutate` endpoints, the CLI's
new `-e/--query-string` flag, the top-level promotion of `lint` /
`check`, and the three-channel deprecation signal on `/read` and
`/change` (OpenAPI `deprecated: true` + RFC 9745 + RFC 8288).
Additions:
* Top blurb: "Two pieces" -> "Three pieces" with a bullet describing
the rename + inline flow.
* Breaking Changes: new "Query / mutation rename" subsection covering
the `ChangeRequest` field rename (with the back-compat serde aliases
and the CLI's `legacy_change_request_body` byte-stable wire helper)
and the `omnigraph query lint` -> `omnigraph lint` move.
* New: 5 bullets — the two endpoints, the CLI subcommands, the `-e`
flag, the deprecation signal channels, the widened `aliases.<name>.command`
vocabulary.
* User Impact: one bullet making explicit that the rename is cosmetic
on the client side and migration is voluntary.
* Documentation: pointers to the updated `server.md` / `cli.md` /
`cli-reference.md` and the new `docs/dev/rfc-001-queries-envelope-mcp.md`.
+15/-1 lines. `./scripts/check-agents-md.sh` clean.
* refactor(cli): demote `check` from visible_alias to deprecation shim
`omnigraph check` was a clap `visible_alias` on `lint`, advertised in
`--help` as an equivalent canonical name. Per MR-981 §6 (long-form
flags as canonical, short forms as visible aliases), visible aliases
on subcommand names hurt agent CX: agents emit either spelling
depending on training-data drift, and there's no length signal
pointing at the canonical name.
Changes:
* Remove `#[command(visible_alias = "check")]` from the `Lint` variant.
`omnigraph --help` now shows only `lint`.
* Add bare `check` to `rewrite_deprecated_argv` so `omnigraph check
<args>` still works — it rewrites to `omnigraph lint <args>` and
emits a one-line stderr deprecation warning, matching the existing
pattern for `read` / `change` / `query lint` / `query check`.
* Fix the nested `query check` shim to substitute `check` -> `lint` in
the rewritten argv (previously it relied on `check` being a
visible_alias to reach the `Lint` variant).
* New test `deprecated_check_top_level_rewrites_to_lint` covers: bare
`check` produces identical stdout to `lint`, emits the deprecation
warning, and `check` does NOT appear as an alias in `omnigraph
--help`.
* Release notes updated to reflect the deprecation-shim treatment and
cross-reference MR-981 §6 reasoning.
Cargo / Go users typing `check` still work indefinitely; one stderr
nudge per invocation teaches the canonical name. Agents see only
`lint` in `--help --json` so they emit one canonical form.
67/0 omnigraph-cli tests pass; 39 workspace test suites green.
---------
Co-authored-by: Devin AI <158243242+devin-ai-integration[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Ragnor Comerford <ragnor.comerford@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Ragnor Comerford <hello@ragnor.co>
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e0f13b32c5
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(feat): multi-graph server mode (#119)
* mr-668: add GraphId newtype + Cloud-mode forward identity stubs (PR 1/10)
PR 1 of the MR-668 multi-graph server work. Pure types, no runtime
behavior changes yet.
Ships the validated identity vocabulary that the rest of the implementation
will consume:
- `GraphId(String)` — `^[a-zA-Z0-9-]{1,64}$`, leading underscore rejected
(engine reserves every `_*` filename), reserved route names rejected
(`policies`, `healthz`, `openapi`, `openapi.json`, `graphs`). Validation
lives in `try_from` only; serde `Deserialize` re-runs it so JSON payloads
cannot bypass.
- `TenantId(String)` — same regex shape as GraphId. `None` in Cluster
mode; reserved for Cloud mode (RFC 0003) where it carries the OAuth
`org_id` claim.
- `GraphKey { tenant_id: Option<TenantId>, graph_id }` — the registry
HashMap key. `cluster()` constructor for the Cluster-mode default.
- `Scope` enum with `Full` variant — Cluster mode default; RFC 0004 will
extend with OAuth scopes (`graph:read`/`write`/`admin`/`*`).
- `AuthSource` enum with `Static` variant — Cluster mode default; RFC
0001 step 1 will add `Oidc`.
- `ResolvedActor { actor_id, tenant_id, scopes, source }` — replaces the
upcoming refactor of `AuthenticatedActor(Arc<str>)` in PR 4a.
Per MR-668 design decision 13: ship the Cloud-mode forward type shapes
now (no `TokenVerifier` trait yet — that's RFC 0001 step 1) so handler
signatures stay stable across the Cluster → Cloud trajectory. `Scope`
and `AuthSource` use `#[non_exhaustive]` so future variants don't break
caller matches.
Tests: 26 new (15 graph_id + 11 identity), all passing. No regression
in the existing 36 server library tests.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* mr-668: Omnigraph::init error-path cleanup + three failpoints (PR 2a/10)
PR 2a of the MR-668 multi-graph server work. Bug fix: a partially-failed
`Omnigraph::init` previously left orphan schema files at the graph URI,
making the URI unusable for a retry (the next `init` would refuse because
`_schema.pg` already exists).
Changes:
1. `init_with_storage` now wraps the I/O phase. On any error from
`init_storage_phase`, calls `best_effort_cleanup_init_artifacts` to
remove the three schema files before returning the original error:
- `_schema.pg`
- `_schema.ir.json`
- `__schema_state.json`
Cleanup is best-effort: a failure to delete is logged via
`tracing::warn` but does NOT mask the init error.
2. Three failpoints added at the init phase boundaries:
- `init.after_schema_pg_written`
- `init.after_schema_contract_written`
- `init.after_coordinator_init`
3. Four new failpoint tests in `tests/failpoints.rs` pin the cleanup
behavior at each boundary plus the "original error wins over cleanup
error" contract. All 23 failpoint tests pass.
Coverage gap (documented in code comments):
Lance per-type datasets and `__manifest/` directory created by
`GraphCoordinator::init` are NOT cleaned up after a coordinator-init-phase
failure. Recursive directory deletion requires `StorageAdapter::delete_prefix`,
which was deferred along with `DELETE /graphs/{id}` (originally PR 2b). When
that primitive lands, the third failpoint test can be tightened to assert
the graph root is fully empty.
Tests: 4 new (init_failpoint_*), all 23 failpoint tests green. No
regression in the 105 engine library tests or 64 end_to_end tests.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* mr-668: add GraphHandle + GraphRegistry data structure (PR 3/10)
PR 3 of the MR-668 multi-graph server work. Pure data structure — no
routing changes yet (that's PR 4a).
New file: `crates/omnigraph-server/src/registry.rs`
- `GraphHandle { key: GraphKey, uri: String, engine: Arc<Omnigraph>,
policy: Option<Arc<PolicyEngine>> }` — the per-graph state that the
routing middleware (PR 4a) will inject as a request extension.
- `RegistrySnapshot { graphs: HashMap<GraphKey, Arc<GraphHandle>> }` —
immutable snapshot; replaced atomically via `ArcSwap`.
- `GraphRegistry { snapshot: ArcSwap<_>, mutate: Mutex<()> }` — lock-free
reads, mutex-serialized mutations.
- `RegistryLookup { Ready(Arc<GraphHandle>) | Gone }` — two-valued, no
`Tombstoned` variant since DELETE is deferred in v0.7.0 scope.
- `InsertError { DuplicateKey | DuplicateUri }` — both rejection cases
for create-graph (maps to HTTP 409 in PR 7).
- Methods: `new`, `from_handles` (bulk startup-time init), `get`, `list`,
`len`, `insert`.
Race semantics pinned by three multi-thread tests:
- `concurrent_insert_same_key_exactly_one_succeeds` — N=8 spawned
inserts with the same key; exactly 1 returns Ok, 7 return DuplicateKey.
- `concurrent_insert_distinct_keys_all_succeed` — N=8 spawned inserts
with distinct keys; all succeed.
- `concurrent_reads_during_inserts_see_consistent_snapshots` — reader
loop concurrent with sequential writes; every listed handle's key
resolves via `get()` (no torn state).
Why no tombstones field: `DELETE /graphs/{id}` is deferred to bound
the scope of v0.7.0. Without a delete endpoint, there's no use for
tombstones — every key in the registry is `Ready`, and every key
not in the registry is `Gone`. When DELETE lands later, the
`Tombstoned` variant + `tombstones: HashSet<GraphKey>` slot in
additively without breaking caller signatures (the `Gone` variant
remains the "not currently active" case).
Why `tokio::sync::Mutex`: insert is async because PR 7's flow holds
this mutex across the atomic YAML rewrite step (file I/O). std::Mutex
would footgun across .await.
Dependency additions: `arc-swap = { workspace = true }`,
`thiserror = { workspace = true }` (used by InsertError).
Tests: 12 new (12 passing). 74 server lib tests total green
(62 from PR 1 + 12 new). Clippy clean on server crate.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* mr-668: router restructure + handler refactor for multi-graph (PR 4a/10)
PR 4a of the MR-668 multi-graph server work. The heaviest single PR —
rewires every handler to extract `Arc<GraphHandle>` from a routing
middleware, replaces `AuthenticatedActor(Arc<str>)` with `ResolvedActor`
everywhere, and adds the `ServerMode` discriminator.
Behavior changes:
- **Single mode** (legacy `omnigraph-server <URI>`): flat routes
(`/snapshot`, `/read`, `/branches`, …) continue to work exactly as
v0.6.0. Internally, the registry holds a single handle keyed by the
sentinel `SINGLE_GRAPH_KEY_ID = "default"`; routing middleware injects
that handle on every request. No HTTP-visible change.
- **Multi mode** (new): routes nest under `/graphs/{graph_id}/...`.
Routing middleware extracts the graph id from the path, looks it up
in the registry, and injects the handle. 404 if not found.
(Multi-mode startup itself lands in PR 5; this PR provides the
router-side wiring.)
AppState refactor:
- `engine: Arc<Omnigraph>` and `policy_engine: Option<Arc<PolicyEngine>>`
fields removed — both now live inside `GraphHandle` in the registry.
- `mode: ServerMode { Single { uri } | Multi { config_path } }` added.
- `registry: Arc<GraphRegistry>` added.
- `server_policy: Option<Arc<PolicyEngine>>` added (placeholder for
management endpoints in PR 6b; unused today).
- Existing constructors (`new`, `new_with_bearer_token{s,_and_policy}`,
`new_with_workload`, `open*`) build a single-mode AppState
internally and remain source-compatible. Tests that constructed
AppState via these constructors continue to work.
- `with_policy_engine` post-construction setter — rebuilds the
single-mode handle with the policy attached. Engine-layer
enforcement is NOT reinstalled (matches the old single-field
semantics; `open_with_bearer_tokens_and_policy` is the path that
installs both layers).
- `new_multi` constructor added for PR 5's startup loop.
- `uri()` now returns `Option<&str>` (Some in single, None in multi).
Routing middleware:
- `resolve_graph_handle` injects `Arc<GraphHandle>` as a request
extension. Mode-aware: single returns the only handle; multi parses
`/graphs/{graph_id}/...` from the URI. Returns 404 in multi mode
when the graph id is unregistered. Records `graph_id` on the
current tracing span.
- `require_bearer_auth` updated to insert `ResolvedActor` (was
`AuthenticatedActor`).
Handler refactor — every protected handler:
- Gains `Extension(handle): Extension<Arc<GraphHandle>>` param.
- Replaces `state.engine` → `handle.engine`.
- Replaces `state.policy_engine()` → `handle.policy.as_deref()`.
- Replaces `state.uri()` → `handle.uri.as_str()` (or `.clone()`
where String is needed).
- Replaces `Arc::clone(&state.engine)` → `Arc::clone(&handle.engine)`
(the spawn-and-clone pattern in `server_export` — proof that a
long-running export survives the registry being mutated later).
authorize_request signature:
- Was: `(state: &AppState, actor: Option<&AuthenticatedActor>, request: PolicyRequest)`.
- Now: `(actor: Option<&ResolvedActor>, policy: Option<&PolicyEngine>, request: PolicyRequest)`.
- Per-graph callers pass `handle.policy.as_deref()`. The (future PR 6b)
management endpoints will pass `state.server_policy.as_deref()`.
MR-731 invariant preserved:
- The single chokepoint `request.actor_id = actor.actor_id.as_ref().to_string()`
inside `authorize_request` still overwrites any client-supplied
actor identity. Regression test
`actor_id_resolves_from_bearer_token_ignoring_client_supplied_headers`
at `tests/server.rs:1114-1216` passes unchanged.
Tests: 0 new (the registry race tests in PR 3 already cover the
data structure; this PR exercises them indirectly via the existing
test suite). 74 lib + 57 server integration + 60 openapi = 191 tests
green. Clippy clean.
LOC: +397 insertions, -153 deletions in `crates/omnigraph-server/src/lib.rs`.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* mr-668: OpenAPI multi-mode cluster filter (PR 4b/10)
PR 4b of the MR-668 multi-graph server work. In multi mode, the served
`/openapi.json` reports cluster routes (`/graphs/{graph_id}/...`) instead
of the legacy flat protected paths — matching what `build_app` actually
mounts (PR 4a's `Router::nest`). Single mode is unchanged.
Implementation:
- New `server_openapi` branch: when `state.mode()` is `Multi`, call
`nest_paths_under_cluster_prefix(&mut doc)` after `ApiDoc::openapi()`.
- The rewrite consumes `doc.paths.paths`, then for every path-item:
- If the path is in `ALWAYS_FLAT_PATHS` (`/healthz` for now), keep
it flat.
- Otherwise, prefix every operation_id with `cluster_` and reinsert
the item at `/graphs/{graph_id}<original_path>`.
- Single mode hits no extra work — the path map is untouched.
- The static `ApiDoc::openapi()` still emits the flat surface, so
in-process callers (the existing `openapi_json()` helper in tests)
see the unmodified spec.
Why cluster_ prefix on operation IDs: OpenAPI specs require unique
operation_ids across the document. With both flat (single-mode) and
cluster (multi-mode) surfaces ever co-existing in a generated SDK,
the prefix prevents collision. The current served doc only carries
one surface, so the prefix is forward-compat with potential future
dual-surface generation.
Tests: 6 new in `tests/openapi.rs`, all via the `/openapi.json` route
(not the static `ApiDoc::openapi()` helper):
- `multi_mode_openapi_lists_cluster_paths` — every protected path
appears as a cluster variant.
- `multi_mode_openapi_drops_flat_protected_paths` — flat protected
paths are absent.
- `multi_mode_openapi_keeps_healthz_flat` — `/healthz` survives.
- `multi_mode_openapi_prefixes_operation_ids_with_cluster` — every
cluster operation_id starts with `cluster_`.
- `multi_mode_operation_ids_are_unique` — no operation_id collisions.
- `single_mode_openapi_unchanged_by_cluster_filter` — single mode
still emits the legacy flat surface (regression).
New test helper `app_for_multi_mode(graph_ids)` exercises the new
`AppState::new_multi` constructor from PR 4a — first user of multi-mode
construction outside of unit tests.
Result: 66 openapi tests + 57 server integration tests + 74 lib tests
= 197 green. No regression in the existing OpenAPI drift check
(`openapi_spec_is_up_to_date` still validates the static flat surface
matches the committed openapi.json).
LOC: +67 in lib.rs (rewrite logic), +219 in tests/openapi.rs (test
suite + helper).
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* mr-668: multi-graph startup + mode inference (PR 5/10)
PR 5 of the MR-668 multi-graph server work. This is the first PR that
makes multi mode actually usable end-to-end: operators invoking
`omnigraph-server --config omnigraph.yaml` with a non-empty `graphs:`
map and no single-mode selector now get a running multi-graph server.
Mode inference (MR-668 decision 2, four-rule matrix in
`load_server_settings`):
1. CLI `<URI>` positional → Single
2. CLI `--target <name>` → Single (URI from graphs.<name>)
3. `server.graph` in config → Single (URI from graphs.<name>)
4. `--config` + non-empty `graphs:` + no single-mode selector
→ Multi (all entries in `graphs:`)
5. otherwise → error with migration hint
Rule 5's error message names every escape hatch so operators can fix
their invocation without grepping docs.
Config schema extensions:
- `TargetConfig.policy: PolicySettings` (per-graph Cedar policy file).
`#[serde(default)]` so existing single-graph YAMLs keep parsing.
- `ServerDefaults.policy: PolicySettings` (server-level Cedar policy
for management endpoints — loaded in PR 5, wired into `GET /graphs`
in PR 6b).
- `OmnigraphConfig::resolve_target_policy_file(name)` and
`resolve_server_policy_file()` helpers — both resolve relative to
the config file's `base_dir`.
Public types added to `omnigraph-server`:
- `ServerConfigMode { Single { uri, policy_file } | Multi { graphs,
config_path, server_policy_file } }`.
- `GraphStartupConfig { graph_id, uri, policy_file }` — one entry
per graph in multi mode.
`ServerConfig` shape change:
- WAS: `{ uri: String, bind, policy_file, allow_unauthenticated }`.
- NOW: `{ mode: ServerConfigMode, bind, allow_unauthenticated }`.
- Breaking for any code that constructs `ServerConfig` directly.
`main.rs` is unaffected (uses `load_server_settings`).
`serve()` now forks on `ServerConfig.mode`:
- Single: existing flow via `AppState::open_with_bearer_tokens_and_policy`.
- Multi: parallel open via `futures::stream::iter(graphs)
.map(open_single_graph).buffer_unordered(4).collect()`. Bound 4 is
a rule-of-thumb for I/O-bound work — at N≤10 this trades startup
latency for a small amount of concurrent S3/Lance open pressure.
Fail-fast: first open error aborts startup; in-flight opens drop
their engine via Arc (Lance datasets close cleanly).
New helper `open_single_graph(GraphStartupConfig)`:
- Validates `GraphId` per the regex in PR 1.
- `Omnigraph::open(uri).await` with descriptive error context.
- Loads per-graph policy file and re-applies it via
`Omnigraph::with_policy` (engine-layer enforcement, MR-722).
- Returns `Arc<GraphHandle>` ready for the registry.
Routing middleware bug fix:
- `Router::nest("/graphs/{graph_id}", inner)` rewrites
`request.uri().path()` to the inner suffix (e.g. `/snapshot`).
The previous middleware tried to parse `{graph_id}` from
`request.uri().path()` and got 400 instead of 200. Fixed by reading
from `axum::extract::OriginalUri` request extension, which preserves
the pre-rewrite URI.
- Caught by the two new tests
`cluster_routes_dispatch_per_graph_handle` and
`cluster_route_for_unknown_graph_returns_404`.
Tests (14 new, all passing):
- Four-rule matrix: one test per branch + the joint case
`mode_inference_cli_uri_overrides_graphs_map` + the empty-graphs-map
error case.
- Per-graph + server-level policy file path resolution.
- Reserved `GraphId` rejection at startup.
- End-to-end multi-graph routing: two graphs side by side, each
cluster route hits the right engine.
- Unknown graph id under cluster prefix → 404.
- Flat routes 404 in multi mode.
Inline `ServerConfig` test (`serve_refuses_to_start_in_state_1_without_unauthenticated`)
and three `server_settings_*` tests updated to the new `mode` shape.
Result: 211 server tests green (74 lib + 71 integration + 66 openapi),
MR-731 regression test still pinned and passing.
LOC: +45 config.rs, +281 lib.rs (net), +395 tests/server.rs.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* mr-668: Cedar resource-model refactor (PR 6a/10)
PR 6a of the MR-668 multi-graph server work. Policy-crate-only refactor —
no HTTP handler changes, no operator-supplied policy.yaml changes. Sets
up the chassis that PR 6b's `GET /graphs` consumes.
Two new `PolicyAction` variants:
- `GraphCreate` — gates `POST /graphs` (deferred behavioral PR).
- `GraphList` — gates `GET /graphs` (lands in PR 6b).
Note: `GraphDelete` is intentionally NOT added in this PR. `DELETE
/graphs/{id}` is deferred from MR-668's v0.7.0 scope to bound complexity
(no `delete_prefix`, no tombstone, no `RegistryLookup::Tombstoned`).
Adding the Cedar action without a consumer would be the same kind of
"dead vocabulary" trap the `Admin` variant already documents.
New `PolicyResourceKind { Graph, Server }` enum, plus a
`PolicyAction::resource_kind()` method that classifies every action.
Per-graph actions (Read, Change, BranchCreate, …) bind to
`Omnigraph::Graph::"<graph_label>"`; server-scoped actions
(GraphCreate, GraphList) bind to the singleton
`Omnigraph::Server::"root"`. `Admin` stays classified as per-graph for
now — MR-724 will pick the final shape when the first consumer surface
ships.
Cedar schema string additions:
- `entity Server;`
- `action "graph_create" appliesTo { principal: Actor, resource: Server, ... }`
- `action "graph_list" appliesTo { principal: Actor, resource: Server, ... }`
Compiler updates:
- `compile_policy_source` picks the resource literal based on the
action's `resource_kind`. Existing graph-only policies generate
the same Cedar source as before — pinned by
`per_graph_rules_continue_to_work_alongside_server_rules`.
- `compile_entities` includes the `Server::"root"` entity only when
a rule references a server-scoped action. Keeps test assertions
for graph-only policies tight.
- `PolicyEngine::authorize` builds the right resource UID at
request time based on `request.action.resource_kind()`.
Validation rules added to `PolicyConfig::validate`:
- A rule may not mix server-scoped and per-graph actions (different
resource kinds need different `permit` clauses).
- Server-scoped actions cannot have `branch_scope` or
`target_branch_scope` — there's no branch context at the server
level.
Operator impact: zero. The Cedar schema `Omnigraph::Server` entity is
internally referenced by `compile_policy_source`; operator policy.yaml
files only declare actions in `rules[].allow.actions` and never
reference the resource entity directly. Decision 6's "internal rename
only; operator policies unaffected" contract is preserved and pinned
by `per_graph_rules_continue_to_work_alongside_server_rules`.
Tests: 5 new (11 policy tests total, up from 6):
- `graph_list_action_authorizes_against_server_resource`
- `graph_create_action_authorizes_against_server_resource`
- `server_scoped_rule_cannot_use_branch_scope`
- `rule_mixing_server_and_per_graph_actions_is_rejected`
- `per_graph_rules_continue_to_work_alongside_server_rules`
No regression: 145 server tests (74 lib + 71 integration) still green.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* mr-668: GET /graphs endpoint + per-graph policy wire-up (PR 6b/10)
PR 6b of the MR-668 multi-graph server work. First management endpoint —
`GET /graphs` lists every graph registered with the server, gated by the
server-level Cedar policy from PR 6a.
New API shapes (in `omnigraph-server::api`):
- `GraphInfo { graph_id, uri }` — one entry per registered graph.
- `GraphListResponse { graphs: Vec<GraphInfo> }` — sorted alphabetically
by `graph_id` for deterministic output.
Handler `server_graphs_list`:
- Mounted at `GET /graphs` in both modes.
- Single mode: returns 405 (resource exists in the API surface, just
not operational without a `graphs:` map). 405 chosen over 404 so
clients see "resource exists, wrong context" rather than "no such
resource".
- Multi mode: requires bearer auth (when configured); Cedar-gated by
`PolicyAction::GraphList` against `Omnigraph::Server::"root"`
(PR 6a's chassis). Returns the sorted registry list.
Cedar gate composition:
- When no `server.policy.file` is configured, the MR-723 default-deny
falls through: `GraphList` is not `Read`, so an authenticated actor
without a server policy gets 403. This is the right default — don't
expose the registry until the operator explicitly authorizes it.
- When a server policy is configured, Cedar evaluates the rule. The
test `get_graphs_with_server_policy_authorizes_per_cedar` pins the
admin-allow / viewer-deny split.
Routing:
- New `management` sub-router holding `/graphs` (auth-required, no
`resolve_graph_handle` middleware — operates on the registry, not
a single graph).
- Single mode merges flat protected routes + management.
- Multi mode merges nested `/graphs/{graph_id}/...` + management.
OpenAPI:
- `server_graphs_list` registered in `ApiDoc::paths(...)`.
- `EXPECTED_PATHS` in `tests/openapi.rs` gains `/graphs`.
- `openapi.json` regenerated (auto-tracked by
`openapi_spec_is_up_to_date` in CI).
Tests: 4 new in `tests/server.rs::multi_graph_startup`:
- `get_graphs_lists_registered_graphs_in_multi_mode`
- `get_graphs_returns_405_in_single_mode`
- `get_graphs_requires_bearer_auth_when_configured`
- `get_graphs_with_server_policy_authorizes_per_cedar`
What's NOT in this PR (deferred):
- Per-graph policy enforcement is wired through `handle.policy`
(PR 4a already did this); PR 6b doesn't add new per-graph
behavior beyond making sure the server policy lookup composes
cleanly alongside it.
- `POST /graphs` (PR 7) and `DELETE /graphs/{id}` (out of scope
for v0.7.0).
- CLI `omnigraph graphs list` (PR 8 will add).
Result: 215 server tests green (74 lib + 66 openapi + 75 integration),
11 policy tests green. MR-731 spoof regression preserved across all
this work.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* mr-668: POST /graphs runtime create endpoint (PR 7/10)
PR 7 of the MR-668 multi-graph server work. Operators can now add a
graph to a running multi-graph server without restarting:
curl -X POST http://server/graphs \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '{
"graph_id": "beta",
"uri": "/data/beta.omni",
"schema": { "source": "node Person { name: String @key }\n" },
"policy": { "file": "./policies/beta.yaml" }
}'
DELETE remains deferred (out of v0.7.0 scope per the trimmed plan —
no `delete_prefix`, no tombstones).
Body shape (decision 7):
- Nested `schema: { source: "..." }` (mirrors the `policy: { file }`
pattern; leaves room for future fields without breakage).
- Optional nested `policy: { file: "..." }` for per-graph Cedar.
- 32 MiB body limit (reuses `INGEST_REQUEST_BODY_LIMIT_BYTES`).
- Asymmetric with `SchemaApplyRequest` which keeps flat
`schema_source: String` — documented in api.rs.
Atomic YAML rewrite + drift detection:
- New `config::rewrite_atomic(path, new_config, expected_hash)`:
flock → re-read + hash check → serialize → write `.tmp` → fsync
→ rename → fsync parent dir. Returns the new hash for the caller
to update its in-memory baseline.
- New `config::hash_config_file(path)` — SHA-256 of the on-disk
bytes, used at startup and after each rewrite.
- New `RewriteAtomicError { Drift | Io | Serialize }` enum.
- `AppState.config_hash: Option<Arc<Mutex<[u8;32]>>>` carries the
in-memory baseline. Updated after every successful rewrite so
subsequent POSTs don't false-trigger drift.
- The mutex is `std::sync::Mutex` (brief critical section, no .await
inside). The flock itself serializes file access process-wide
AND across multiple server instances (defense in depth).
- All sync I/O runs inside `tokio::task::spawn_blocking` — flock
is sync.
Handler ordering (the load-bearing sequence):
1. Mode check: 405 in single mode.
2. Cedar authorize: `GraphCreate` against `Omnigraph::Server::"root"`.
3. Validate body: `GraphId::try_from` (regex + reserved-name), empty
schema/uri checks, per-graph policy file parse.
4. Pre-check registry for duplicate graph_id / duplicate uri (409).
5. `Omnigraph::init` the new engine.
6. Atomic YAML rewrite (drift detection inside).
7. Publish in registry (atomic re-check via `GraphRegistry::insert`).
Failure modes (documented in handler rustdoc):
- Init fails → orphan storage at `req.uri` (PR 2a cleans up schema
files; Lance datasets remain orphans until `delete_prefix` lands).
- YAML rewrite fails (drift, IO) → orphan storage; YAML unchanged.
- Registry insert fails (race) → YAML has entry but registry doesn't;
next restart opens it cleanly.
New dependency: `fs2 = "0.4"` (workspace + omnigraph-server). POSIX-only
file locking. Linux/macOS deployment supported; Windows out of scope.
Tests (10 new in `tests/server.rs::multi_graph_startup`):
- `post_graphs_creates_a_new_graph_end_to_end` — happy path, includes
YAML inspection to confirm the rewrite landed.
- `post_graphs_baseline_hash_updates_between_rewrites` — two POSTs in
a row both succeed (drift baseline updates correctly).
- `post_graphs_duplicate_graph_id_returns_409`
- `post_graphs_duplicate_uri_returns_409`
- `post_graphs_invalid_graph_id_returns_400` (reserved name)
- `post_graphs_empty_schema_source_returns_400`
- `post_graphs_returns_405_in_single_mode`
- `post_graphs_yaml_drift_detection_returns_503` — operator hand-edits
omnigraph.yaml; server refuses to clobber.
- `hash_config_file_is_deterministic_and_detects_changes`
- `rewrite_atomic_refuses_when_hash_drifts`
OpenAPI: `server_graphs_create` registered in `ApiDoc::paths(...)`;
openapi.json regenerated.
Result: 225 server tests green (74 lib + 66 openapi + 85 integration),
all MR-731 regressions still pinned.
LOC: ~580 lib.rs net (handler + helpers), ~120 config.rs (rewrite
machinery), +71 api.rs (request/response shapes), +332 tests/server.rs.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* mr-668: CLI omnigraph graphs list/create (PR 8/10)
PR 8 of the MR-668 multi-graph server work. CLI parity for the
v0.7.0 management surface: operators can now manage graphs from
the command line against a running multi-graph server.
omnigraph graphs list --target dev --json
omnigraph graphs create \
--target dev \
--graph-id beta \
--graph-uri /data/beta.omni \
--schema schema.pg
DELETE is intentionally absent — server-side DELETE was deferred from
v0.7.0 scope, and shipping a client subcommand for a server endpoint
that doesn't exist would be dead vocabulary. The help output, the
subcommand enum, and the test that pins it (`graphs_subcommand_help_
lists_list_and_create`) all agree.
CLI architecture (modeled on `BranchCommand`):
- New `Command::Graphs { command: GraphsCommand }` top-level variant.
- `GraphsCommand { List, Create }` enum.
- List: GET `<base>/graphs`. Stdout is `<graph_id>\t<uri>` per line,
or JSON via `--json`.
- Create: reads `--schema <path>` from local disk, inlines as
`schema: { source: <file> }` in the POST body (nested per
MR-668 decision 7). Optional `--policy-file <path>` becomes
`policy: { file: <path> }`. Returns 201 → "created graph X at Y"
or JSON via `--json`.
- Both subcommands reject local URI targets with a clear
"remote multi-graph server URL" error.
New API type imports in the CLI: `GraphCreateRequest`,
`GraphCreateResponse`, `GraphListResponse`, `GraphSchemaSpec`,
`GraphPolicySpec` — all from `omnigraph-server::api`.
Tests:
- cli.rs (4 new, non-network):
* `graphs_subcommand_help_lists_list_and_create` — pins the
deferral of `delete` (catches scope creep).
* `graphs_list_against_local_uri_errors_with_remote_only_message`
* `graphs_create_against_local_uri_errors_with_remote_only_message`
* `graphs_create_with_missing_schema_file_errors` — pins the
IO context in the schema-read error path.
- system_remote.rs (1 new, `#[ignore]` like its peers):
* `graphs_list_and_create_against_multi_graph_server` — spawns a
multi-mode server, calls `graphs list` (sees `alpha`),
`graphs create` (adds `beta`), `graphs list` again (sees both),
and confirms the new graph is reachable via its cluster route.
CLI suite: 62 tests green (58 existing + 4 new). The new ignored
end-to-end test runs locally with `cargo test --ignored`.
LOC: +159 main.rs (enum + handlers), +88 cli.rs (unit tests),
+131 system_remote.rs (integration test).
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* mr-668: composite e2e tests, race fix, v0.7.0 release (PR 9/10)
PR 9 — the final integration PR for MR-668 multi-graph server work.
Closes the v0.7.0 release.
Composite lifecycle tests (closes gaps flagged in PR 7's coverage
review):
- `multi_graph_lifecycle_post_query_restart_persistence` — POST a
graph, query it via cluster route, reload the config from disk
and confirm `load_server_settings` sees the rewritten YAML.
Validates the "restart resolves orphans" failure-mode story.
- `per_graph_policy_enforced_on_post_created_graph` — POST a graph
with a per-graph policy attached, then send authenticated read
and change requests. Per-graph Cedar enforcement fires correctly
on a POST-created graph (engine-layer policy reinstalled via
`Omnigraph::with_policy` inside the create flow).
- `concurrent_post_graphs_distinct_ids_all_succeed` — 4 concurrent
POSTs with distinct graph_ids all return 201. Caught a real
race in `rewrite_atomic` (see below).
Race fix — `rewrite_atomic_with_modify`:
The first composite test surfaced a real bug. The old
`rewrite_atomic(path, new_config, expected_hash)` captured the
baseline hash OUTSIDE the flock, then called rewrite_atomic which
re-acquired it inside. Under concurrent writers:
- POST A: captures baseline H0, calls rewrite_atomic.
- POST B: captures baseline H0 too (before A's update lands).
- A: acquires flock, on-disk == H0, writes H1, releases.
- A: updates baseline H0 → H1.
- B: tries to acquire flock — waits.
- B: acquires flock. On-disk is now H1. Expected (captured
before A finished) is H0. MISMATCH → spurious Drift error.
Worse: even if the timing happens to align, B's `updated` config
was constructed from BYTES read before the flock. B writes a config
that doesn't include A's new graph — silent data loss.
The fix: new `config::rewrite_atomic_with_modify(path, baseline,
modify)` takes a closure. Inside the flock + baseline mutex:
1. Read on-disk bytes, hash, compare to baseline.
2. Parse on-disk YAML.
3. Call `modify(parsed)` to produce the new config — receives
fresh on-disk state, returns the modification.
4. Serialize + write + fsync + rename + update baseline.
Everything is read-modify-write under the same critical section.
Concurrent writers serialize cleanly. Test confirmed this is no
longer a race.
The old `rewrite_atomic(path, new_config, expected_hash)` API stays
for tests that don't need the read-modify-write shape; the POST
handler switches to the new shape.
Version bump v0.6.0 → v0.7.0:
- All 5 `crates/*/Cargo.toml` (compiler, engine, policy, cli, server)
plus their inter-crate `path` dep version constraints.
- `Cargo.lock` regenerated by `cargo build --workspace`.
- `AGENTS.md` "Version surveyed" line, capability matrix HTTP-server
row updated to mention multi-graph + cluster routes + atomic YAML
rewrite.
- `openapi.json` regenerated.
Docs:
- `docs/releases/v0.7.0.md` (new) — release notes with breaking
changes, new features, deferred items (DELETE, `delete_prefix`,
actor forwarding), and the single→multi migration recipe.
- `docs/user/server.md` — substantial section additions for the
two modes, mode inference, cluster endpoint table, management
endpoints, `omnigraph.yaml` ownership contract, `POST /graphs`
body shape + status codes.
- `docs/user/cli.md` — `omnigraph graphs list/create` section,
deferred-DELETE note.
- `docs/user/policy.md` — server-scoped Cedar actions
(`graph_create`, `graph_list`), per-graph vs server-level policy
composition, example server-level policy.
Workspace test pass: 573 tests green across all crates. Zero
failures. MR-731 spoof regression still pinned and passing across
the entire 10-PR series.
This commit closes MR-668. v0.7.0 is ready for tagging.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* mr-668: remove POST /graphs and CLI graphs create (defer runtime graph mgmt)
The POST /graphs runtime-create endpoint shipped in PR 7/10 has three
unresolved high-severity bugs:
- flock-on-renamed-inode race: the YAML flock is taken on
omnigraph.yaml itself, then a temp file is renamed over it.
Cross-process writers end up locking different inodes — both
believing they hold exclusive access.
- duplicate-check outside the file lock: precheck runs against
the in-memory registry only; the locked closure does
config.graphs.insert(...) unconditionally. Concurrent same-id
POSTs can persist the loser in YAML while the in-memory registry
keeps the winner — they disagree after restart.
- best_effort_cleanup_init_artifacts deletes _schema.pg /
_schema.ir.json / __schema_state.json on any init failure. An
accidental re-init against an existing graph's URI destroys its
schema; subsequent open() fails at read_text(_schema.pg).
The correct fix is a Lance-style cluster catalog (reserve → init →
publish with recovery sidecars), parallel to the engine's existing
__manifest discipline. That work is out of scope for v0.7.0.
For now, disable runtime add/remove from the network and CLI surface.
Operators add graphs by editing omnigraph.yaml and restarting. The
GET /graphs read-only enumeration stays.
Removed:
- POST /graphs handler + router fragment + utoipa registration
- 13 post_graphs_* server tests + 3 composite POST tests +
multi_mode_app_with_real_config / post_graph helpers
- CLI omnigraph graphs create subcommand + its handler + cli.rs tests
- system_remote.rs combined list+create test trimmed to list-only
- YAML rewrite infra: rewrite_atomic[_with_modify], RewriteAtomicError,
staging_path, hash_config_file, AppState::config_hash field +
threading through new_multi and open_multi_graph_state
- fs2 dependency (verified absent from cargo tree)
- sha2/fs2 imports in config.rs (only the rewrite path used them)
- Cedar PolicyAction::GraphCreate variant + "graph_create" match arms
+ action def in Cedar schema + graph_create_action_authorizes_against_server_resource test
- GraphCreateRequest / GraphCreateResponse / GraphSchemaSpec /
GraphPolicySpec API types (only the POST handler / CLI imported them)
Kept:
- GET /graphs (read-only enumeration) and graph_list Cedar action
- omnigraph graphs list CLI subcommand
- All multi-graph startup, mode inference, cluster routes,
per-graph + server-level Cedar policies
- server_settings_drive_multi_graph_startup_end_to_end (the test
that covers operator-authored YAML + restart — the path that
survives)
- best_effort_cleanup_init_artifacts and the three init failpoints
(still reachable from CLI `omnigraph init`; preflight fix deferred
as a follow-up)
- GraphRegistry::insert and its concurrency tests — production
callers gone, but the method is the natural seam for the future
cluster-catalog work
Also fixed (transcript issue 4):
- ALWAYS_FLAT_PATHS now includes /graphs so multi-mode OpenAPI
advertises the management route correctly (was previously rewritten
to /graphs/{graph_id}/graphs)
- multi_mode_openapi_keeps_healthz_flat → renamed to
multi_mode_openapi_keeps_management_paths_flat, asserts both
/healthz and /graphs stay flat
- multi_mode_openapi_prefixes_operation_ids_with_cluster skips
/graphs in addition to /healthz
Doc fixes:
- docs/user/cli.md: graphs list example was --target http://...,
but --target is a config-graph-name lookup; corrected to --uri.
Removed the graphs create example.
- docs/user/server.md: dropped POST /graphs row, "omnigraph.yaml
ownership", and "POST /graphs body shape" sections. Added a
paragraph stating runtime add/remove is not exposed in v0.7.0.
- docs/user/policy.md: dropped graph_create action; reworded the
"Configuration" line to clarify that server-scoped rules (graph_list)
take neither branch_scope nor target_branch_scope.
- docs/releases/v0.7.0.md: rewrote release narrative — multi-graph
mode ships; runtime add/remove deferred.
- AGENTS.md: HTTP server bullet and capability matrix row updated to
reflect read-only GET /graphs and the operator-edit workflow.
- openapi.json regenerated; /graphs has only .get, no .post.
Diff: 17 files, +123 −1525 LOC.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* mr-668: comment cleanup and policy format style
Strip "PR Na/Nb" sub-PR references throughout MR-668 surfaces — they
were useful during the 10-PR delivery sequence but rot now that the
work is in the tree. Keep the MR-668 umbrella references.
Also:
- Add explicit `when = when` and `resource_literal = resource_literal`
named args in `compile_policy_source`'s outer `format!` to match the
surrounding crate style (already explicit for `group` and `action`).
- Rename the best-effort cleanup tracing target from
"omnigraph::init" to "omnigraph::init::cleanup" so operators can
filter init-failure cleanup events separately from init's other
log lines.
No behavior change.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* mr-668: drop actor_id from PolicyRequest; pass actor as separate arg
The MR-731 "server-authoritative actor identity" invariant was enforced
by an in-function chokepoint (`request.actor_id = actor.actor_id...`
overwrite inside `authorize_request`). That worked but relied on every
caller passing in a `PolicyRequest` and trusting the overwrite — a
comment-enforced invariant.
Move the invariant into the type system:
* `PolicyRequest` no longer carries `actor_id`. The struct now models
what a caller wants to do, not who they are.
* `PolicyEngine::authorize(actor_id: &str, request: &PolicyRequest)`
and `validate_request(actor_id, request)` take identity as a
separate argument. The same shape `PolicyChecker::check` already had
for the engine layer.
* `authorize_request` in the HTTP layer extracts `actor_id` from the
bearer-resolved `ResolvedActor` and passes it positionally — no
overwrite step that could be skipped.
* CLI `omnigraph policy explain` updated (the only other consumer
that built a `PolicyRequest`).
Public API break for the `omnigraph-policy` crate. Worth it: handlers
can no longer accidentally populate `actor_id` from a request body
field, and external consumers are forced by the compiler to source
actor identity from a trusted path.
The MR-731 chokepoint test
`actor_id_resolves_from_bearer_token_ignoring_client_supplied_headers`
still passes — the bearer-resolved actor is what reaches the engine.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* mr-668: consolidate AppState single-mode constructors; delete with_policy_engine
The prior `with_policy_engine` constructor reused the engine `Arc`
from the existing handle (`engine: Arc::clone(&existing.engine)`)
without re-applying `Omnigraph::with_policy`. Combined with
`new_with_workload`, the documented composition pattern was
`AppState::new_with_workload(...).with_policy_engine(p)` — which
produced an `AppState` whose HTTP layer enforced Cedar but whose
underlying engine had no `PolicyChecker` installed. Any caller
reaching the engine via `state.registry().list()[i].engine` could
bypass policy entirely. The doc comment named this gap; the type
system didn't.
Make composition impossible to get wrong:
* Add `AppState::new_single(uri, db, tokens, Option<PolicyEngine>,
WorkloadController)` — canonical single-mode constructor that
takes every option together and routes through `build_single_mode`
(which applies `db.with_policy(checker)` to the engine itself).
* `new`, `new_with_bearer_token`, `new_with_bearer_tokens`,
`new_with_bearer_tokens_and_policy`, `new_with_workload` all become
thin wrappers around `new_single`.
* Delete `with_policy_engine`. There is no post-construction policy
install path any more; the single linear construction forces
HTTP-layer and engine-layer policy to install together or not at all.
Regression test `engine_layer_policy_fires_via_direct_arc_omnigraph_from_new_single`
constructs an `AppState::new_single` with a deny-all policy, pulls
the `Arc<Omnigraph>` from the registry handle (the same path an
embedded SDK consumer would take), and asserts a direct `mutate_as`
call returns `OmniError::Policy`. Pre-fix this test would have
succeeded the mutation.
Test caller in `ingest_per_actor_admission_cap_returns_429`
migrates from `.with_policy_engine(...)` to `new_single(...,
Some(policy_engine), workload)`.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* mr-668: derive any_per_graph_policy on RegistrySnapshot; simplify dup check
`AppState::requires_bearer_auth` walked the entire registry per
request (cloning Arcs into a `Vec`, then `.iter().any(|h| h.policy
.is_some())`) to decide whether the auth middleware should challenge.
The walk is unnecessary — the answer only changes when the registry
mutates, which is exactly the moment a new snapshot is constructed.
Move the flag onto the snapshot itself:
* `RegistrySnapshot { graphs, any_per_graph_policy: bool }`.
* `RegistrySnapshot::new(graphs)` is the only construction path —
it derives the flag from `graphs.values().any(|h| h.policy
.is_some())` so the cached value can't drift from the source data.
* `Default` delegates to `new(HashMap::new())`.
* `GraphRegistry::from_handles` and `insert` build snapshots via
`RegistrySnapshot::new(...)`.
* `GraphRegistry::snapshot_ref()` exposes the current snapshot
through an `arc_swap::Guard`; callers that need cached derived
state go through this accessor (callers that only want `graphs`
still use `list` / `get`).
`requires_bearer_auth` becomes one `ArcSwap::load` + bool read.
Also (drive-by, same file, same hunk): replace the dead
`if let Some(other) = seen_uris.get(...)` + `let _ = other;` pattern
in `from_handles` with a plain `seen_uris.contains_key(...)`.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* mr-668: fail-fast multi-graph startup with try_collect
The `open_multi_graph_state` doc comment claims "Fail-fast — the
first open error aborts startup; other in-flight opens are dropped"
but the code did
.buffer_unordered(4)
.collect::<Vec<_>>()
.await
.into_iter()
.collect::<Result<Vec<_>>>()?;
which drains every future in the stream before propagating the first
`Err`. With N S3-backed graphs and graph #2 failing fast, the caller
still waits for #1, #3, #4, … to either succeed or fail before
seeing the error.
Replace the four-line dance with `futures::TryStreamExt::try_collect`,
which short-circuits on the first `Err` and drops the rest. The
doc comment now matches behavior.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* mr-668: drop unused State extractor from 7 read-only handlers
After the routing-middleware refactor moved the engine into the per-graph
`GraphHandle` (extracted via `Extension<Arc<GraphHandle>>`), seven
read-only handlers — `server_snapshot`, `server_read`, `server_export`,
`server_schema_get`, `server_branch_list`, `server_commit_list`,
`server_commit_show` — kept an unused `State(_state): State<AppState>`
extractor. Drop it. Each request avoids one `FromRequestParts` clone
of `AppState`'s Arcs.
Handlers that actually use state (workload admission for write paths,
`server_policy` for management endpoints) keep theirs.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* mr-668: emit info! for graph routing decision
`tracing::Span::current().record("graph_id", ...)` in the routing
middleware silently no-ops here: no upstream `#[tracing::instrument]`
on the handlers declares a `graph_id` field, and `TraceLayer::new_for_http`
doesn't either. The recorded value never lands anywhere visible.
Replace with an explicit `info!(graph_id = %handle.key.graph_id,
"graph routed")` event so operators can grep logs and correlate
requests with the active graph. In single mode the value is the
sentinel `"default"`.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* mr-668: align GET /graphs 405 body code with HTTP status
The single-mode `GET /graphs` handler returned an `ApiError` built
via struct literal with `status: METHOD_NOT_ALLOWED, code: BadRequest`.
The body code disagreed with the HTTP status — clients deserializing
on `code` saw `bad_request`, clients deserializing on `status` saw
405. Same bug class as the earlier 503+Conflict mismatch on the
removed YAML drift path.
Close the class for this one remaining instance:
* Add `ErrorCode::MethodNotAllowed` to the API enum.
* Add `ApiError::method_not_allowed(msg)` — pairs the 405 status
with the matching code.
* Replace the struct literal in `server_graphs_list` with the
constructor.
* Regenerate `openapi.json` (adds `method_not_allowed` to the
ErrorCode schema enum).
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* mr-668: drop unused axum::handler::Handler import
The import landed in earlier work but no current call site uses it.
Emitted an `unused_imports` warning on every server build.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* mr-668: drop unused fs2 workspace dependency
`fs2 = "0.4"` lingered in [workspace.dependencies] after the
POST /graphs flock-on-rename design was pulled. `cargo tree -i fs2`
reports no consumers in the workspace and the dep is not in
Cargo.lock. Removing the declaration closes the "phantom dep" class.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* mr-668: AGENTS.md Cedar row no longer hardcodes action count
The "8 actions" claim drifted as soon as MR-668 added `graph_list`.
Bumping the count would just push the drift one PR forward; the
correct-by-design fix is to defer to the canonical list in
docs/user/policy.md and stop maintaining a duplicate count.
Closes the "doc hardcodes a count that drifts from the enum" class.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* mr-668: cfg(test)-gate GraphRegistry::insert and its mutex
`insert` and the `mutate: Mutex<()>` that serializes it had no
runtime consumer in v0.7.0 — the only insertion path at startup
is `from_handles`, and runtime add/remove is deferred until a
managed cluster catalog ships. Leaving both `pub` and live made
them a "looks like API, isn't" footgun: a future change could
build on `insert` without re-establishing the concurrency contract
with an actual consumer in scope.
Gate both together (`#[cfg(test)]` on the method, the field, and
the `tokio::sync::Mutex` import) so the race-pinning tests still
compile but production cannot reach them. When a real consumer
ships, ungate both — they're a unit. Closes the "public API with
no runtime consumer drifts toward incorrect" class.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* mr-668: drop vestigial PolicyEngine surface
* `validate_request` had zero callsites — pure surface for nothing.
* `deny`'s `_actor_id` and `_request` parameters were both unused
(the underscore prefix gave it away); the message is built by the
caller before `deny` ever sees the request. Trim both.
Closes the "public API that the type system can't justify" class
for the policy engine. No behavior change; every existing test
stays green because the deletions never had a runtime effect.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* mr-668: regression test for init re-init footgun (red)
A second `Omnigraph::init` against an existing graph URI today
destroys the existing graph's schema artifacts. `init_storage_phase`
overwrites `_schema.pg` before any preflight, and on the inner
`GraphCoordinator::init` failure that follows,
`best_effort_cleanup_init_artifacts` deletes all three schema files.
The existing Lance datasets and `__manifest/` survive but the
schema metadata is gone — unrecoverable without operator surgery.
This test exercises that path and currently fails with
"_schema.pg must not be deleted by a failed re-init", confirming
the destructive cleanup branch fires. The fix in the next commit
makes the test pass by preflighting with `storage.exists()` and
returning a typed error before any write touches disk.
Per AGENTS.md rule 12, the test commit lands just before the fix
commit so the red → green pair is visible in `git log` and a
reviewer can check out this commit alone to reproduce.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* mr-668: close init re-init footgun via InitOptions preflight (green)
`Omnigraph::init` is "create a new graph"; existing graphs need
an explicit overwrite. Today's behavior — silently overwrite
schema files, then on inner failure delete them via best-effort
cleanup — is destructive against an existing graph regardless of
which branch fires.
Correct-by-design fix:
* New `InitOptions { force: bool }` struct (default `force: false`).
* New `Omnigraph::init_with_options(uri, schema, options)`. The
old `Omnigraph::init(uri, schema)` is a thin shortcut that
passes `InitOptions::default()`.
* `init_with_storage` runs a `storage.exists()` preflight on the
three schema URIs BEFORE any parse, write, or coordinator call.
Any hit → typed `OmniError::AlreadyInitialized { uri }`. The
destructive code paths (the `write_text` overwrite and the
best-effort cleanup) are now unreachable in strict mode against
an existing graph.
* `force: true` skips the preflight; existing operators who
actually mean to overwrite opt in explicitly.
* CLI: `omnigraph init --force` maps to `InitOptions { force: true }`.
* HTTP: `OmniError::AlreadyInitialized` maps to 409 via
`ApiError::from_omni`. Not currently HTTP-reachable (POST /graphs
was pulled), but the wiring lands here so a future runtime
create endpoint has one canonical translation.
Closes the "init is destructive against existing state" class.
The regression test added in the previous commit
(`init_on_existing_graph_uri_does_not_destroy_existing_schema`)
turns green: the original schema files now survive a second
init attempt byte-for-byte, and the call errors cleanly with
`AlreadyInitialized`. The four existing
`init_failpoint_after_*_cleans_up_*` tests stay green — strict
mode's preflight passes on a fresh tempdir, and cleanup still
runs as before when a failpoint fires mid-write.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* mr-668: split PolicyEngine::load into kind-typed loaders
Pre-fix, every caller of `PolicyEngine::load(path, graph_id)`
passed *some* `graph_id` argument — even when the policy was
server-scoped and Cedar's resolution would never touch a Graph
entity. The server-level loader at lib.rs passed the meaningless
sentinel `"server"`. A graph policy file containing a `graph_list`
rule compiled fine; a server policy file containing a `read` rule
compiled fine. Both silently no-op'd at request time because the
engine kind and the rule's resource kind disagreed.
Correct-by-design fix: replace `load` with two kind-typed loaders.
* `PolicyEngine::load_graph(path, graph_id)` — for per-graph
policy files. Rejects any rule whose action `resource_kind()`
is `Server`.
* `PolicyEngine::load_server(path)` — for server-level policy
files. Takes no `graph_id`: server-scoped actions resolve against
the singleton `Omnigraph::Server::"root"` entity, never a Graph.
Rejects any rule whose action `resource_kind()` is `Graph`.
The old `load` is hard-deleted in the same commit because every
in-tree consumer migrates here (no semver promise on the workspace
crate, no external pinners). New `PolicyEngineKind` enum types
the loader's intent; `validate_kind_alignment` is the load-time
check that closes the "wrong action, wrong file, silent no-op"
class — operators get a load-time error instead of confused-and-
silent behavior at request time.
Callsites migrated:
* server lib.rs:374 (single-mode per-graph) → load_graph
* server lib.rs:1065 (multi-mode server) → load_server
* server lib.rs:1103 (multi-mode per-graph) → load_graph
* CLI main.rs:732 (resolve_policy_engine) → load_graph
* tests/server.rs ×5 (4 graph, 1 server) → load_graph/load_server
* policy_engine_chassis.rs → load_graph
Four new in-source tests pin the contract: both rejection paths
and both positive paths.
Closes the "operator puts an action in the wrong file and the
rule silently never matches" class.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* mr-668: introduce GraphRouting, retire single_mode_handle
Pre-fix, `AppState` always carried `Arc<GraphRegistry>` even when
serving one graph. Single mode populated the registry with one
handle keyed by the `SINGLE_GRAPH_KEY_ID = "default"` sentinel;
`single_mode_handle` walked the registry, asserted `len == 1`,
and returned the single element with a 500-class "programmer
error" branch on mismatch. Three smells in a row — magic key,
walk-and-assert, programmer-error guard — all because the
single-mode runtime was forced through a multi-mode abstraction.
Correct-by-design fix: type the routing.
* New `pub enum GraphRouting { Single { handle }, Multi { registry,
config_path } }` on `AppState`. The `Single` arm carries the handle
directly — no registry, no key, no walk.
* `resolve_graph_handle` middleware matches on `routing`. Single mode
returns the handle in O(1); multi mode does the same path-extract +
registry lookup as before. The 500-class programmer-error branch
is gone — the type system now makes the violated invariant
("single mode has exactly one handle") unrepresentable.
* `requires_bearer_auth` reads `handle.policy.is_some()` directly
in the Single arm; Multi arm still uses the cached
`any_per_graph_policy` flag.
`ServerMode` and the legacy `registry` field on `AppState` are still
populated for now — C-3 removes both once every reader is migrated.
The `SINGLE_GRAPH_KEY_ID` sentinel and `ServerMode` will also go
away in C-3.
Closes the "single mode forced through a multi-mode abstraction"
class. All 76 server integration tests stay green: handlers still
extract `Extension<Arc<GraphHandle>>` from the request, so the
middleware's internal change is invisible to them.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* mr-668: remove ServerMode, registry field, and the SINGLE_GRAPH sentinel
C-1/C-2 introduced `GraphRouting` and pointed the middleware at it.
This commit removes the legacy shape that's now dead:
* `ServerMode` enum — deleted. Single mode's `uri` lives on
`handle.uri`; multi mode's `config_path` lives on the
`GraphRouting::Multi` arm.
* `AppState.mode: ServerMode` field — deleted.
* `AppState.registry: Arc<GraphRegistry>` field — deleted. Multi
mode's registry is on `GraphRouting::Multi { registry, .. }`;
single mode has no registry at all.
* `AppState::mode()`, `AppState::uri()`, `AppState::registry()`
accessors — deleted. New `AppState::routing() -> &GraphRouting`
is the single public entry point.
* `SINGLE_GRAPH_KEY_ID` constant — deleted. `GraphHandle.key` is
still required by the struct, but in single mode the key is now
only a tracing label (`"default"`, inlined with a comment naming
its sole remaining purpose). Single-mode flat routes never carry
a `{graph_id}` parameter, so the key is never compared against
user input, and there is no registry where it could be a map
key. C-1/C-2 already removed the registry walk that the sentinel
was named for.
Callers migrated:
* `build_app` (lib.rs:944) — matches on `state.routing()` instead
of `state.mode()`.
* `server_graphs_list` (lib.rs:1162) — destructures the Multi arm
to get the registry; Single arm short-circuits to 405.
* `server_openapi` (lib.rs:1217) — matches the Multi arm for the
cluster-prefix rewrite.
* `tests/server.rs:3735` — the B2 footgun regression test now
matches on `state.routing()` to extract the single-mode handle
(the test's earlier `state.registry().list().next()` shape was
the closest pre-fix analog to "embedded consumer reaches the
engine"; the new shape is more direct).
Closes the entire "single mode forced through a multi-mode
abstraction" class. After this commit:
* No magic sentinel as a routing key.
* No `single_mode_handle` walk-and-assert helper.
* No 500-class "programmer error" branch in the middleware.
* No two-field discriminant on `AppState` where one would do.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* mr-668: regression test for nested-route path extraction (red)
`server_branch_delete` and `server_commit_show` use bare
`Path<String>` extractors. In single-mode flat routes
(`/branches/{branch}`, `/commits/{commit_id}`) this works — one
capture, one value. In multi-graph cluster routes
(`/graphs/{graph_id}/branches/{branch}`,
`/graphs/{graph_id}/commits/{commit_id}`) axum 0.8 propagates the
outer `{graph_id}` capture into the inner handler, so the
extractor sees two captures and 500s with
"Wrong number of path arguments. Expected 1 but got 2."
`cluster_routes_dispatch_per_graph_handle` only exercises
`/snapshot` (no Path extractor), so the regression slipped through.
This test closes that gap structurally: every cluster route with
an inner path param gets exercised here.
Currently fails with the exact symptom above. Fix in the next
commit makes it pass.
Per AGENTS.md rule 12, the red test commit lands just before the
fix so the pair is visible in `git log` and a reviewer can check
out this commit alone to reproduce.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* mr-668: named-field path-param structs for nested cluster routes (green)
`Path<String>` deserializes one path-param value positionally.
Single-mode flat routes (`/branches/{branch}`,
`/commits/{commit_id}`) have one capture; multi-mode nested routes
(`/graphs/{graph_id}/branches/{branch}`,
`/graphs/{graph_id}/commits/{commit_id}`) have two — axum 0.8
propagates the outer capture into nested handlers. Same handler,
two different shapes; the multi-mode shape 500s with
"Wrong number of path arguments. Expected 1 but got 2."
Symptomatic fix: change to `Path<(String, String)>` and ignore the
first element. Breaks again the moment we add another nest layer
(e.g. tenant in Cloud mode).
Correct-by-design fix: named-field structs deserialized by name
from axum's path-param map. Each handler picks only the fields it
needs. Stable across single / multi / future-cloud nest depths
because deserialization is by field name, not position.
* New `BranchPath { branch: String }` (file-local to lib.rs)
* New `CommitPath { commit_id: String }`
* `server_branch_delete` extractor → `Path<BranchPath>`
* `server_commit_show` extractor → `Path<CommitPath>`
Closes the "handler path-extractor type is positional and breaks
when route nesting changes" class. Red test from the previous
commit turns green. All 77 server tests pass (single-mode branch
delete + commit show, plus new multi-mode coverage).
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* mr-668: centralize policy-requires-tokens check in the runtime classifier
Single-mode `open_with_bearer_tokens_and_policy` bailed at lib.rs:380
when policy was installed and no tokens. Multi-mode
`open_multi_graph_state` had no equivalent: the server started, every
request 401'd because no token could ever match, and the operator
spent time debugging a misconfiguration the single-mode path would
have caught at startup.
The doc/code contradiction made the gap easy to miss: the
`ServerRuntimeState::PolicyEnabled` docstring said tokens-or-not
was "unusual but valid — every request fails 401 without a bearer,
which is effectively 'locked'." The single-mode bail contradicted
that. In practice, silent-401-on-every-request is bug-shaped, not
feature-shaped (operators wanting deny-all should configure tokens
plus a deny-all Cedar rule to get meaningful 403s with
policy-decision logging).
Symptomatic fix: add a copy of the bail to multi-mode. Two copies
that can drift again the next time a startup path is added.
Correct-by-design fix: hoist the check into
`classify_server_runtime_state` so both modes get the same
enforcement from one source of truth. The classifier becomes the
single source of truth for "should we start?" and adding a startup
invariant there is now the natural extension point for any future
mode.
Classifier matrix is now complete:
| has_tokens | has_policy | allow_unauthenticated | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| F | F | F | bail (existing) |
| F | F | T | Open (existing) |
| T | F | * | DefaultDeny (existing) |
| F | T | * | bail (NEW — closes the gap) |
| T | T | * | PolicyEnabled (existing) |
Changes:
* `classify_server_runtime_state` (lib.rs:870-890) gains the
`(false, true, _) => bail!(…)` arm with a clear message naming
the failure mode and the two valid resolutions.
* `open_with_bearer_tokens_and_policy` (lib.rs:369+) drops its
redundant local bail — the classifier rejected the invalid case
before construction was reached.
* `ServerRuntimeState::PolicyEnabled` docstring is rewritten:
drops the "(unusual but valid)" carve-out and states plainly
that PolicyEnabled requires tokens. Names the explicit
alternative (tokens + deny-all Cedar rule) for operators who
want the all-requests-denied behavior.
* `classify_policy_enabled_always_wins` test is renamed to
`classify_policy_enabled_requires_tokens` and the now-invalid
`(false, true, _)` assertion is removed (covered by the new
rejection test).
* New `classify_policy_without_tokens_is_rejected` test covers the
new arm.
* New `serve_refuses_to_start_with_policy_but_no_tokens_multi_mode`
integration test pins the multi-mode propagation path —
symmetric with the existing single-mode
`serve_refuses_to_start_in_state_1_without_unauthenticated`.
Closes the "single mode and multi mode startup branches can drift
on safety invariants" class.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* mr-668: close coverage gaps surfaced by the test-coverage audit
The bot-review pass and the subsequent coverage audit surfaced two
material gaps in PR #119's test surface — both easy to close, both
worth closing before merge.
* **Gap 1 — cluster-route sweep.** The Bug-1 path-extractor
regression slipped through because
`cluster_routes_dispatch_per_graph_handle` only exercised
`/snapshot`. The other six protected cluster routes (`/read`,
`/change`, `/export`, `/schema`, `/schema/apply`, `/ingest`,
`/branches/merge`) were implicitly trusted to work without any
multi-mode integration test.
Add `all_protected_cluster_routes_resolve_to_their_handler`
(`tests/server.rs`) that hits each protected cluster route with
a minimal request and asserts the response is consistent with
the handler being reached — no 404 (router didn't match), no 500
with "Wrong number of path arguments" (Bug-1 class), no 500 with
"missing extension" (routing middleware didn't inject the handle).
Status code is a negative assertion because each handler's
happy-path inputs differ; what matters is "the request reached
the handler," not "the handler returned 200" — that's already
pinned by the single-mode tests.
* **Gap 2 — `--force` happy path.** The strict re-init regression
test (`init_on_existing_graph_uri_does_not_destroy_existing_schema`)
pins the error path; nothing pinned the `force: true` escape
hatch actually doing what its docstring claims.
Add `init_with_force_recovers_from_orphan_schema_files`
(`tests/lifecycle.rs`). Writes a bare `_schema.pg` to simulate
orphan files from a failed prior init, confirms strict mode
bails as expected, then confirms `init_with_options(force: true)`
succeeds and produces a functional graph.
Note: the test follows the documented semantics — force skips
the preflight only, it does NOT purge existing Lance state. An
earlier draft of the test (against full overwrite of an existing
populated graph) failed because `GraphCoordinator::init` errored
on the existing `__manifest`, which is exactly the limitation
the `InitOptions::force` docstring already calls out. Recursive
purge needs `StorageAdapter::delete_prefix` (tracked separately).
Coverage is now fully aligned with the PR's claims.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* mr-668: regression test for GraphList open-mode bypass (red)
Cursor bot's review at commit
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cc2412dc65
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Rename repo terminology to graph (#118)
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60eee78465
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docs: split user and developer docs (#93) |
Renamed from docs/server.md (Browse further)