omnigraph/docs/dev/writes.md
Ragnor Comerford 7779b72446
feat(engine): retire commit-graph tables (#311)
* docs(dev): write-latency roadmap (validated cost model + layered fix)

Records the validated 6-LIST warm-write cost model, the two root causes
(un-GC'd _versions/; re-resolving latest by listing), and the layered fix
(GC + capture-once reuse), plus how commit-graph-table retirement feeds in.
Linked from docs/dev/index.md next to the RFC-013 docs.

* feat(engine)!: strand storage versioning — one internal-schema version, no in-place migration

Set MIN_SUPPORTED == CURRENT == 4: this binary reads exactly one `__manifest`
internal-schema version and refuses any older graph on open with a
rebuild-via-export/import message, instead of migrating it in place. Storage
format changes become a deliberate cutover, not a permanently-carried in-place
migration — the pre-release "complexity must be earned" contract.

Delete the entire in-place migration apparatus and everything that existed only
to support it: the `migrate_vN` arms + dispatcher + stamp-bump helpers + the
schema-version-floor tripwire; `migrate_on_open` (both open modes now refuse);
the legacy `_graph_commits.lance` readers + the v3 test fixtures + migration
tests + `migration.v3_to_v4.*` failpoints + the two surface guards that pinned
Lance variants only the migration matched on; and `state::merge_lineage_rows`.
Keep `read_stamp` / `stamp_current_version` / `set_stamp` /
`refuse_if_stamp_unsupported` — the seam a future one-shot converter plugs into.

`load_commit_cache_for_branch` now reads the `__manifest` projection
unconditionally (sub-v4 graphs are refused at open). Adds
`sub_current_graph_is_refused_on_open_with_rebuild_hint`.

The commit-graph TABLES are still created/used as branch-ref ledgers — their
retirement (CommitGraph -> pure `__manifest` projection) is the next commit.

BREAKING CHANGE: a graph created by omnigraph <= 0.7.2 (internal schema v3) is
refused on open. Rebuild it: `omnigraph export` with the old release, then
`omnigraph init` + `omnigraph load` with this one. Data, vectors, and blobs are
preserved; commit history and branches are not.

* feat(engine)!: retire `_graph_commits.lance` / `_graph_commit_actors.lance` — CommitGraph is a pure `__manifest` projection

Since RFC-013 Phase 7, graph lineage lives in `__manifest` (`graph_commit` /
`graph_head` rows) and branch authority is `__manifest` (branch create forks it
first). The two commit-graph datasets were vestigial: `_graph_commit_actors.lance`
was never written or read; `_graph_commits.lance` carried zero commit rows and
only mirrored the manifest's branch refs (a deny-list "parallel copy"). Retire
both.

- `CommitGraph` collapses to a pure projection: drops its Lance dataset handles
  (`dataset`/`actor_dataset`) and all branch methods; `open`/`open_at_branch`/
  `refresh`/`init` open NO dataset, building the cache from
  `ManifestCoordinator::read_graph_lineage_at`. Removes ~1.4s of cold-open
  dataset opens.
- `graph_coordinator`: `commit_graph` is now non-`Option` (always a valid
  projection). `branch_create`/`branch_delete` go through `ManifestCoordinator`
  only — a single atomic op, replacing the two-step manifest-fork +
  commit-graph-fork + rollback. Deleted `create_commit_graph_branch`,
  `reclaim_commit_graph_branch`, `ensure_commit_graph_initialized`, and every
  `storage.exists(_graph_commits.lance)` gate.
- `optimize`: dropped `reconcile_commit_graph_orphans` and the two tables from
  the internal-table compaction set (now `__manifest` only).
- `instrumentation`: `INTERNAL_TABLE_DIRS` no longer lists the two tables.
- Fresh graphs create neither table; `lineage_projection.rs` now asserts both
  `.lance` dirs are absent. Deleted the obsolete commit-graph-branch-race
  failpoint tests + their failpoint names, and updated the `maintenance`
  optimize tests (one internal table, not three).

Review-pass fixes folded in:
- Removed two stale `omnigraph.rs` in-source tests the prior run missed (a
  disk-full link failure masked them): one asserting `open` probes
  `_graph_commits.lance` (the exists-gate this commit removes) — it was masked
  earlier by a disk-full link failure.
- Corrected src comments referencing deleted code (`migrate_v3_to_v4`,
  `append_commit`/`append_merge_commit`, the three-internal-table list,
  the `_graph_commits` reconcile owner) in publisher/recovery/optimize/recovery_audit.
- Narrowed `set_stamp_for_test` to `cfg(test)` (its only caller is the refusal
  test) — removes a dead-code warning in the failpoints build.

Branch create/delete atomicity improves (single atomic `__manifest` op). No
behavior change for reads or branches.

Follow-up (separate commit): the now-always-0 `IoCounts::commit_graph_reads` test
counter + its `IOTracker`, threaded through ~11 cost-test files.

* feat: surface the internal-schema (storage-format) version to operators

After stranding storage versioning (a sub-v4 graph is refused on open), operators
could only discover the storage-format version by hitting a refusal. Surface it:

- `omnigraph version` prints an `internal-schema <N>` line (the binary's CURRENT
  storage-format version).
- `omnigraph snapshot` includes `internal_schema_version` — the GRAPH's per-branch
  on-disk stamp, read via the new `Omnigraph::internal_schema_version_of`.
- `GET /healthz` includes `internal_schema_version` (server-scoped: the binary's
  CURRENT, alongside `version`/`source_version`).

Wire: re-expose `INTERNAL_MANIFEST_SCHEMA_VERSION` as `pub` on `db::manifest`;
add `internal_schema_version: u32` to `SnapshotOutput` + `HealthOutput`;
`snapshot_payload` takes the per-graph version (the `Snapshot` does not carry it),
threaded through the embedded CLI + server snapshot callers. `openapi.json`
regenerated (two added int32 properties). Extends the existing healthz / snapshot /
version tests.

* docs(engine): gate internal-schema version at the graph level; record the per-branch read gap

PR reviewers flagged that the open path validates only main's internal-schema stamp, so a branch read could decode a branch stamped outside this binary's range. The stamp is a graph-wide storage-format property (the upgrade path is a whole-graph export/import), so with one binary version every branch is always CURRENT; divergence needs concurrent multi-version writers, an unsupported topology already in one-winner-CAS territory. Gating per-branch would add a second __manifest open per non-main branch read to defend a state we do not support, unearned complexity that regresses the warm-read budget.

Keep the graph-level gate, document it at the code site (refuse_if_internal_schema_unsupported), and record the read-only residual hole as a known gap in invariants.md to close only when multi-version write topologies become supported. Also clarify the sub-floor rebuild message to say "export with the older omnigraph binary that created it."

No behavior change: HEAD already gated at the graph level.

* test(cost): remove the dead commit_graph_reads IO counter

Phase B retired _graph_commits.lance / _graph_commit_actors.lance, so no commit-graph dataset is opened and the commit_graph IOTracker term is structurally always 0. Remove IoCounts::commit_graph_reads, its total_reads() term, the commit_graph IOTracker in OpProbes, and the now-dead commit_graph_wrapper field on QueryIoProbes (it had no accessor — nothing ever attached it). Drop the 7 trivially-true assert_eq!(commit_graph_reads, 0) checks in warm_read_cost.rs and the debug-print refs in write_cost{,_s3}.rs.

Lineage and actor rows now live in __manifest (RFC-013 Phase 7), so the internal_table_scans_are_flat_in_history gate folds into the single manifest_reads flat-assertion — the manifest scan already covers them. Harness-only; no production runtime impact.

* docs: align with the commit-graph retirement + strand storage versioning

Update the always-loaded and user-facing docs to match the landed state: graph lineage lives in __manifest, the _graph_commits.lance / _graph_commit_actors.lance tables are retired, and storage is strict-single-version (no in-place migration — a sub-CURRENT graph is refused with an export/import rebuild).

Fixed stale claims in invariants.md (the migration/atomicity known-gap entry, the Truth Matrix branch-delete row, the read-path/optimize internal-table scope), lance.md (the migrate_v1_to_v2 PK bullet now reflects init-time set; removed the two deleted v3->v4 migration surface guards), testing.md (dropped the deleted migration failpoint tests; manifest-only internal-table term), writes.md (rewrote the Migration-code section to the strand model), storage.md / maintenance.md / constants.md (retired tables out of the layout, internal-table compaction scope, and the constants cheat-sheet), and AGENTS.md. Marked the retirement DONE in the RFC-013 handoff/roadmap and banner-noted the historical RFC analysis.

Added docs/user/operations/upgrade.md (the export/import rebuild recipe) and docs/dev/versioning.md (the four-axis compatibility policy: release lockstep / wire additive / storage strict-single-version / Lance pinned), cross-linked from the audience indexes and the AGENTS.md topic map, and rewrote the in-progress v0.8.0 release note for the strand model + version surfacing. check-agents-md.sh passes (65 links, 62 docs).

* test(manifest): cover the v3-refusal→export/import rebuild cycle and branch stamp inheritance

Two coverage additions from PR review (P1):

(a) sub_current_graph_is_refused_then_rebuilt_via_export_import — the full operator narrative in one flow: load → export → a sub-CURRENT graph (stamp rewound below CURRENT) is refused with the export nudge → fresh init + load(export) → data present and the rebuilt graph opens. The refusal is stamp-only (read before any data), so a stamp-rewound graph is a faithful stand-in for a real older-release graph without a second binary; vector/blob fidelity stays covered by tests/export.rs.

(b) branch_inherits_main_internal_schema_stamp — proves a branch cannot diverge from main's stamp under single-binary operation (create_branch forks main's __manifest, the publisher does not re-stamp), which is why the graph-level (main-only) stamp gate is sufficient for supported inputs. A divergent branch stamp needs concurrent multi-version writers, the unsupported topology recorded as a known gap.
2026-06-28 16:49:49 +02:00

24 KiB

Direct-Publish Write Path

History: the Run state machine and __run__<id> staging branches were removed in MR-771 (shipped v0.4.0). Writes now go directly to the target table; this document specifies that direct-publish path.

mutate_as and load write directly to the target table and call ManifestBatchPublisher::publish once at the end with expected_table_versions (the per-table manifest versions captured before the first write). Cross-table OCC is enforced inside the publisher; the publisher's row-level CAS on __manifest is the single fence.

What this means in practice

  • No RunRecord, no _graph_runs.lance, no _graph_run_actors.lance.
  • No omnigraph run * CLI subcommands and no /runs/* HTTP endpoints.
  • No __run__<id> staging branches; __run__* is no longer a reserved name. The branch-name guard was removed in MR-770, and any stale __run__* branch on an upgraded graph is swept off __manifest by the v2→v3 internal-schema migration on first read-write open. (The inert _graph_runs.lance bytes remain until a delete_prefix primitive lands.)
  • Cancelled mutation futures leave no graph-visible state — the manifest is never advanced. They can leave two kinds of unreferenced residue, both self-healing: orphaned Lance fragments (reclaimed by omnigraph cleanup), and — on the first write to a table on a branch, which forks it before the publish — a manifest-unreferenced branch ref. The next write to that table reclaims the stale fork and re-forks (reclaim_orphaned_fork_and_refork), and cleanup's per-table reconciler is the guaranteed backstop; see the fork-reclaim note in invariants.md.

Read-your-writes within a multi-statement mutation

A .gq query with multiple ops (e.g. insert Person … insert Knows …) must observe earlier ops' writes when validating later ops (referential integrity, edge cardinality). After MR-794 step 2+ this is implemented via an in-memory MutationStaging accumulator in crates/omnigraph/src/exec/staging.rs, shared by both mutate_as and the bulk loader:

  • On the first touch of each table, the pre-write manifest version is captured into expected_versions[table_key] (the publisher's CAS fence at end-of-query).
  • Each insert/update op pushes a RecordBatch into the per-table pending accumulator. Lance HEAD does not advance during op execution.
  • Read sites (validation, predicate matching for update) consume TableStore::scan_with_pending, which scans committed via Lance and applies the same SQL filter to the pending batches via DataFusion MemTable. Same-query writes are visible to subsequent reads.
  • At end-of-query, MutationStaging::finalize issues exactly one stage_* + commit_staged per touched table (concatenating accumulated batches; merge-mode dedupes by id, last-write-wins), and the publisher publishes the manifest atomically across all touched sub-tables. Cross-table conflicts surface as ManifestConflictDetails::ExpectedVersionMismatch.
  • Deletes stage too (MR-A). Lance 7.0's DeleteBuilder::execute_uncommitted (#6658) makes delete a two-phase op, so deletes no longer inline-commit. Each delete records a predicate in MutationStaging.delete_predicates; at end-of-query stage_all combines a table's predicates into one stage_delete (a deletion-vector transaction, no HEAD advance) committed through the same commit_staged path as writes. A predicate matching zero rows stages nothing — no inline residual, and the zero-row drift class is closed by construction. The parse-time D₂ rule (below) still prevents inserts/updates from coexisting with deletes in one query.

This upholds the manifest-atomic mutation and read-your-writes invariants tracked in docs/dev/invariants.md.

D₂ — parse-time mixed-mode rejection

A single mutation query is either insert/update-only or delete-only. Mixed → rejected at parse time with a clear error directing the user to split the query. This is a deliberate boundary, not a temporary limitation. Inserts/updates accumulate as pending batches and deletes as predicates, and both stage correctly; keeping a single query to one kind means read-your-writes within that query stays unambiguous (a read never reconciles pending inserts against same-query delete predicates) and each touched table commits at most one version. Compose mixed operations by issuing separate atomic mutations (writes, then deletes), or a branch + merge for one atomic commit. Allowing mixing would instead require an in-query delete view, pending pruning, and per-table two-commit ordering in the hot mutation path — complexity this boundary deliberately avoids.

MR-793 status (storage trait two-phase invariant) — partial

MR-793 hoists the staged-write pattern into a TableStorage trait surface with sealed-trait enforcement and opaque SnapshotHandle / StagedHandle types — see crates/omnigraph/src/storage_layer.rs. The trait is the canonical surface for new engine code; existing call sites still use the inherent TableStore methods (mechanical migration deferred to a follow-up cycle — tracked).

Three writers have been migrated onto staged primitives:

  • ensure_indices (db/omnigraph/table_ops.rs::build_indices_on_dataset_for_catalog) — scalar indices (BTree, Inverted) use stage_create_*_index + commit_staged. Which index a @index/@key property gets is dispatched by type via node_prop_index_kind (enum + orderable scalar → BTree, free-text String → Inverted/FTS, Vector → vector). Vector indices stay inline (residual — Lance build_index_metadata_from_segments is pub(crate) in 6.0.1; companion ticket to lance-format/lance#6658 needed). This build is existence-gated (it creates a missing index over current fragments); folding fragments appended afterward into an existing index is optimize's optimize_indices pass — an inline-commit residual, not a staged write (Lance exposes no uncommitted index-optimize), covered by the optimize recovery sidecar (see maintenance.md).
  • branch_merge::publish_rewritten_merge_table (exec/merge.rs) — merge_insert now uses stage_merge_insert + commit_staged; its deletes use stage_delete + commit_staged (MR-A).
  • schema_apply rewritten_tables (db/omnigraph/schema_apply.rs) — rewrites use stage_overwrite + commit_staged, including empty-table rewrites via a zero-fragment Lance Operation::Overwrite.

A defense-in-depth integration test (tests/forbidden_apis.rs) walks engine source and fails if non-allow-listed code calls Lance's inline-commit APIs directly. The trait surface itself is the primary enforcement (sealed + only-callable-via-trait once call sites land); the grep test catches type-system bypass attempts.

The "finalize → publisher residual" described below applies equally to the migrated writers — Lance has no multi-dataset atomic commit primitive, so the per-table commit_staged → manifest publish gap is the same drift class. Closing it requires either upstream Lance multi-dataset commit OR the omnigraph-side recovery-on-open reconciler described in .context/mr-793-design.md §15 (deferred to MR-795).

Inline-commit residuals live on InlineCommitResidual, not db.storage() (MR-793 acceptance §1, by construction)

MR-793's acceptance criterion §1 ("TableStore (or successor) public API has no method that performs a manifest commit as a side effect of writing") holds by construction after MR-854. db.storage() (&dyn TableStorage) exposes only staged primitives + reads; the inline-commit writes Lance cannot yet stage live on a separate InlineCommitResidual trait reached via Omnigraph::storage_inline_residual(). A new engine writer cannot couple a write with a Lance HEAD advance through the default surface — it would have to name the residual accessor explicitly. The dead legacy methods (trait append_batch / merge_insert_batches, inherent merge_insert_batch{,es}, create_{btree,inverted}_index) were removed; appends/merges and scalar index builds all use the stage_* primitives.

One method remains on InlineCommitResidual, named honestly at its call site:

Residual method Inline-commit reason Closes when
create_vector_index Vector indices take Lance's "segment commit path"; build_index_metadata_from_segments is pub(crate) (Lance #6666 still open) Lance #6666 lands and stage_create_vector_index joins the staged surface

delete_where used to be the second residual. Lance 7.0's DeleteBuilder::execute_uncommitted (#6658) made delete a staged write, so MR-A migrated it to TableStorage::stage_delete and removed InlineCommitResidual::delete_where. The parse-time D₂ rule is retained as a deliberate boundary (constructive XOR destructive per query) — see the D₂ section above.

The tests/forbidden_apis.rs guard still catches direct lance::* inline-commit misuse outside the storage layer; the trait split makes the staged-only default a type-system guarantee on top of it.

LoadMode::Overwrite uses staged Lance Overwrite

The bulk loader's Append, Merge, and Overwrite modes all use the staged-write path described above. LoadMode::Overwrite accumulates replacement batches in memory, validates node/edge constraints, referential integrity, and edge cardinality before any Lance HEAD movement, stages each touched table with Lance Operation::Overwrite, then runs commit_staged under the normal SidecarKind::Load recovery sidecar before publishing __manifest. OMNIGRAPH_LOAD_CONCURRENCY applies to the fragment-writing stage only; the commit and manifest publish still run under the per-table write queues. Empty-table overwrite is represented as a valid zero-fragment Lance Overwrite transaction, not as truncate-then-append.

Open-time recovery sweep

The staged-write rewire eliminates one drift class by construction at the writer layer: an op that fails before pushing to the in-memory accumulator (validation errors, missing endpoints, parse-time D₂ rejection) leaves Lance HEAD untouched on every staged table. This is the case the partial_failure_leaves_target_queryable_and_unblocks_next_mutation test pins.

A second, narrower drift class — the finalize → publisher window — is closed across one open cycle by the open-time recovery sweep:

MutationStaging::finalize runs stage_* + commit_staged per touched table sequentially, then the publisher commits the manifest. Lance has no multi-dataset atomic commit, so the per-table commit_staged calls are independent operations: if commit_staged on table N+1 fails after commit_staged on tables 1..N succeeded, or if the publisher's CAS pre-check rejects after every commit_staged succeeded, tables 1..N are left at Lance HEAD = manifest_pinned + 1.

Recovery protocol (lifecycle of every staged-write writer — MutationStaging::finalize, schema_apply::apply_schema_with_lock, branch_merge_on_current_target, ensure_indices_for_branch, optimize_all_tables):

  1. Phase A: writer writes a sidecar JSON to __recovery/{ulid}.json BEFORE its first HEAD-advancing commit (commit_staged, or compact_files for optimize_all_tables, which advances the Lance HEAD via a reserve-fragments + rewrite commit rather than a staged write). The sidecar names every (table_key, table_path, expected_version, post_commit_pin) it intends to commit + the writer kind + actor_id.
  2. Phase B: writer's per-table commit_staged loop runs.
    • Phase-B confirmation (BranchMerge only): a BranchMerge writer advances each table's HEAD by several commits (append → upsert → delete), so a bare "HEAD moved" is ambiguous — it could be a complete publish or one crashed mid-sequence. After the whole per-table loop finishes, the writer re-writes the sidecar stamping each pin's confirmed_version with the exact achieved version, then proceeds to Phase C. This is the commit point of the recovery WAL: a crash after confirmation rolls forward to those versions; a crash during Phase B (sidecar still unconfirmed) rolls back. Other writers don't confirm — their drift is derived state (index coverage, compaction) that a partial roll-forward never corrupts.
  3. Phase C: publisher commits the manifest.
  4. Phase D: writer deletes the sidecar.

Phase letter convention. Throughout the recovery code, log messages, failpoint names (e.g. branch_merge.post_phase_b_pre_manifest_commit), and the per-writer integration tests, "Phase A/B/C/D" refers exclusively to the four-step lifecycle above. The per-table staged-write contract (stage_* then commit_staged, two steps) is referred to by those API verbs — never by phase letters — so a reader of recovery.rs, failpoints.rs, or this document only encounters phase letters in the per-writer context.

A failure between Phase A and Phase D leaves the sidecar on disk. The next Omnigraph::open (gated on OpenMode::ReadWrite) runs the recovery sweep in crates/omnigraph/src/db/manifest/recovery.rs:

  • For each sidecar in __recovery/, compare every named table's Lance HEAD to the manifest pin. Classify per the all-or-nothing decision tree (RolledPastExpected / NoMovement / UnexpectedAtP1 / UnexpectedMultistep / IncompletePhaseB / InvariantViolation). For a BranchMerge sidecar, a moved HEAD with no confirmed_version classifies as IncompletePhaseB (a partial multi-commit publish) and forces roll-back; with a confirmed_version, roll-forward targets exactly that version.
  • If any table is InvariantViolation (Lance HEAD < manifest pinned — should be impossible), abort with a loud error and leave the sidecar on disk for operator review.
  • Otherwise, if every table is RolledPastExpected, roll forward: a single ManifestBatchPublisher::publish call extends every pin atomically. SchemaApply sidecars are eligible only when schema-state recovery promoted the matching staging files in the same recovery pass; otherwise full open-time recovery rolls them back and refresh-time recovery leaves them for the next read-write open.
  • Otherwise roll back: per-table Dataset::restore to the manifest-pinned table version, then a single ManifestBatchPublisher::publish of the restored HEAD — symmetric with roll-forward, so manifest == HEAD after recovery (no residual drift). This convergence is what lets a failed-then-retried schema apply succeed instead of failing one version higher each iteration. The audit row's to_version records the logical rolled-back-to version (manifest_pinned); the manifest is published at the restore commit (manifest_pinned + 1, same content).
  • After a successful roll-forward or roll-back, an audit row is recorded — the graph commit lineage (the graph_commit rows in __manifest since RFC-013 Phase 7) carries a commit tagged actor_id = "omnigraph:recovery", and a sibling _graph_commit_recoveries.lance row carries recovery_kind, recovery_for_actor (the original sidecar's actor), operation_id, per-table outcomes. Operators run omnigraph commit list --filter actor=omnigraph:recovery to find recoveries.
  • Sidecar deleted as the final step.

Triggers for the residual: transient Lance write errors during finalize (object-store retry budget exhaustion, disk full); persistent publisher contention exceeding PUBLISHER_RETRY_BUDGET = 5 retries.

Long-running servers: the write entry points (load_as, mutate_as, apply_schema_as, branch_merge_as) and Omnigraph::refresh run roll-forward-only recovery in-process (recovery::heal_pending_sidecars_roll_forward) — the common Phase B → Phase C residual closes on the next write, without a restart and without an explicit refresh. The heal lists __recovery/ (one list_dir; empty in the steady state) and, per sidecar, acquires the same per-(table_key, table_branch) write queues every sidecar writer holds from before write_sidecar until after delete_sidecar — so it serializes against a live writer instead of rolling its in-flight sidecar forward from under it (a sidecar whose queues can be acquired belongs to a writer that finished or died; an existence re-check after the wait skips the finished case). Lock order is queues → coordinator, matching every writer's commit→publish path. Pinned by the four tests/failpoints.rs::*_after_finalize_publisher_failure_heals_without_reopen tests (load, mutation, schema apply, branch merge). The maintenance entries need the heal for more than liveness: without it, a schema apply re-plans rewrites from the manifest pin and orphans the drifted Phase-B commit (dropping its rows), and a branch merge publishes the drift as an unattributed side effect — both while the stale sidecar lingers to misclassify later. Sidecars that would require a Dataset::restore (mixed / unexpected state) are deferred to the next OpenMode::ReadWrite open: restore is unsafe under concurrency because Lance's check_restore_txn accepts the restore against in-flight Append/Update/Delete commits and silently orphans them (pinned by tests/staged_writes.rs::lance_restore_loses_to_concurrent_append_via_orphaning). When such a deferred sidecar blocks a write, the commit-time drift guard says so explicitly ("a pending recovery sidecar requires rollback — reopen the graph read-write") instead of pointing at omnigraph repair, which refuses while a sidecar is pending. Continuous in-process recovery for the rollback path is the goal of a future background reconciler. ensure_indices does not heal at entry itself — it runs inside the load / schema-apply flows after their entry heal, and its strict preconditions still fail loudly on drift when invoked directly.

The publisher-CAS contract is unchanged: a concurrent writer that advances any of our touched tables between snapshot capture and publisher commit produces exactly one winner. The residual above is about our abandoned commits in the failure path, not about concurrency races.

Sidecar I/O failure semantics (all sidecar I/O goes through the backend-generic StorageAdapter; the contracts below are pinned by the storage-fault failpoints recovery.sidecar_{write,delete,list} / recovery.record_audit and their tests in tests/failpoints.rs and tests/recovery.rs):

  • Phase A put fails (S3 PutObject / fs write): the writer aborts before its first HEAD-advancing commit — no sidecar, no drift, nothing to recover; a transient fault never wedges later writes.
  • Phase D delete fails (S3 DeleteObject): swallowed with a warning — the write already published, so failing the caller would report an error for a durable write. The stale sidecar is consumed by the next write's entry heal (or the next open) via the stale-sidecar audit-recovery path, recorded as RolledForward.
  • __recovery/ list fails (S3 ListObjectsV2): loud at every consumer — the write-entry heal fails the write, the open-time sweep fails the open. Silently skipping recovery would be consumer tolerance of drift.
  • Corrupt / unparseable sidecar: refused loudly by heal and open alike; the file stays on disk for operator inspection (read-only opens still work — the sweep is skipped there).
  • Audit append fails after a roll-forward publish: that recovery attempt errors and keeps the sidecar; re-entry sees the already-published manifest, records exactly one RolledForward audit row, and deletes the sidecar (the retry tolerance documented on record_audit).

Backend notes (the adapter is one implementation over object_store for every backend): local writes stage through name#<digits> temp files that the backend filters from listings and refuses to address — crash residue of that shape is invisible to the sweep, harmless, and reclaimed by delete_prefix/manual cleanup. Storage errors are backend-wrapped text without a typed NotFound discriminant — callers that need missing-vs-error (the cluster store) probe exists() first. exists() itself is object-store semantics everywhere: only objects (or non-empty prefixes) exist, and a permission failure is a loud error, not a silent false.

Conflict shape

Concurrent writers to the same (table, branch) produce exactly one success and one failure. The losing writer's error is OmniError::Manifest with kind Conflict and details ManifestConflictDetails::ExpectedVersionMismatch { table_key, expected, actual }. The HTTP server maps this to 409 Conflict with body {"error": "...", "code": "conflict", "manifest_conflict": { "table_key": "...", "expected": N, "actual": M }} — see docs/user/server.md.

Audit

actor_id lands in the graph commit lineage — the graph_commit rows in __manifest, written in the publish CAS (RFC-013 Phase 7; previously _graph_commits.lance). Audit history is queried via omnigraph commit list.

Storage versioning (no in-place migration)

db/manifest/migrations.rs is the single place the on-disk __manifest shape is reconciled with what the binary expects. Storage is strict-single-version (the strand model): this binary reads exactly ONE internal-schema version (MIN_SUPPORTED == CURRENT == 4), so there is no in-place migration.

  • Graph creation stamps omnigraph:internal_schema_version at CURRENT, so a fresh graph always opens.
  • Omnigraph::open (both read-write and read-only) reads main's stamp before the coordinator reads any branch state and calls refuse_if_stamp_unsupported: a stamp below CURRENT is refused with a rebuild-via-export/import message; a stamp above CURRENT is refused with "upgrade omnigraph". The publisher re-checks the stamp on its write path against the branch it targets, with no object-store writes, so the check is safe under a read-only open.
  • The stamp + refuse_if_stamp_unsupported floor is the only seam a future in-place migration would re-introduce (re-add a dispatcher and lower MIN_SUPPORTED). Until a concrete graph demands it, that machinery is deliberately absent — see versioning.md (the compatibility policy) and the upgrade guide (the rebuild recipe).

The stamp history (v1 PK-less, v2 unenforced-PK, v3 __run__* sweep, v4 lineage in __manifest with the commit-graph tables retired) is recorded on the INTERNAL_MANIFEST_SCHEMA_VERSION doc-comment; only v4 is served. An earlier-stamped graph is rebuilt via export/import, not migrated in place.

Mid-query partial failure: closed by MR-794

The pre-MR-794 design had a known limitation: a multi-statement .gq mutation where op-N inline-committed a Lance fragment and op-N+1 then failed left the touched table at Lance HEAD = manifest_version + 1, blocking the next mutation with ExpectedVersionMismatch.

MR-794 (step 1 + step 2+) closed this for inserts/updates by construction at the writer layer: insert and update batches accumulate in memory; no Lance HEAD advance happens during op execution; one stage_* + commit_staged per touched table runs at end-of-query, and only after every op succeeded. A failed op leaves Lance HEAD untouched on the staged tables, so the next mutation proceeds normally with no drift to reconcile.

The cancellation case (future drop mid-mutation) inherits the same guarantee — the in-memory accumulator evaporates with the dropped task and no Lance write was ever issued.

Delete-touching mutations now inherit the same guarantee (MR-A). Deletes accumulate as predicates and stage via stage_delete at end-of-query, so a delete cascade that fails mid-way advances no Lance HEAD — the same "untouched on failure" property as inserts/updates. The old narrow inline window (and the retry/cleanup workaround it required) is gone. The parse-time D₂ rule keeps inserts/updates from coexisting with deletes in one query as a deliberate boundary (see the D₂ section above), so a mutation is always purely constructive or purely destructive.