Move the 23 flat docs/user/*.md files into topic subdirectories so the user guide is organized by area (schema, queries, search, branching, cli, operations, clusters, concepts, reference) instead of a flat list. This is a pure structural move — whole files relocated, every cross-doc link recomputed, no prose rewrites or content splits (those follow in Phase 2). - 19 `git mv`s (install.md, deployment.md stay top-level); history preserved (renames detected at 92–100% similarity). - All intra-doc links, AGENTS.md's topic table (52 pointers), and the docs/dev + docs/releases back-links recomputed via relpath from each file's new location. - docs/user/index.md rewritten as a sectioned nav hub. - Fixed 5 doc-path references in Rust (comments + two user-facing server settings error strings) to point at the new locations. Verified: zero broken .md links across tracked docs; check-agents-md.sh green (with the untracked scratch docs set aside); touched crates build. Note: the public site (omnigraph-web) imports docs/ via a flat-only script; its import-docs.mjs needs a subdir-aware update before the next re-sync. Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.8 <noreply@anthropic.com>
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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__manifestby the v2→v3 internal-schema migration on first read-write open. (The inert_graph_runs.lancebytes remain until adelete_prefixprimitive lands.) - Cancelled mutation futures leave no graph-level state — only orphaned
Lance fragments, which the existing
omnigraph cleanuppipe reclaims.
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
RecordBatchinto the per-table pending accumulator. Lance HEAD does not advance during op execution. - Read sites (validation, predicate matching for
update) consumeTableStore::scan_with_pending, which scans committed via Lance and applies the same SQL filter to the pending batches via DataFusionMemTable. Same-query writes are visible to subsequent reads. - At end-of-query,
MutationStaging::finalizeissues exactly onestage_*+commit_stagedper touched table (concatenating accumulated batches; merge-mode dedupes byid, last-write-wins), and the publisher publishes the manifest atomically across all touched sub-tables. Cross-table conflicts surface asManifestConflictDetails::ExpectedVersionMismatch. - Deletes still inline-commit. Lance's
Dataset::deleteis not exposed as a two-phase op in 6.0.1; deletes go throughdelete_whereimmediately and record their post-write state inMutationStaging.inline_committed. The parse-time D₂ rule (below) prevents inserts/updates from coexisting with deletes in one query, so the inline path is safe for delete-only mutations.
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. Reason: mixing creates ordering hazards (insert→delete on the same row would silently no-op because the staged insert isn't visible to delete; cascading deletes of just-inserted edges break referential integrity). Until Lance exposes a two-phase delete API, the parse-time rejection keeps both paths atomic and correct. Tracked: MR-793, plus a Lance-upstream ticket.
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) now usestage_create_*_index+commit_staged. Vector indices stay inline (residual — Lancebuild_index_metadata_from_segmentsispub(crate)in 6.0.1; companion ticket to lance-format/lance#6658 needed).branch_merge::publish_rewritten_merge_table(exec/merge.rs) — merge_insert now usesstage_merge_insert+commit_staged. Deletes stay inline (Lance #6658 residual).schema_applyrewritten_tables (db/omnigraph/schema_apply.rs) — rewrites usestage_overwrite+commit_staged, including empty-table rewrites via a zero-fragment LanceOperation::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.
Two methods remain on InlineCommitResidual, each named honestly at its call site:
| Residual method | Inline-commit reason | Closes when |
|---|---|---|
delete_where |
DeleteBuilder::execute_uncommitted is not in Lance v6.0.1 (closed upstream as #6658 but first ships in v7.0.0-beta.10); see docs/dev/lance.md |
MR-A: Lance v7.x bump migrates delete_where to staged, retires the parse-time D₂ mutation rule, and extends recovery sidecar coverage |
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 |
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):
- Phase A: writer writes a sidecar JSON to
__recovery/{ulid}.jsonBEFORE its first HEAD-advancing commit (commit_staged, orcompact_filesforoptimize_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. - Phase B: writer's per-table
commit_stagedloop runs. - Phase C: publisher commits the manifest.
- 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_*thencommit_staged, two steps) is referred to by those API verbs — never by phase letters — so a reader ofrecovery.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 / InvariantViolation). - 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 singleManifestBatchPublisher::publishcall extends every pin atomically.SchemaApplysidecars 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::restoreto the manifest-pinned table version, then a singleManifestBatchPublisher::publishof the restored HEAD — symmetric with roll-forward, somanifest == HEADafter 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'sto_versionrecords 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 —
_graph_commits.lancecarries a commit taggedactor_id = "omnigraph:recovery", and a sibling_graph_commit_recoveries.lancerow carriesrecovery_kind,recovery_for_actor(the original sidecar's actor),operation_id, per-table outcomes. Operators runomnigraph commit list --filter actor=omnigraph:recoveryto 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
RolledForwardaudit row, and deletes the sidecar (the retry tolerance documented onrecord_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 _graph_commits.lance via record_graph_commit (no
intermediate run record). Audit history is queried via omnigraph commit list.
Migration code
db/manifest/migrations.rs carries the v2→v3 internal-schema step (MR-770):
a one-time sweep that deletes legacy __run__* staging branches off
__manifest. It runs in Omnigraph::open(ReadWrite) (via
manifest::migrate_on_open, before the coordinator reads branch state) and
again on the publisher's write path; both are idempotent once the stamp is at
v3. Deleting the inert _graph_runs.lance / _graph_run_actors.lance dataset
bytes is still deferred — it needs a StorageAdapter::delete_prefix
primitive — but those bytes are invisible to graph-level state.
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.
For delete-touching mutations the legacy inline-commit shape is
preserved (Lance has no public two-phase delete in 6.0.1) — the same
narrow window remains. The parse-time D₂ rule prevents inserts/updates
from coexisting with deletes in one query, so a pure-delete failure
cannot drift any staged-table state. If a delete-only multi-table
mutation fails mid-cascade, the same workaround as before applies
(retry; rely on omnigraph cleanup once a later successful commit
moves HEAD past the orphan version). Closing this requires Lance to
expose DeleteJob::execute_uncommitted; tracked in MR-793 and a
Lance-upstream ticket.