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fed-sx-m2: Step 10c — peer-actor doc fetch + cache (+ 11 tests)
Closes Step 10 (10a discovery + 10b webfinger + 10c fetch). New
next/kernel/discovery_fetch.erl produces a 1-arity FetchFn closure
suitable for peer_actors:lookup_or_fetch_srv/2, completing the
discovery half that Step 5c's peer_actors cache stubbed out.

discovery_fetch API:
  make_fetch_fn(Cfg) -> fun((PeerId) -> {ok, AS} | {error, _})
  fetch(Url, Cfg) -> {ok, AS} | {error, _}
  actor_doc_url(BaseUrl, PeerAtom) -> <Base>/actors/<peer>
  accept_header/0 -> <<"application/vnd.fed-sx.actor-doc">>
  decode_body(Body) -> {ok, AS} | {error, bad_actor_doc}

Closure GETs <base>/actors/<peer> via the Step 8e BIF with
Accept = application/vnd.fed-sx.actor-doc, decodes the response
body via term_codec:decode/1, returns the peer-actor-state
proplist (currently [{public_keys, [...]}]) in the shape
envelope:verify_signature consumes.

Cfg reuses dispatch_http's :peer_url / :peer_url_fn resolution so
a single Cfg threads through both delivery (8f) and discovery (10c).

Server side: http_server.erl extended to serve the same MIME.
  - accept_format/1 matches application/vnd.fed-sx.actor-doc first
    via the new actor_doc_prefix/0 — content negotiation atom is
    `actor_doc`.
  - content_type_for(actor_doc) emits the MIME on outbound.
  - actor_doc_response_for/3 kernel-aware arm: with kernel + actor
    -> 200 + term_codec:encode of nx_kernel:state_for/1 result.
    Unknown actor -> not_found_response/0. Other formats fall
    through to the existing /2 stub variants.
  - actor_get/3 route dispatch threads Cfg to the /3 arm.

Port quirks documented:
  * This Erlang doesn't support Mod:Fun(X) dispatch on a variable
    module — kernel_actor_state/2 hardcodes nx_kernel; the Cfg
    :kernel field is just a "no kernel wired" -> nil flag.
  * nx_kernel:actor_state/1 is the LEGACY single-bucket accessor
    that takes State (not ActorId); the server-side variant we
    want is state_for/1 (gen_server:call wrapper). Easy mismatch,
    documented in the comment.

Outcome mapping:
  2xx + decodable body -> {ok, AS}
  2xx + bad body       -> {error, bad_actor_doc}
  non-2xx              -> {error, {status, N}}
  resolver miss        -> {error, no_peer_url}
  transport            -> {error, Reason}  (BIF re-raises)

Test: next/tests/discovery_fetch.sh 11/11
  Server side (in-process via http_server:actor_doc_response_for):
    - Accept negotiation
    - kernel + actor -> 200 + decodable body w/ :public_keys
    - unknown actor -> 404
  Closure side (live HTTP against background python stub returning
  hand-crafted term_codec bytes):
    - URL construction <base>/actors/X
    - fetch live -> {ok, AS}
    - make_fetch_fn closure -> {ok, AS} via static :peer_url map
    - missing peer -> {error, no_peer_url}
    - 404 path -> {error, {status, 404}}
    - peer_actors:lookup_or_fetch/3 caches the result

Test setup note: Python term_codec encoder uses ELEMENT COUNT
(not byte length) for l/t headers — see encode/1 in term_codec.erl
which does integer_to_list(length(T)). Easy bug, documented in the
test's python source.

No-regression gates green: Erlang conformance 761/761,
httpc_request 10/10, dispatch_http 10/10, http_listen_bif 5/5,
peer_actors 19/19, discovery 12/12, http_accept 13/13,
http_actors 13/13.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-06-07 13:15:48 +00:00
..

next — fed-sx Milestone 1 kernel

Single-instance, single-actor fed-sx server built as Erlang-on-SX modules. See plans/fed-sx-design.md for the architecture and plans/fed-sx-milestone-1.md for the build plan + per-step progress log.

Status

Both Step 9 smoke proof points are functional in-process:

  • 9a-pure (verb extensibility)Create{DefineActivity{Pin}} registers Pin at runtime; subsequent Pin{path, cid} activities fold into a pin-state projection. Zero kernel code between definition and use. See next/tests/smoke_pin_pure.sh.
  • 9b-pure (reactive application) — A trigger projection matches Notes tagged smoketest and derives a TestEcho carrying the source CID. See next/tests/smoke_app_pure.sh.

The remaining 9a-tcp / 9b-tcp deliverables layer TCP transport on top — see Substrate gaps below.

Layout

next/
├── kernel/      Erlang-on-SX kernel modules (.erl)
├── genesis/     SX source files for the bootstrap bundle
├── tests/       Bash test scripts driving sx_server.exe via the epoch protocol
└── data/        Runtime state — gitignored

Module map

Module Role
nx_cid.erl Canonical CID wrapper around the host cid:to_string BIF
envelope.erl Activity envelope shape, canonical bytes, time-aware sig verify
log.erl Per-actor in-memory append log (open / append / tip / replay / entries)
registry.erl Pure-functional + gen_server-wrapped registry keyed by Kind
pipeline.erl Validation driver + stage_envelope/signature/replay/schema
projection.erl Pure projection driver + gen_server-per-projection wrapper
outbox.erl Envelope construct + sign + publish orchestrator + broadcast
bootstrap.erl Genesis read/build/verify/load + one-call start/3 kernel bring-up
define_registry.erl Meta-projection fold for Create{Define*} → registry
sandbox.erl eval_pure/2,3 try/catch envelope for projection folds
nx_kernel.erl Long-lived runtime orchestrator; per-actor bucketed state (m2 Step 1a)
http_server.erl route/1,2 + format-aware GET + POST + Accept header content negotiation

Genesis bundle

next/genesis/ contains 31 SX files across 7 sections, all consumed as data (read + serialised by bootstrap:populate_registry, not eval'd):

  • 3 activity-types — Create, Update, Delete
  • 10 object-types — SXArtifact, Note, Tombstone, 6 Define* meta-types, Snapshot
  • 7 projections — activity-log, by-type, by-actor, by-object, actor-state, define-registry, audience-graph
  • 3 validators — envelope-shape, signature, type-schema
  • 3 codecs — dag-cbor, raw, dag-json
  • 2 sig-suites — rsa-sha256-2018, ed25519-2020
  • 3 audience predicates — Public, Followers, Direct

manifest.sx is the bundle root, listed in dependency-friendly order.

Tests

43 test suites, ~560+ assertions. Each script drives sx_server.exe via the epoch protocol — loads the Erlang substrate, loads relevant kernel modules via code:load_binary / erlang-load-module, then exercises behaviour through erlang-eval-ast.

Conventions:

  • Scripts marked _pure.sh exercise pure-functional state.
  • Scripts marked _server.sh (or no suffix) exercise gen_server APIs and must inline start_link with operations — the Erlang-on-SX scheduler doesn't preserve spawned processes across separate erlang-eval-ast invocations.
  • smoke_*_pure.sh are end-to-end smoke tests demonstrating the §Step 9 proof points without TCP / curl / JSON.

The Erlang-on-SX conformance gate (bash lib/erlang/conformance.sh, 729 / 729) is the no-regression contract — every commit on loops/fed-sx-m1 preserves it.

Substrate

Each .erl source file is hot-loaded at boot via code:load_binary(Mod, Filename, SourceString) (Phase 7 BIF). Tests drive the runtime via the epoch protocol:

printf '(epoch 1)\n(load "lib/erlang/runtime.sx")\n(epoch 2)\n<test-expr>\n' \
  | hosts/ocaml/_build/default/bin/sx_server.exe

The kernel calls into these host primitives: crypto:hash/2, cid:from_bytes/1, cid:to_string/1, file:read_file/1, file:write_file/2, file:delete/1, file:list_dir/1, code:load_binary/3, plus http:listen/2 (the briefing's allowed scope exception, added to lib/erlang/runtime.sx).

Substrate gaps (parked work)

These three gaps block the remaining unchecked deliverables:

  1. Term codec (3b/3c) — all three substrate fixes done 2026-06-05: erlang:binary_to_list/1 and erlang:list_to_binary/1 registered in lib/erlang/runtime.sx (iolist-aware); the tokenizer's $X branch emits the decimal char code; atom_to_list/1 and integer_to_list/1 now return Erlang charlists (standard Erlang semantics) with list_to_atom/ list_to_integer accepting both charlists and SX strings for back-compat. 759/759 conformance. The full term-codec primitive set is in place — Step 3b on-disk segment writer can encode arbitrary Erlang activity terms (atoms, ints, binaries, tuples, lists) into byte sequences using only Erlang-native primitives.

  2. SX-source eval bridge — There's no BIF that lets Erlang call into the SX evaluator on a parsed source string. Blocks evaluating the :schema / :fold / :predicate / :verify bodies from the genesis bundle. Erlang-fun stand-ins (pipeline:stage_schema, define_registry:fold, etc.) prove the API shapes; the bridge would let bundle bodies dispatch through them unchanged.

  3. Dict ↔ proplist marshalling for http:listen/2done 2026-06-05. er-bif-http-listen marshals the native server's request dict ({:method :path :query :headers :body}) into the proplist shape [{method, Bin}, {path, Bin}, {query, Bin}, {headers, [{Name, Value}]}, {body, Bin}] that http_server:route/2 consumes, and converts the handler's response proplist back to {:status :headers :body} for the native server to serialise. Helpers (er-request-dict-to-proplist, er-proplist-to-dict, er-of-sx-deep, er-to-sx-deep, er-dict-to-header-proplist, er-proplist-fill!) live alongside the BIF wrapper in lib/erlang/runtime.sx. The BIF also spawns the handler into a real Erlang process via er-spawn-fun + er-sched-run-all! so self() / gen_server:call work inside route handlers (the kernel and projection gen_servers reach the handler this way). Verified by next/tests/http_marshal.sh and the live TCP smoke next/tests/http_server_tcp.sh / http_server_start.sh. Unblocks Step 8b-start (TCP listener spawn) and the curl-driven 9a-tcp / 9b-tcp smoke tests.

Bringing up the kernel

For tests, bootstrap:start/3(ActorId, KeySpec, ActorState) is the one-call boot:

KM = <<1,2,3,4>>,
KS = [{key_id, k1}, {algorithm, ed25519}, {value, KM}],
AS = [{public_keys, [[{id, k1}, {created, 0}, {value, KM}]]}],
Pid = bootstrap:start(alice, KS, AS),
%% nx_kernel + registry populated; you now have a kernel.

The HTTP layer (http_server) and nx_kernel:publish/1 flow through the same in-process gen_servers; http_publish_fold.sh is the end-to-end proof the chain works.

What's next (when work resumes)

In priority order:

  1. 8b-starthttp_server:start/1 spawns a process hosting http:listen/2. (8b-bridge done — see Substrate gap #3.)
  2. 9a-tcp / 9b-tcp — replace the in-process smoke scripts with curl-driven versions hitting the running server.
  3. Term codec / on-disk log — needs either a new BIF or a temp-file workaround; current in-memory log keeps everything functional otherwise.
  4. SX-source eval bridge — unlocks real :schema / :fold body evaluation from the genesis bundle.