giles bd2c61367d
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Test, Build, and Deploy / test-build-deploy (push) Failing after 37s
fed-sx-m2: Step 8e — httpc:request/4 BIF wrapper (+ 10 tests)
Closes the BIF half of Step 8. Native http-request primitive landed
in architecture via the fed-prims merge (the m2 plan's Blocker #2),
so the briefing-allowed-exception wrapper in lib/erlang/runtime.sx
can finally be wired.

Marshalling at the BIF boundary:
  Url     : Erlang binary -> SX string (byte-list -> integer->char).
  Method  : Erlang atom upcased ('get -> "GET") for HTTP-wire
            convention, or Erlang binary passes through verbatim.
  Headers : Erlang proplist -> SX dict via er-proplist-to-dict.
  Body    : Erlang binary -> SX string.

Result {:status :headers :body} marshalled back to Erlang
  {ok, Status::integer,
       Headers::proplist (binary-keyed via er-of-sx-deep),
       Body::binary (char->integer over the SX string)}.

Bad arg shapes (non-binary URL or body) raise error:badarg; native
DNS / connect / bad-URL failures surface as Erlang error markers
that the caller can catch.

Test: next/tests/httpc_request.sh 10/10
  - registration under httpc/request/4
  - BIF marked non-pure
  - wrong-arity (/1) absent from registry
  - badarg on non-binary URL
  - badarg on non-binary body
  - live GET against `python3 -m http.server` -> Status 200
  - body bytes match "hello from python\n"
  - headers come back as proplist (is_list/1 = true)
  - 404 path -> {ok, 404, ...} (not an error tuple)
  - method passed as binary works

URLs spelled out as byte-list <<104,116,116,p,...>> binaries since
the parser truncates <<"..."> string-literal binaries (same
workaround backfill_drain.sh uses for inbox paths).

Plan: 8e ticked; Blocker #2 marked RESOLVED with the merge that
unblocked it referenced. Step 8f (live HTTP dispatch through
delivery_worker) and Step 10c (peer-actor doc fetch) are now
unblocked.

No-regression gates green: Erlang conformance 761/761,
http_multi_actor 44/44, follower_graph 18/18, follow_lifecycle 9/9,
backfill 20/20, backfill_drain 6/6, http_listen_bif 5/5.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-06-07 10:44:25 +00:00
2026-03-25 00:36:57 +00:00
2026-02-24 20:10:23 +00:00

Rose Ash

Monorepo for the Rose Ash cooperative platform — six Quart microservices sharing a common infrastructure layer, a single PostgreSQL database, and an ActivityPub federation layer.

Services

Service URL Description
blog blog.rose-ash.com Content management, Ghost sync, navigation, editor
market market.rose-ash.com Product listings, scraping, market pages
cart cart.rose-ash.com Shopping cart, checkout, orders, SumUp payments
events events.rose-ash.com Calendar, event entries, container widgets
federation federation.rose-ash.com OAuth2 authorization server, ActivityPub hub, social features
account account.rose-ash.com User dashboard, newsletters, tickets, bookings

All services are Python 3.11 / Quart apps served by Hypercorn, deployed as a Docker Swarm stack.

Repository structure

rose-ash/
├── shared/              # Common code: models, services, infrastructure, templates
│   ├── models/          # Canonical SQLAlchemy ORM models (all domains)
│   ├── services/        # Domain service implementations + registry
│   ├── contracts/       # DTOs, protocols, widget contracts
│   ├── infrastructure/  # App factory, OAuth, ActivityPub, fragments, Jinja setup
│   ├── templates/       # Shared base templates and partials
│   ├── static/          # Shared CSS, JS, images
│   ├── editor/          # Prose editor (Node build, blog only)
│   └── alembic/         # Database migrations
├── blog/                # Blog app
├── market/              # Market app
├── cart/                # Cart app
├── events/              # Events app
├── federation/          # Federation app
├── account/             # Account app
├── docker-compose.yml   # Swarm stack definition
├── deploy.sh            # Local build + restart script
├── .gitea/workflows/    # CI: build changed apps + deploy
├── _config/             # Runtime config (app-config.yaml)
├── schema.sql           # Reference schema snapshot
└── .env                 # Environment variables (not committed)

Each app follows the same layout:

{app}/
├── app.py               # App entry point (creates Quart app)
├── path_setup.py        # Adds project root + app dir to sys.path
├── entrypoint.sh        # Container entrypoint (wait for DB, run migrations, start)
├── Dockerfile           # Build instructions (monorepo context)
├── bp/                  # Blueprints (routes, handlers)
│   └── fragments/       # Fragment endpoints for cross-app composition
├── models/              # Re-export stubs pointing to shared/models/
├── services/            # App-specific service wiring
├── templates/           # App-specific templates (override shared/)
└── config/              # App-specific config

Key architecture patterns

Shared models — All ORM models live in shared/models/. Each app's models/ directory contains thin re-export stubs. factory.py imports all six apps' models at startup so SQLAlchemy relationship references resolve across domains.

Service contracts — Apps communicate through typed protocols (shared/contracts/protocols.py) and frozen dataclass DTOs (shared/contracts/dtos.py), wired via a singleton registry (shared/services/registry.py). No direct HTTP calls between apps for domain logic.

Fragment composition — Apps expose HTML fragments at /internal/fragments/<type> for cross-app UI composition. The blog fetches cart, account, navigation, and event fragments to compose its pages. Fragments are cached in Redis with short TTLs.

OAuth SSO — Federation is the OAuth2 authorization server. All other apps are OAuth clients with per-app first-party session cookies (Safari ITP compatible). Login/callback/logout routes are auto-registered via shared/infrastructure/oauth.py.

ActivityPub — Each app has its own AP actor (virtual projection of the same keypair). The federation app is the social hub (timeline, compose, follow, notifications). Activities are emitted to ap_activities table and processed by EventProcessor.

Development

Quick deploy (skip CI)

# Rebuild + restart one app
./deploy.sh blog

# Rebuild + restart multiple apps
./deploy.sh blog market

# Rebuild all
./deploy.sh --all

# Auto-detect changes from git
./deploy.sh

Full stack deploy

source .env
docker stack deploy -c docker-compose.yml coop

Build a single app image

docker build -f blog/Dockerfile -t registry.rose-ash.com:5000/blog:latest .

Run migrations

Migrations run automatically on the blog service startup when RUN_MIGRATIONS=true is set (only blog runs migrations; all other apps skip them).

# Manual migration
docker exec -it $(docker ps -qf name=coop_blog) bash -c "cd shared && alembic upgrade head"

CI/CD

A single Gitea Actions workflow (.gitea/workflows/ci.yml) handles all six apps:

  1. Detects which files changed since the last deploy
  2. If shared/ or docker-compose.yml changed, rebuilds all apps
  3. Otherwise rebuilds only apps with changes (or missing images)
  4. Pushes images to the private registry
  5. Runs docker stack deploy to update the swarm

Required secrets

Secret Value
DEPLOY_SSH_KEY Private SSH key for root access to the deploy host
DEPLOY_HOST Hostname or IP of the deploy server

Infrastructure

  • Runtime: Python 3.11, Quart (async Flask), Hypercorn
  • Database: PostgreSQL 16 (shared by all apps)
  • Cache: Redis 7 (page cache, fragment cache, sessions)
  • Orchestration: Docker Swarm
  • Registry: registry.rose-ash.com:5000
  • CI: Gitea Actions
  • Reverse proxy: Caddy (external, not in this repo)
Description
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