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ATOCore/tests/test_database.py

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"""Tests for SQLite connection pragmas and runtime behavior."""
import sqlite3
import atocore.config as config
from atocore.models.database import get_connection, init_db
def test_get_connection_applies_busy_timeout_and_wal(tmp_path, monkeypatch):
monkeypatch.setenv("ATOCORE_DATA_DIR", str(tmp_path / "data"))
monkeypatch.setenv("ATOCORE_DB_BUSY_TIMEOUT_MS", "7000")
original_settings = config.settings
try:
config.settings = config.Settings()
init_db()
with get_connection() as conn:
busy_timeout = conn.execute("PRAGMA busy_timeout").fetchone()[0]
journal_mode = conn.execute("PRAGMA journal_mode").fetchone()[0]
foreign_keys = conn.execute("PRAGMA foreign_keys").fetchone()[0]
finally:
config.settings = original_settings
assert busy_timeout == 7000
assert str(journal_mode).lower() == "wal"
assert foreign_keys == 1
def test_get_connection_uses_configured_timeout_value(tmp_path, monkeypatch):
monkeypatch.setenv("ATOCORE_DATA_DIR", str(tmp_path / "data"))
monkeypatch.setenv("ATOCORE_DB_BUSY_TIMEOUT_MS", "2500")
original_settings = config.settings
original_connect = sqlite3.connect
calls = []
def fake_connect(*args, **kwargs):
calls.append(kwargs.get("timeout"))
return original_connect(*args, **kwargs)
try:
config.settings = config.Settings()
monkeypatch.setattr("atocore.models.database.sqlite3.connect", fake_connect)
init_db()
finally:
config.settings = original_settings
assert calls
assert calls[0] == 2.5
fix: schema init ordering, deploy.sh default, client BASE_URL docs Three issues Dalidou Claude surfaced during the first real deploy of commit e877e5b to the live service (report from 2026-04-08). Bug 1 was the critical one — a schema init ordering bug that would have bitten every future upgrade from a pre-Phase-9 schema — and the other two were usability traps around hostname resolution. Bug 1 (CRITICAL): schema init ordering -------------------------------------- src/atocore/models/database.py SCHEMA_SQL contained CREATE INDEX statements that referenced columns added later by _apply_migrations(): CREATE INDEX IF NOT EXISTS idx_memories_project ON memories(project); CREATE INDEX IF NOT EXISTS idx_interactions_project_name ON interactions(project); CREATE INDEX IF NOT EXISTS idx_interactions_session ON interactions(session_id); On a FRESH install, CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS creates the tables with the Phase 9 shape (columns present), so the CREATE INDEX runs cleanly and _apply_migrations is effectively a no-op. On an UPGRADE from a pre-Phase-9 schema, CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS is a no-op (the tables already exist in the old shape), the columns are NOT added yet, and the CREATE INDEX fails with "OperationalError: no such column: project" before _apply_migrations gets a chance to add the columns. Dalidou Claude hit this exactly when redeploying from 0.1.0 to 0.2.0 — had to manually ALTER TABLE to add the Phase 9 columns before the container could start. The fix is to remove the Phase 9-column indexes from SCHEMA_SQL. They already exist in _apply_migrations() AFTER the corresponding ALTER TABLE, so they still get created on both fresh and upgrade paths — just after the columns exist, not before. Indexes still in SCHEMA_SQL (all safe — reference columns that have existed since the first release): - idx_chunks_document on source_chunks(document_id) - idx_memories_type on memories(memory_type) - idx_memories_status on memories(status) - idx_interactions_project on interactions(project_id) Indexes moved to _apply_migrations (already there — just no longer duplicated in SCHEMA_SQL): - idx_memories_project on memories(project) - idx_interactions_project_name on interactions(project) - idx_interactions_session on interactions(session_id) - idx_interactions_created_at on interactions(created_at) Regression test: tests/test_database.py --------------------------------------- New test_init_db_upgrades_pre_phase9_schema_without_failing: - Seeds the DB with the exact pre-Phase-9 shape (no project / last_referenced_at / reference_count on memories; no project / client / session_id / response / memories_used / chunks_used on interactions) - Calls init_db() — which used to raise OperationalError before the fix - Verifies all Phase 9 columns are present after the call - Verifies the migration indexes exist Before the fix this test would have failed with "OperationalError: no such column: project" on the init_db call. After the fix it passes. This locks the invariant "init_db is safe on any legacy schema shape" so the bug can't silently come back. Full suite: 216 passing (was 215), 1 warning. The +1 is the new regression test. Bug 3 (usability): deploy.sh DNS default ---------------------------------------- deploy/dalidou/deploy.sh ATOCORE_GIT_REMOTE defaulted to http://dalidou:3000/Antoine/ATOCore.git which requires the "dalidou" hostname to resolve. On the Dalidou host itself it didn't (no /etc/hosts entry for localhost alias), so deploy.sh had to be run with the IP as a manual workaround. Fix: default ATOCORE_GIT_REMOTE to http://127.0.0.1:3000/Antoine/ATOCore.git. Loopback always works on the host running the script. Callers from a remote host (e.g. running deploy.sh from a laptop against the Dalidou LAN) set ATOCORE_GIT_REMOTE explicitly. The script header's Environment Variables section documents this with an explicit reference to the 2026-04-08 Dalidou deploy report so the rationale isn't lost. docs/dalidou-deployment.md gets a new "Troubleshooting hostname resolution" subsection and a new example invocation showing how to deploy from a remote host with an explicit ATOCORE_GIT_REMOTE override. Bug 2 (usability): atocore_client.py ATOCORE_BASE_URL documentation ------------------------------------------------------------------- scripts/atocore_client.py Same class of issue as bug 3. BASE_URL defaults to http://dalidou:8100 which resolves fine from a remote caller (laptop, T420/OpenClaw over Tailscale) but NOT from the Dalidou host itself or from inside the atocore container. Dalidou Claude saw the CLI return {"status": "unavailable", "fail_open": true} while direct curl to http://127.0.0.1:8100 worked. The fix here is NOT to change the default (remote callers are the common case and would break) but to DOCUMENT the override clearly so the next operator knows what's happening: - The script module docstring grew a new "Environment variables" section covering ATOCORE_BASE_URL, ATOCORE_TIMEOUT_SECONDS, ATOCORE_REFRESH_TIMEOUT_SECONDS, and ATOCORE_FAIL_OPEN, with the explicit override example for on-host/in-container use - It calls out the exact symptom (fail-open envelope when the base URL doesn't resolve) so the diagnosis is obvious from the error alone - docs/dalidou-deployment.md troubleshooting section mirrors this guidance so there's one place to look regardless of whether the operator starts with the client help or the deploy doc What this commit does NOT do ---------------------------- - Does NOT change the default ATOCORE_BASE_URL. Doing that would break the T420 OpenClaw helper and every remote caller who currently relies on the hostname. Documentation is the right fix for this case. - Does NOT fix /etc/hosts on Dalidou. That's a host-level configuration issue that the user can fix if they prefer having the hostname resolve; the deploy.sh fix makes it unnecessary regardless. - Does NOT re-run the validation on Dalidou. The next step is for the live service to pull this commit via deploy.sh (which should now work without the IP workaround) and re-run the Phase 9 loop test to confirm nothing regressed.
2026-04-08 19:02:57 -04:00
def test_init_db_upgrades_pre_phase9_schema_without_failing(tmp_path, monkeypatch):
"""Regression test for the schema init ordering bug caught during
the first real Dalidou deploy (report from 2026-04-08).
Before the fix, SCHEMA_SQL contained CREATE INDEX statements that
referenced columns (memories.project, interactions.project,
interactions.session_id) added by _apply_migrations later in
init_db. On a fresh install this worked because CREATE TABLE
created the tables with the new columns before the CREATE INDEX
ran, but on UPGRADE from a pre-Phase-9 schema the CREATE TABLE
IF NOT EXISTS was a no-op and the CREATE INDEX hit
OperationalError: no such column.
This test seeds the tables with the OLD pre-Phase-9 shape then
calls init_db() and verifies that:
- init_db does not raise
- The new columns were added via _apply_migrations
- The new indexes exist
If the bug is reintroduced by moving a CREATE INDEX for a
migration column back into SCHEMA_SQL, this test will fail
with OperationalError before reaching the assertions.
"""
monkeypatch.setenv("ATOCORE_DATA_DIR", str(tmp_path / "data"))
original_settings = config.settings
try:
config.settings = config.Settings()
# Step 1: create the data dir and open a direct connection
config.ensure_runtime_dirs()
db_path = config.settings.db_path
# Step 2: seed the DB with the old pre-Phase-9 shape. No
# project/last_referenced_at/reference_count on memories; no
# project/client/session_id/response/memories_used/chunks_used
# on interactions. We also need the prerequisite tables
# (projects, source_documents, source_chunks) because the
# memories table has an FK to source_chunks.
with sqlite3.connect(str(db_path)) as conn:
conn.executescript(
"""
CREATE TABLE source_documents (
id TEXT PRIMARY KEY,
file_path TEXT UNIQUE NOT NULL,
file_hash TEXT NOT NULL,
title TEXT,
doc_type TEXT DEFAULT 'markdown',
tags TEXT DEFAULT '[]',
ingested_at DATETIME DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP,
updated_at DATETIME DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
);
CREATE TABLE source_chunks (
id TEXT PRIMARY KEY,
document_id TEXT NOT NULL REFERENCES source_documents(id) ON DELETE CASCADE,
chunk_index INTEGER NOT NULL,
content TEXT NOT NULL,
heading_path TEXT DEFAULT '',
char_count INTEGER NOT NULL,
metadata TEXT DEFAULT '{}',
created_at DATETIME DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
);
CREATE TABLE memories (
id TEXT PRIMARY KEY,
memory_type TEXT NOT NULL,
content TEXT NOT NULL,
source_chunk_id TEXT REFERENCES source_chunks(id),
confidence REAL DEFAULT 1.0,
status TEXT DEFAULT 'active',
created_at DATETIME DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP,
updated_at DATETIME DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
);
CREATE TABLE projects (
id TEXT PRIMARY KEY,
name TEXT UNIQUE NOT NULL,
description TEXT DEFAULT '',
status TEXT DEFAULT 'active',
created_at DATETIME DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP,
updated_at DATETIME DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
);
CREATE TABLE interactions (
id TEXT PRIMARY KEY,
prompt TEXT NOT NULL,
context_pack TEXT DEFAULT '{}',
response_summary TEXT DEFAULT '',
project_id TEXT REFERENCES projects(id),
created_at DATETIME DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
);
"""
)
conn.commit()
# Step 3: call init_db — this used to raise on the upgrade
# path. After the fix it should succeed.
init_db()
# Step 4: verify the migrations ran — Phase 9 columns present
with sqlite3.connect(str(db_path)) as conn:
conn.row_factory = sqlite3.Row
memories_cols = {
row["name"] for row in conn.execute("PRAGMA table_info(memories)")
}
interactions_cols = {
row["name"]
for row in conn.execute("PRAGMA table_info(interactions)")
}
assert "project" in memories_cols
assert "last_referenced_at" in memories_cols
assert "reference_count" in memories_cols
assert "project" in interactions_cols
assert "client" in interactions_cols
assert "session_id" in interactions_cols
assert "response" in interactions_cols
assert "memories_used" in interactions_cols
assert "chunks_used" in interactions_cols
# Step 5: verify the indexes on migration columns exist
index_rows = conn.execute(
"SELECT name FROM sqlite_master WHERE type='index' AND tbl_name IN ('memories','interactions')"
).fetchall()
index_names = {row["name"] for row in index_rows}
assert "idx_memories_project" in index_names
assert "idx_interactions_project_name" in index_names
assert "idx_interactions_session" in index_names
finally:
config.settings = original_settings