* 🐛 Fix library updates reappear after file is reloaded
Summary
Migrate synced_at timestamps to a standalone file_library_sync table to ensure sync state is tracked for both direct and transitive libraries.
Problem
Transitive libraries (libraries imported by other libraries) are not stored as direct rows in file_library_rel. Because the system previously coupled synced_at directly to the file_library_rel schema, transitive libraries lacked a persistent location for their sync timestamps. This caused sync states to be lost or incorrectly reported for nested dependencies.
Changes
Schema Migration: Created file_library_sync and migrated existing synced_at values from file_library_rel.
Decoupling: Removed tight Foreign Key coupling to allow sync rows to exist independently of specific relationship records.
Persistent Writes: Added upsert-file-library-sync! helper. Updated all import, duplication, and RPC write paths (v1/v2/v3 importers, link-file-library) to ensure every write persists a sync row.
Unified Reads: Updated both direct and recursive/transitive library queries to fetch synced_at from the new table.
Testing: Added regression tests to verify that sync rows are correctly created/updated even when a transitive relation is absent in file_library_rel.
Impact
This fix ensures that the system accurately records and retrieves sync states for the entire library dependency tree, resolving the bug where nested libraries appeared out of sync.
* ✨ MR review
The ReplServer Express app was calling `app.listen(port)` with no host
argument, causing Node/Express to default to binding on all interfaces
(0.0.0.0). Combined with the unauthenticated /execute endpoint, any
network peer could POST arbitrary JS and get it run inside the MCP
process.
Fix: add a `host` parameter (default "localhost") to the ReplServer
constructor and pass it to `app.listen`. The call site in
PenpotMcpServer now forwards `this.host` (sourced from
PENPOT_MCP_SERVER_HOST env var, default "localhost"), so environment-
variable overrides continue to work.
Signed-off-by: Andrey Antukh <niwi@niwi.nz>
* 🐛 Fix incorrect invitation token handling on register process
- Reject prepare-register-profile when an active profile already
exists for the requested email.
- Stop embedding an existing profile's :profile-id into the
prepared-register JWE. Profile resolution in register-profile is
now done exclusively by email lookup, never by a JWE claim.
- Add created? guard to the invitation-success branch in
register-profile, so existing profiles (active or not) cannot
reach session creation via anonymous registration.
Signed-off-by: Andrey Antukh <niwi@niwi.nz>
* ♻️ Restructure invitation handling inside register-profile
Move the invitation-success branch into the created? sub-cond so it
sits alongside the other post-creation branches, making the control
flow consistent.
- Active new profile + matching invitation: mint session and return
:invitation-token (frontend redirects to :auth-verify-token).
- Not-yet-active new profile + matching invitation: embed the
invitation token inside the verify-email JWE and send the
verification email. When the user clicks the link, they get
logged in and the frontend completes the team-invitation flow.
- Extend send-email-verification! with an optional invitation-token
parameter propagated into the verify-email JWE claims.
- Update the frontend verify-email handler to navigate to
:auth-verify-token when the response carries :invitation-token.
Signed-off-by: Andrey Antukh <niwi@niwi.nz>
* 🐛 Handle email-already-exists error on registration form
Add a specific handler for the [:validation :email-already-exists] error
code in the registration form's on-error callback. The backend raises
this error when an active profile already exists for the requested email,
but the frontend was falling through to the generic error message.
Now it shows the existing "Email already used" i18n message instead of
the generic "Something wrong has happened" toast.
* 🐛 Reset submitted state on registration form error
The on-error handler in the registration form was not resetting the
submitted? state, causing the submit button to remain disabled after
any error. The completion callback in rx/subs! only fires on success,
not on error.
Add (reset! submitted? false) at the beginning of the on-error handler
so the form becomes submittable again after any error, allowing the user
to fix their input and retry.
---------
Signed-off-by: Andrey Antukh <niwi@niwi.nz>
The shape API method .component() used locate-component which walks
to the outermost instance root via get-instance-root. For nested
component instances (e.g. a button inside a card), this incorrectly
returned the outer component (the card) instead of the nearest one
(the button).
Added locate-head-component in utils.cljs which uses get-head-shape
to find the nearest component head, and updated the :component
property in shape.cljs to use it.
Fixes#9183