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dbmd_core/
store.rs

1//! `store` — walk, locate, and shard a db.md store.
2//!
3//! A db.md store is one directory marked by an uppercase `DB.md` at its root.
4//! [`Store::open`] is the single gate every store-walking subcommand goes
5//! through; a missing `DB.md` is the [`NotAStore`] error (`NOT_A_STORE`). The
6//! toolkit never guesses a store root.
7//!
8//! Scale discipline lives here: [`Store::walk`] and the layer/type-folder
9//! walks are **SWEEP** primitives used only by `validate --all`,
10//! `index rebuild`, and `stats`. The interactive loop instead uses
11//! [`Store::find_links_to`] / [`Store::find_links_to_any`] (a single
12//! presence-only content scan) and the `index.jsonl` sidecar readers
13//! ([`Store::find_by_type`] / [`Store::find_by_where`] /
14//! [`Store::read_type_index`]) — never a whole-store parse. The batch
15//! [`Store::find_links_to_any`] is what keeps the working-set validate's
16//! incoming-linker discovery a single store scan rather than one scan per
17//! changed object.
18//!
19//! Link edges are defined once, here, by the shared [`extract_edge_targets`] /
20//! [`canonical_link_target`] / [`link_edge_key`] helpers (fence-aware,
21//! whitespace-trimmed, case-folded to the filesystem), so the forward view
22//! (`graph::forwardlinks`), the backward view ([`Store::find_links_to_any`]),
23//! `rename`, and `validate` all agree on exactly which `[[...]]` is an edge.
24//! [`ensure_path_within_store`] is the within-store containment gate every
25//! caller-influenced path passes through before it is read or traversed.
26
27use std::collections::BTreeMap;
28use std::path::{Path, PathBuf};
29use std::time::{SystemTime, UNIX_EPOCH};
30
31use chrono::{DateTime, Datelike, FixedOffset};
32use ignore::WalkBuilder;
33
34use crate::index::IndexRecord;
35use crate::parser::{parse_db_md, Config, Frontmatter};
36
37/// Basenames that are never content files: the config marker and the two
38/// curator-maintained catalogs. The store walks skip these so a SWEEP over the
39/// content layers never mistakes a catalog for a record.
40///
41/// Only `index.md` is excluded by basename, because the content walks traverse
42/// the layer dirs (`sources/`/`records/`) and `index.md` is the only
43/// meta file that appears INSIDE them. The root `DB.md` / `log.md` (and the
44/// `log/` archive) live at the store root, outside every layer, so they are
45/// never reached by these walks — and a content file that merely happens to be
46/// named `DB.md` or `log.md` inside a layer (e.g. `records/docs/DB.md`) is real
47/// content the SPEC does NOT reserve at type-folder depth.
48const NON_CONTENT_BASENAMES: [&str; 1] = ["index.md"];
49
50/// The complete machine-twin sidecar that backs every structured read.
51const TYPE_INDEX_FILE: &str = "index.jsonl";
52
53/// Returned when a path is opened as a store but has no `DB.md` at its root.
54/// Surfaced as the structured code `NOT_A_STORE` with a non-zero exit.
55#[derive(Debug, thiserror::Error)]
56#[error("not a db.md store: {path} has no DB.md")]
57pub struct NotAStore {
58    /// The path that was inspected.
59    pub path: PathBuf,
60}
61
62/// Errors from store-level operations (walk, locate, shard, sidecar read).
63#[derive(Debug, thiserror::Error)]
64pub enum StoreError {
65    /// A sidecar `index.jsonl` could not be read or parsed.
66    #[error("failed to read type index {path}: {message}")]
67    BadTypeIndex {
68        /// The sidecar file.
69        path: PathBuf,
70        /// What went wrong.
71        message: String,
72    },
73
74    /// A required date field for sharding was absent or unparseable, and there
75    /// was no usable fallback.
76    #[error("cannot compute shard path for {file}: no usable date field")]
77    NoShardDate {
78        /// The file being placed.
79        file: PathBuf,
80    },
81
82    /// An embedded-ripgrep scan failed to start or run.
83    #[error("search failed under {root}: {message}")]
84    Search {
85        /// The root the scan ran under.
86        root: PathBuf,
87        /// What went wrong.
88        message: String,
89    },
90
91    /// An underlying I/O failure.
92    #[error(transparent)]
93    Io(#[from] std::io::Error),
94}
95
96/// The three canonical layers of a db.md store.
97///
98/// `Ord`/`PartialOrd` are derived (additively) because sibling modules key
99/// `BTreeMap`s on `Layer` (e.g. `stats::Stats::files_per_layer`); the canonical
100/// declaration order (`Sources` < `Records`) is the sort order.
101#[derive(Debug, Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Eq, PartialOrd, Ord, Hash)]
102pub enum Layer {
103    /// `sources/` — raw evidence (documentary + testimonial); immutable; date-sharded at scale.
104    Sources,
105    /// `records/` — everything the agent authors; meta-typed fact/operational/conclusion; entity types flat, event types sharded.
106    Records,
107}
108
109impl Layer {
110    /// The on-disk folder name for this layer (`"sources"` / `"records"`).
111    pub fn dir_name(self) -> &'static str {
112        match self {
113            Layer::Sources => "sources",
114            Layer::Records => "records",
115        }
116    }
117
118    /// Parse a layer from its folder name; `None` for anything else.
119    pub fn from_dir_name(name: &str) -> Option<Self> {
120        match name {
121            "sources" => Some(Layer::Sources),
122            "records" => Some(Layer::Records),
123            _ => None,
124        }
125    }
126
127    /// Every layer, in canonical order.
128    pub fn all() -> [Layer; 2] {
129        [Layer::Sources, Layer::Records]
130    }
131}
132
133/// An opened db.md store: its root path plus the parsed `DB.md` [`Config`].
134///
135/// Construct via [`Store::open`]; that is the only path in, and it validates
136/// the `DB.md` marker so downstream code can assume a real store.
137#[derive(Debug, Clone)]
138pub struct Store {
139    /// The store root (the directory containing `DB.md`).
140    pub root: PathBuf,
141    /// The parsed `DB.md` config (agent instructions, policies, schemas).
142    pub config: Config,
143}
144
145impl Store {
146    /// True if `path` is a db.md store root: an uppercase `DB.md` file exists
147    /// at `path`. On case-sensitive filesystems a lowercase `db.md` must NOT
148    /// count (the lowercase name refers to the project/spec, not the marker).
149    pub fn is_db_md_store(path: &Path) -> bool {
150        // Read the directory and match the *stored* filename byte-for-byte.
151        // `path.join("DB.md").exists()` would lie on a case-insensitive
152        // filesystem (macOS default), where a lowercase `db.md` answers a
153        // `DB.md` probe. `read_dir` returns the real on-disk name, so the
154        // exact-match check is correct on both case-sensitive (Linux) and
155        // case-insensitive filesystems.
156        let entries = match std::fs::read_dir(path) {
157            Ok(entries) => entries,
158            Err(_) => return false,
159        };
160        for entry in entries.flatten() {
161            if entry.file_name() == "DB.md" {
162                // A directory literally named `DB.md` is not the marker.
163                match entry.file_type() {
164                    Ok(ft) if ft.is_dir() => return false,
165                    Ok(_) => return true,
166                    Err(_) => return false,
167                }
168            }
169        }
170        false
171    }
172
173    /// Open `path` as a db.md store and require `DB.md` to be readable and
174    /// parseable. Normal commands should enter through this strict gate so a
175    /// damaged config cannot silently disable schema or policy rules.
176    pub fn open_strict(path: &Path) -> crate::Result<Store> {
177        if !Store::is_db_md_store(path) {
178            return Err(NotAStore {
179                path: path.to_path_buf(),
180            }
181            .into());
182        }
183        let db_md = path.join("DB.md");
184        let text = std::fs::read_to_string(&db_md)?;
185        let config = parse_db_md(&text, &db_md)?;
186        Ok(Store {
187            root: path.to_path_buf(),
188            config,
189        })
190    }
191
192    /// Open `path` as a db.md store: confirm the `DB.md` marker (else
193    /// [`NotAStore`]) and parse the `DB.md` config when possible. This is the
194    /// lenient validation-oriented open path: a damaged `DB.md` still marks the
195    /// directory as a store so `dbmd validate` can report the config error as an
196    /// issue. Normal CLI commands should use [`Store::open_strict`] instead.
197    pub fn open(path: &Path) -> Result<Store, NotAStore> {
198        if !Store::is_db_md_store(path) {
199            return Err(NotAStore {
200                path: path.to_path_buf(),
201            });
202        }
203        let db_md = path.join("DB.md");
204        // The marker exists; parse its config. A read or parse failure leaves
205        // the store openable with default config rather than masquerading as
206        // NOT_A_STORE — the marker is present, so this *is* a store; a damaged
207        // DB.md is `dbmd validate`'s job to report, not `open`'s.
208        let config = match std::fs::read_to_string(&db_md) {
209            Ok(text) => parse_db_md(&text, &db_md).unwrap_or_default(),
210            Err(_) => Config::default(),
211        };
212        Ok(Store {
213            root: path.to_path_buf(),
214            config,
215        })
216    }
217
218    /// **SWEEP.** Recursively iterate every `.md` content file across
219    /// `sources/` and `records/`, skipping hidden dirs and `log/`.
220    /// Used only by `validate --all`, `index rebuild`, and `stats` — never on
221    /// the interactive loop.
222    pub fn walk(&self) -> Result<Vec<PathBuf>, StoreError> {
223        // Only the three content layers — never root meta files (`DB.md`,
224        // `index.md`, `log.md`) and never `log/`, which live at root and are
225        // outside every layer dir.
226        let mut out = Vec::new();
227        for layer in Layer::all() {
228            out.extend(self.walk_layer(layer)?);
229        }
230        out.sort();
231        Ok(out)
232    }
233
234    /// **SWEEP.** Like [`Store::walk`] but scoped to a single layer.
235    pub fn walk_layer(&self, layer: Layer) -> Result<Vec<PathBuf>, StoreError> {
236        let layer_root = self.root.join(layer.dir_name());
237        if !layer_root.is_dir() {
238            return Ok(Vec::new());
239        }
240        self.walk_content_md(&layer_root)
241    }
242
243    /// Enumerate every `.md` file in a single type-folder, **recursing through
244    /// its date-shards** (`sources/emails/**/*.md`). The unit the index builder
245    /// and per-folder rebuild operate on. SWEEP-class (scoped to one folder).
246    pub fn walk_type_folder(&self, type_folder: &Path) -> Result<Vec<PathBuf>, StoreError> {
247        let abs = self.resolve_under_root(type_folder);
248        if !abs.is_dir() {
249            return Ok(Vec::new());
250        }
251        self.walk_content_md(&abs)
252    }
253
254    /// The ≤`n` most-recent files in a type-folder by frontmatter `updated`
255    /// (descending), ties broken by store-relative path (ascending) — a total
256    /// order, so write-through and rebuild never disagree on #500 vs #501.
257    ///
258    /// Reads `updated` across the folder's shards — a SWEEP cost absorbed into
259    /// `index rebuild`. The write-through path never calls this. The
260    /// cap-selection primitive for the 500-entry `index.md` browse view.
261    pub fn recent_in_type_folder(
262        &self,
263        type_folder: &Path,
264        n: usize,
265    ) -> Result<Vec<PathBuf>, StoreError> {
266        let files = self.walk_type_folder(type_folder)?;
267        // (updated, rel-path) for each file. Files missing/unparseable
268        // `updated` sort *after* dated ones (None last), then by path — so they
269        // are deterministically the lowest-priority candidates for the cap, not
270        // dropped silently. The total order (updated desc, path asc) is what
271        // keeps write-through and rebuild agreeing on #500 vs #501.
272        let mut keyed: Vec<(Option<DateTime<FixedOffset>>, PathBuf)> = files
273            .into_iter()
274            .map(|rel| {
275                let updated = self.read_updated(&self.abs_path(&rel));
276                (updated, rel)
277            })
278            .collect();
279        keyed.sort_by(|a, b| {
280            // `updated` descending: newest first. `None` is treated as the
281            // oldest possible, so dated files always win a cap slot over
282            // undated ones.
283            let by_updated = b.0.cmp(&a.0);
284            by_updated.then_with(|| a.1.cmp(&b.1))
285        });
286        keyed.truncate(n);
287        Ok(keyed.into_iter().map(|(_, rel)| rel).collect())
288    }
289
290    /// The shard/flat predicate: true if the type date-shards, false if it
291    /// stays flat. True for source types and event record types
292    /// (`expense`/`invoice`/`meeting` + custom `order`/`ticket`/`transaction`),
293    /// or when `DB.md ## Schemas` declares `shard: by-date`. False for
294    /// dedup-bounded entity types (`contact`/`company`/`decision`) and
295    /// conclusion records (`profile`/`concept`/`synthesis`).
296    pub fn type_shards(&self, type_: &str) -> bool {
297        // A `DB.md ## Schemas` `### <type>` block with a `shard:` directive is
298        // authoritative — it is the v0.2 generic-model way to declare sharding,
299        // so it overrides the built-in default below (in either direction).
300        if let Some(shard) = self.config.schemas.get(type_).and_then(|s| s.shard) {
301            return shard;
302        }
303        // Built-in default for the example types. Sharding is a property of the
304        // *type*:
305        //  - source types carry a primary date field and shard;
306        //  - event record types track business volume and shard;
307        //  - dedup-bounded entity types and curation-bounded conclusion
308        //    records (`profile`/`concept`/`synthesis`) stay flat.
309        // Any type can override this via a `shard:` directive (above).
310        matches!(
311            type_,
312            // source types (documentary + testimonial)
313            "email" | "transcript" | "pdf-source" | "note"
314            // event record types (canonical)
315            | "expense" | "invoice" | "meeting"
316            // event record types (recognized custom, per the plan)
317            | "order" | "ticket" | "transaction"
318        )
319    }
320
321    /// Compute the canonical write path for a new file. For a sharding type
322    /// (per [`Store::type_shards`]) insert `<YYYY>/<MM>/` from the type's
323    /// primary date field (`email.date`, `expense.date`, … fallback `created`)
324    /// under the type folder; flat types (entity + conclusion records) get no
325    /// shard segment.
326    /// Deterministic + stable: same input → same path, so a record never moves
327    /// once written.
328    pub fn shard_path_for(
329        &self,
330        type_: &str,
331        frontmatter: &Frontmatter,
332        name: &str,
333    ) -> Result<PathBuf, StoreError> {
334        self.shard_path_in(&default_type_folder(type_), type_, frontmatter, name)
335    }
336
337    /// Like [`Store::shard_path_for`], but compute the path under an explicit,
338    /// caller-resolved type-folder rather than the canonical default. This lets a
339    /// write surface honour an agent-supplied conforming sub-folder — e.g. a
340    /// conclusion record filed under `records/profiles/`, `records/concepts/`, or
341    /// `records/synthesis/` (a conclusion record may be filed under ANY
342    /// `records/<folder>/`, not only its canonical one) — while still applying
343    /// date-sharding for sharding types. The folder must be a conforming
344    /// `<layer>/<type-folder>` (2
345    /// components, recognized layer); the caller is responsible for that (see the
346    /// CLI's `resolve_write_path`), so it is taken as given here.
347    ///
348    /// Sharding is still a property of the *type*: a sharding type gets the
349    /// `<YYYY>/<MM>` segment under `folder`; a flat type lands directly in it.
350    pub fn shard_path_in(
351        &self,
352        folder: &Path,
353        type_: &str,
354        frontmatter: &Frontmatter,
355        name: &str,
356    ) -> Result<PathBuf, StoreError> {
357        let folder = folder.to_path_buf();
358        let filename = ensure_md_extension(name);
359
360        if !self.type_shards(type_) {
361            // Flat type (entity records, conclusion records, decisions): no
362            // shard segment.
363            return Ok(folder.join(filename));
364        }
365
366        // Sharding type: derive <YYYY>/<MM> from the primary date field, with
367        // `created` as the universal fallback. Reading the public `Frontmatter`
368        // fields directly (typed `created`/`updated` + raw `extra`) avoids the
369        // not-yet-implemented `Frontmatter::get`/`parse` and keeps this pure.
370        let (year, month) = self
371            .primary_shard_segment(type_, frontmatter)
372            .ok_or_else(|| StoreError::NoShardDate {
373                file: folder.join(&filename),
374            })?;
375
376        Ok(folder.join(year).join(month).join(filename))
377    }
378
379    /// Find files with an incoming wiki-link to `target` via a **single
380    /// presence-only content scan** for an edge to `target` across all layers,
381    /// using the shared fence-aware/whitespace-trimmed/case-folded edge notion
382    /// ([`extract_edge_targets`]). Loop-fast; no whole-graph build. Returns
383    /// store-relative paths.
384    pub fn find_links_to(&self, target: &Path) -> Result<Vec<PathBuf>, StoreError> {
385        // A single target is just the degenerate batch case — one key, one store
386        // scan. Routing through `find_links_to_any` keeps the
387        // pattern construction and the scan loop in exactly one place. The
388        // batch API takes `&[PathBuf]`, so the one-element slice is owned (a
389        // single alloc on this single-target convenience path; the batch path
390        // validate.rs rides is untouched).
391        self.find_links_to_any(&[target.to_path_buf()])
392    }
393
394    /// Find every file with an incoming wiki-link to **any** of `targets`, in a
395    /// **single content pass** over the store (one `.md` walk, one presence-only
396    /// edge scan per file). This is the batch incoming-linker finder the
397    /// working-set [`crate::validate::validate_working_set`] sits on: it must find
398    /// the linkers for the *whole* changed set without paying a full store read
399    /// per changed object. Cost is therefore one store scan (O(store)), NOT
400    /// `targets.len() × store` — calling [`find_links_to`](Self::find_links_to)
401    /// in a loop would reread every `.md` once per target and is the exact
402    /// `O(changed × store)` blow-up this method exists to prevent. Returns
403    /// store-relative paths (deduped, sorted).
404    ///
405    /// **One edge notion with `forwardlinks`/`rename`/`validate`.** A file links
406    /// to a target iff [`extract_edge_targets`] (fence-aware, whitespace-trimmed)
407    /// of its content yields a target whose [`link_edge_key`] equals the target's
408    /// — the *same* definition the forward view and the rename rewriter use. The
409    /// previous implementation used a literal-adjacency ripgrep regex that (a)
410    /// matched `[[...]]` text inside fenced code examples (which validate treats
411    /// as non-edges), (b) missed inner-whitespace padding (`[[ x ]]`), and (c)
412    /// compared case-sensitively even where the filesystem resolves links
413    /// case-insensitively — so backlinks/links/rename silently disagreed with
414    /// forwardlinks and validate. Reading content and routing through the shared
415    /// extractor removes all three divergences.
416    ///
417    /// Why content scan and not the sidecar `links` field: the sidecar projects
418    /// only the frontmatter `links:` array, so it misses edges written in the
419    /// body or in typed fields (`company: [[…]]`). Finding an incoming link to an
420    /// arbitrary path therefore requires reading file content.
421    pub fn find_links_to_any(&self, targets: &[PathBuf]) -> Result<Vec<PathBuf>, StoreError> {
422        // Build the set of comparison keys for the requested targets, in the
423        // canonical (case-folded where the filesystem is case-insensitive) form
424        // the edge extractor emits. An empty key (a target that renders to no
425        // link text, e.g. `""` or `"./"`) contributes nothing — and crucially the
426        // empty set short-circuits below so we never report every file.
427        let want: std::collections::HashSet<String> = targets
428            .iter()
429            .filter_map(|t| {
430                let canonical = canonical_link_target(&t.to_string_lossy());
431                if canonical.is_empty() {
432                    None
433                } else {
434                    Some(link_edge_key(&canonical))
435                }
436            })
437            .collect();
438        if want.is_empty() {
439            return Ok(Vec::new());
440        }
441
442        let mut hits = std::collections::BTreeSet::new();
443        // Scan every `.md` file in the store (skip hidden + `log/`), including
444        // `index.md` catalogs — an incoming reference is wherever the link text
445        // lives; the caller decides relevance. ONE walk for the whole target set;
446        // per file we stop at the first matching edge (presence is all we need),
447        // so a file that links to several targets is read once, not once per
448        // target.
449        for rel in self.walk_all_md()? {
450            let abs = self.abs_path(&rel);
451            // Read lossily: a `.md` verbatim-ingested into `sources/` can carry a
452            // stray non-UTF-8 byte (a mis-decoded Latin-1 import). Decoding
453            // lossily substitutes replacement characters instead of erroring, so
454            // one bad byte on a link-bearing line no longer aborts the whole
455            // store scan (the historical `UTF8`-sink failure). The link syntax is
456            // ASCII, so a replacement char elsewhere on the line never hides a
457            // `[[...]]`. A read error (not a decode error) is genuine I/O trouble
458            // and propagates.
459            let bytes = match std::fs::read(&abs) {
460                Ok(b) => b,
461                Err(e) => {
462                    return Err(StoreError::Search {
463                        root: self.root.clone(),
464                        message: format!("read failed in {}: {e}", abs.display()),
465                    })
466                }
467            };
468            let text = String::from_utf8_lossy(&bytes);
469            for target in extract_edge_targets(&text) {
470                if want.contains(&link_edge_key(&target)) {
471                    hits.insert(rel);
472                    break;
473                }
474            }
475        }
476        Ok(hits.into_iter().collect())
477    }
478
479    /// Candidate set for a `type` query: read every type-folder `index.jsonl`
480    /// sidecar in the type's single layer and return the records of that
481    /// `type`. Complete and cold-cache-proof — NOT a walk-and-parse or a
482    /// frontmatter ripgrep scan, and **never a store-wide read**.
483    ///
484    /// The read is bounded to the type's one layer subtree
485    /// (O(entities-in-layer)): a type lives in exactly one layer, and
486    /// `default_type_folder` always encodes it (recognized → its SPEC layer;
487    /// unrecognized → `records/`), so the walk never fans out across every
488    /// sidecar in the store and stays inside the interactive loop's
489    /// O(entities) contract.
490    ///
491    /// The whole-layer read — rather than reading only the type's canonical
492    /// folder sidecar when it happens to exist — is what makes the result
493    /// *complete*. A single `type` can legitimately be filed across several
494    /// folders within its layer: a conclusion `profile` filed under any
495    /// `records/<folder>/`, or a `contact` filed in `records/clients/` alongside
496    /// the canonical `records/contacts/`. The previous code read only the
497    /// canonical-guess sidecar whenever it was a file, which silently dropped
498    /// those non-canonical records the moment the canonical sidecar existed —
499    /// returning an incomplete set, and a *different* set as the store grew
500    /// (the omission flipped on once one canonical record was added). That
501    /// broke the dedup/enumeration premise this primitive backs and disagreed
502    /// with `find_by_where_in`, which already walks the whole layer. Filtering
503    /// the layer read by `type` keeps the result complete regardless of how the
504    /// type's records are foldered.
505    pub fn find_by_type(&self, type_: &str) -> Result<Vec<IndexRecord>, StoreError> {
506        let canonical_folder = default_type_folder(type_);
507        let records = self.read_all_type_indexes_in(layer_of_folder(&canonical_folder))?;
508        Ok(records.into_iter().filter(|r| r.type_ == type_).collect())
509    }
510
511    /// Candidate set for a `key=value` frontmatter query, **store-wide**: read
512    /// every type-folder `index.jsonl` sidecar and filter their records. The
513    /// unscoped pre-write dedup primitive; prefer [`Store::find_by_where_in`]
514    /// with a layer scope to stay O(entities-in-layer) on the interactive loop.
515    pub fn find_by_where(&self, key: &str, value: &str) -> Result<Vec<IndexRecord>, StoreError> {
516        self.find_by_where_in(key, value, None)
517    }
518
519    /// Candidate set for a `key=value` frontmatter query, **scoped to one
520    /// layer** when `layer` is `Some`: the sidecar walk is confined to that
521    /// layer's subtree (`<root>/<layer>/`), so the I/O is O(entities-in-layer),
522    /// not O(store records). `None` keeps the store-wide read.
523    ///
524    /// This is what makes `--in <layer>` an I/O scope, not just a result
525    /// filter: a `--where`-only query (no `--type`) used to read every sidecar
526    /// in the store and narrow by layer in memory, breaking the O(entities)
527    /// contract the interactive loop depends on. With a layer in hand we walk
528    /// only that layer's sidecars.
529    pub fn find_by_where_in(
530        &self,
531        key: &str,
532        value: &str,
533        layer: Option<Layer>,
534    ) -> Result<Vec<IndexRecord>, StoreError> {
535        // A `key=value` query can target any frontmatter field across any type,
536        // so within the chosen subtree we still read every type-folder sidecar
537        // and filter. The layer (when given) bounds *which* subtree, turning a
538        // whole-store walk into a single-layer walk.
539        let records = self.read_all_type_indexes_in(layer)?;
540        Ok(records
541            .into_iter()
542            .filter(|r| record_matches_field(r, key, value))
543            .collect())
544    }
545
546    /// Every record across the type-folder `index.jsonl` sidecars, scoped to one
547    /// layer when `layer` is `Some` (the walk is confined to `<root>/<layer>/`)
548    /// else store-wide. Sequential, complete sidecar reads — never a
549    /// walk-and-parse of the content tree.
550    ///
551    /// This is the unfiltered sidecar-enumeration primitive the relationship
552    /// loop sits on: [`crate::graph::backlinks_filtered`] uses it to bound its
553    /// candidate set to the relevant layer (or the whole store) without opening
554    /// the content tree, then confirms each candidate's edge by parsing the file.
555    pub fn sidecar_records(&self, layer: Option<Layer>) -> Result<Vec<IndexRecord>, StoreError> {
556        self.read_all_type_indexes_in(layer)
557    }
558
559    /// Parse a type-folder's `index.jsonl` into [`IndexRecord`]s, applying
560    /// last-write-wins by `path` over any un-compacted lines. The sidecar-read
561    /// primitive every structured query sits on.
562    pub fn read_type_index(&self, index_jsonl: &Path) -> Result<Vec<IndexRecord>, StoreError> {
563        let text = std::fs::read_to_string(index_jsonl).map_err(|e| StoreError::BadTypeIndex {
564            path: index_jsonl.to_path_buf(),
565            message: e.to_string(),
566        })?;
567
568        // Last-write-wins by `path` over un-compacted lines: a later line for
569        // the same path supersedes an earlier one (the jsonl is append-mostly
570        // and only compacted on rebuild). Blank lines are skipped; a non-blank
571        // line that is not a valid IndexRecord is a hard parse error.
572        let mut by_path: BTreeMap<PathBuf, IndexRecord> = BTreeMap::new();
573        for (i, line) in text.lines().enumerate() {
574            let trimmed = line.trim();
575            if trimmed.is_empty() {
576                continue;
577            }
578            let record: IndexRecord =
579                serde_json::from_str(trimmed).map_err(|e| StoreError::BadTypeIndex {
580                    path: index_jsonl.to_path_buf(),
581                    message: format!("line {}: {e}", i + 1),
582                })?;
583            by_path.insert(record.path.clone(), record);
584        }
585        // BTreeMap keyed by path → records emerge sorted by path ascending,
586        // a deterministic order independent of line order in the file.
587        Ok(by_path.into_values().collect())
588    }
589
590    /// Resolve a store-relative path to its absolute on-disk path under
591    /// [`root`](Store::root).
592    pub fn abs_path(&self, store_relative: &Path) -> PathBuf {
593        // `Path::join` returns `store_relative` unchanged if it is already
594        // absolute, so passing an absolute path through is a no-op.
595        self.root.join(store_relative)
596    }
597
598    /// Convert an absolute path under the store into its store-relative form.
599    pub fn rel_path(&self, abs: &Path) -> Option<PathBuf> {
600        abs.strip_prefix(&self.root).ok().map(|p| p.to_path_buf())
601    }
602
603    // ── Private helpers ─────────────────────────────────────────────────────
604
605    /// Resolve a caller-supplied folder path (store-relative or absolute) to an
606    /// absolute path under the store root.
607    fn resolve_under_root(&self, folder: &Path) -> PathBuf {
608        if folder.is_absolute() {
609            folder.to_path_buf()
610        } else {
611            self.root.join(folder)
612        }
613    }
614
615    /// Walk a subtree for content `.md` files (skip hidden dirs, skip `index.md`
616    /// / `DB.md` / `log.md`), returning store-relative paths. Used by the layer
617    /// and type-folder walks.
618    fn walk_content_md(&self, root: &Path) -> Result<Vec<PathBuf>, StoreError> {
619        let mut out = Vec::new();
620        for entry in self.md_walker(root).build() {
621            let entry = entry.map_err(|e| StoreError::Search {
622                root: root.to_path_buf(),
623                message: e.to_string(),
624            })?;
625            if !is_file_entry(&entry) {
626                continue;
627            }
628            let path = entry.path();
629            if !has_md_extension(path) {
630                continue;
631            }
632            if is_non_content_basename(path) {
633                continue;
634            }
635            if let Some(rel) = self.rel_path(path) {
636                out.push(rel);
637            }
638        }
639        out.sort();
640        Ok(out)
641    }
642
643    /// Walk the whole store for **every** `.md` file (including `index.md`),
644    /// skipping hidden dirs and the `log/` archive tree. Used by the backlink
645    /// scan, where the literal link text can live in any markdown file.
646    fn walk_all_md(&self) -> Result<Vec<PathBuf>, StoreError> {
647        let mut out = Vec::new();
648        for entry in self.md_walker(&self.root).build() {
649            let entry = entry.map_err(|e| StoreError::Search {
650                root: self.root.clone(),
651                message: e.to_string(),
652            })?;
653            if !is_file_entry(&entry) {
654                continue;
655            }
656            let path = entry.path();
657            if !has_md_extension(path) {
658                continue;
659            }
660            if self.is_in_log_dir(path) {
661                continue;
662            }
663            if let Some(rel) = self.rel_path(path) {
664                out.push(rel);
665            }
666        }
667        out.sort();
668        Ok(out)
669    }
670
671    /// Read and merge every type-folder `index.jsonl` sidecar under `layer`
672    /// when given, else the whole store (skip hidden + `log/`). Each sidecar is
673    /// read with last-write-wins by path; across sidecars, paths are disjoint by
674    /// construction (one sidecar per folder), so a plain concatenation preserves
675    /// completeness. A layer scope confines the walk to `<root>/<layer>/`, which
676    /// is what keeps `find_by_where_in` O(entities-in-layer).
677    fn read_all_type_indexes_in(
678        &self,
679        layer: Option<Layer>,
680    ) -> Result<Vec<IndexRecord>, StoreError> {
681        let mut out = Vec::new();
682        for sidecar in self.find_type_index_files_in(layer)? {
683            out.extend(self.read_type_index(&self.abs_path(&sidecar))?);
684        }
685        Ok(out)
686    }
687
688    /// Locate every `index.jsonl` sidecar under `layer` (when given) else the
689    /// whole store (skip hidden + `log/`), returning store-relative paths. A
690    /// scoped read walks `<root>/<layer>/`; the store-wide read enumerates the
691    /// two canonical layer subtrees (`sources/`, `records/`) — the
692    /// same store model [`Store::walk`] uses — rather than walking from
693    /// `self.root`. Walking from root would descend into non-layer top-level
694    /// dirs (`EXPECTED/` test goldens, an `archive/` of frozen index copies,
695    /// any sibling folder holding store-relative `path`s), pulling their
696    /// sidecars in and returning every record twice. A non-existent layer
697    /// subtree yields no sidecars rather than walking a missing path.
698    fn find_type_index_files_in(&self, layer: Option<Layer>) -> Result<Vec<PathBuf>, StoreError> {
699        // Store-wide read: union the per-layer scoped reads so only the three
700        // content layers are walked (never root meta files or non-layer dirs),
701        // matching `Store::walk`. The per-layer paths are disjoint by folder, so
702        // a plain concatenation preserves completeness.
703        let Some(layer) = layer else {
704            let mut out = Vec::new();
705            for l in Layer::all() {
706                out.extend(self.find_type_index_files_in(Some(l))?);
707            }
708            out.sort();
709            return Ok(out);
710        };
711        let walk_root = self.root.join(layer.dir_name());
712        // A scoped walk over a layer folder that does not exist yet must be an
713        // empty result, mirroring `walk_layer`'s missing-dir guard — not a walk
714        // error from `ignore` over a nonexistent path.
715        if !walk_root.is_dir() {
716            return Ok(Vec::new());
717        }
718        let mut out = Vec::new();
719        let mut builder = WalkBuilder::new(&walk_root);
720        builder
721            .standard_filters(false)
722            .hidden(true)
723            .follow_links(true);
724        for entry in builder.build() {
725            let entry = entry.map_err(|e| StoreError::Search {
726                root: walk_root.clone(),
727                message: e.to_string(),
728            })?;
729            if !is_file_entry(&entry) {
730                continue;
731            }
732            let path = entry.path();
733            if path.file_name().and_then(|n| n.to_str()) != Some(TYPE_INDEX_FILE) {
734                continue;
735            }
736            if self.is_in_log_dir(path) {
737                continue;
738            }
739            if let Some(rel) = self.rel_path(path) {
740                out.push(rel);
741            }
742        }
743        out.sort();
744        Ok(out)
745    }
746
747    /// A `WalkBuilder` configured for db.md SWEEPs: gitignore/global-ignore are
748    /// OFF (a SWEEP must see every file even if the store is a git repo with a
749    /// `.gitignore`), but hidden files/dirs are skipped. Symlinks are
750    /// **followed** (`follow_links(true)`) so a symlinked `.md` content file or
751    /// a symlinked type folder (e.g. `records/companies -> /other/disk/...`) is
752    /// walked like any other content rather than silently vanishing; a symlinked
753    /// layer dir was already traversed (the walk root is followed), so following
754    /// symlinks one level deeper just removes that inconsistency.
755    fn md_walker(&self, root: &Path) -> WalkBuilder {
756        let mut builder = WalkBuilder::new(root);
757        builder
758            .standard_filters(false)
759            .hidden(true)
760            .follow_links(true);
761        builder
762    }
763
764    /// True if an absolute path lives under the store's root-level `log/`
765    /// rotation-archive directory.
766    fn is_in_log_dir(&self, abs: &Path) -> bool {
767        match self.rel_path(abs) {
768            Some(rel) => rel.components().next().map(|c| c.as_os_str()) == Some("log".as_ref()),
769            None => false,
770        }
771    }
772
773    /// Read a file's frontmatter `updated` field as an RFC3339 timestamp,
774    /// returning `None` when absent/unparseable. A self-contained reader (does
775    /// not depend on the not-yet-implemented `parser::read_file`); parses the
776    /// leading `---`-fenced YAML block with the same engine the parser uses.
777    fn read_updated(&self, abs: &Path) -> Option<DateTime<FixedOffset>> {
778        let text = std::fs::read_to_string(abs).ok()?;
779        let yaml = frontmatter_block(&text)?;
780        let value: serde_norway::Value = serde_norway::from_str(yaml).ok()?;
781        let raw = value.get("updated")?;
782        value_to_datetime(raw)
783    }
784
785    /// The `<YYYY>/<MM>` shard segment for a sharding type, from its primary
786    /// date field with a `created` fallback. Reads the public `Frontmatter`
787    /// fields directly. `None` when no usable date is present.
788    fn primary_shard_segment(&self, type_: &str, fm: &Frontmatter) -> Option<(String, String)> {
789        // Try the type's primary date field first.
790        if let Some(field) = primary_date_field(type_) {
791            if let Some(v) = fm.extra.get(field) {
792                if let Some(seg) = value_to_year_month(v) {
793                    return Some(seg);
794                }
795            }
796        }
797        // Universal fallback: the typed `created` timestamp.
798        fm.created
799            .map(|dt| (format!("{:04}", dt.year()), format!("{:02}", dt.month())))
800    }
801}
802
803// ── Path containment (security) ─────────────────────────────────────────────
804
805/// Canonicalize `candidate` (resolving symlinks; for a not-yet-existing leaf,
806/// canonicalize its existing parent chain and re-append the leaf) and return it
807/// only if it resolves inside `store_root`; otherwise `Err`.
808///
809/// This is the single within-store containment gate. A wiki-link target, a
810/// rename destination, or any other caller-influenced path must pass through
811/// here before it is read or traversed, so a `..`-laden or symlink-escaping
812/// target can never turn a store operation into a read of an arbitrary file
813/// outside the store. `store_root` itself is canonicalized first so the
814/// `starts_with` comparison is symlink-stable on both sides (e.g. macOS's
815/// `/tmp` → `/private/tmp`).
816pub fn ensure_path_within_store(store_root: &Path, candidate: &Path) -> std::io::Result<PathBuf> {
817    // The `..` rejection below must apply only to the *caller-influenced* tail of
818    // the candidate — never to a `..` the trusted `store_root` itself carries.
819    // Callers build the candidate as `store_root.join(rel)`, so a user-supplied
820    // `--dir ../../some/store` legitimately seeds every candidate with leading
821    // `..` components that belong to the root, not to the sidecar/link target.
822    // Strip the trusted `store_root` prefix lexically and scrutinize only what
823    // remains; the root's own `..` is resolved safely by `canonicalize()` just
824    // below. A candidate that does NOT begin with `store_root` (an absolute
825    // out-of-store path, a CWD-relative target) keeps the whole path under
826    // scrutiny — there is no trusted prefix to exempt.
827    let scrutinized = candidate.strip_prefix(store_root).unwrap_or(candidate);
828
829    // Reject any `..` component in the scrutinized tail. A `ParentDir` can never
830    // be resolved safely by lexical normalization: once a symlink sits earlier in
831    // the path, `foo/../bar` does NOT equal `bar`, and canonicalizing the existing
832    // prefix (below) would silently collapse `records/contacts/../../outside` down
833    // to a path that *appears* inside the root, masking the traversal. There is no
834    // legitimate in-store caller that needs `..` in the tail — wiki-link targets,
835    // rename destinations, and graph reads are all forward (`Normal`-only) paths —
836    // so a tail `..` is always either an escape attempt or a malformed target.
837    if scrutinized
838        .components()
839        .any(|c| matches!(c, std::path::Component::ParentDir))
840    {
841        return Err(std::io::Error::new(
842            std::io::ErrorKind::PermissionDenied,
843            format!(
844                "path {} contains a `..` component beyond the store root {} and cannot be contained",
845                candidate.display(),
846                store_root.display()
847            ),
848        ));
849    }
850
851    // Canonicalize the root so both sides of the containment check are in the
852    // same (fully-resolved) namespace. This also resolves any `..` the root
853    // itself carries (the user-supplied `--dir`), which the tail-only check above
854    // deliberately left in place.
855    let root = store_root.canonicalize()?;
856
857    // Resolve the candidate as far as it exists on disk. `canonicalize` fails on
858    // a not-yet-existing leaf, so peel trailing components until the remaining
859    // prefix exists, canonicalize that, then re-append the peeled tail. This
860    // resolves any symlink in the existing parent chain (an escape vector) while
861    // still working for a target that does not exist yet (a rename destination).
862    let mut existing = candidate.to_path_buf();
863    let mut tail: Vec<std::ffi::OsString> = Vec::new();
864    let resolved_prefix = loop {
865        match existing.canonicalize() {
866            Ok(p) => break p,
867            Err(_) => {
868                // No existing prefix left to canonicalize → resolve relative to
869                // the canonical root (the candidate is somewhere under, or
870                // escaping from, the store) and let the containment check below
871                // decide. Pop one component and keep peeling.
872                match existing.file_name() {
873                    Some(name) => {
874                        tail.push(name.to_os_string());
875                        if !existing.pop() {
876                            // Ran out of components without finding an existing
877                            // prefix: anchor the un-resolvable remainder at the
878                            // canonical root so a relative candidate is judged
879                            // against the store, not the process CWD.
880                            break root.clone();
881                        }
882                    }
883                    None => {
884                        // A root/prefix component with no file name and no
885                        // on-disk existence: anchor at the canonical root.
886                        break root.clone();
887                    }
888                }
889            }
890        }
891    };
892
893    // Reassemble: canonical existing prefix + the peeled (still-virtual) tail,
894    // in original order (the peel pushed them reversed).
895    let mut resolved = resolved_prefix;
896    for name in tail.into_iter().rev() {
897        resolved.push(name);
898    }
899
900    if resolved.starts_with(&root) {
901        Ok(resolved)
902    } else {
903        Err(std::io::Error::new(
904            std::io::ErrorKind::PermissionDenied,
905            format!(
906                "path {} resolves outside the store root {}",
907                candidate.display(),
908                store_root.display()
909            ),
910        ))
911    }
912}
913
914// ── The shared wiki-link edge notion (graph / stats / validate / rename) ─────
915//
916// One definition of "what `[[...]]` text is a real edge" that every relationship
917// op keys on, so `forwardlinks`, `backlinks`, `links`, `stats`, and `rename`
918// never disagree with each other (or with `validate`'s body extractor):
919//
920//   1. **Fence-aware.** A `[[...]]` inside a ``` / ~~~ fenced code block is a
921//      documentation example, not an edge — exactly `validate`'s rule. Counting
922//      it as an edge over-reports backlinks, falsely un-orphans the page, and
923//      (worst) lets `rename` rewrite verbatim example text.
924//   2. **Whitespace-trimmed.** `[[ records/contacts/sarah ]]` is the same edge
925//      as `[[records/contacts/sarah]]`. The inner padding is cosmetic; both the
926//      forward and the backward view must resolve it identically.
927//   3. **Case-folded to the filesystem.** Link *resolution* is `is_file()`,
928//      which is case-insensitive on macOS/Windows. So on a case-insensitive
929//      filesystem `[[records/contacts/Sarah-Chen]]` and the on-disk
930//      `sarah-chen.md` are the SAME edge; the comparison key must case-fold to
931//      match, or backlinks/rename silently miss the link while validate (which
932//      resolves via the filesystem) considers it fine.
933
934/// Canonicalize a raw `[[...]]` inner target into the wiki-link key: forward
935/// slashes, no leading `./` or `/`, no trailing `.md`, inner whitespace trimmed.
936/// The single key forward and backward edges are compared on. Pairs with
937/// [`link_edge_key`] for the case-fold step.
938pub fn canonical_link_target(raw: &str) -> String {
939    let mut s = raw.trim().replace('\\', "/");
940    while let Some(rest) = s.strip_prefix("./") {
941        s = rest.to_string();
942    }
943    let s = s.trim_start_matches('/');
944    let s = s.strip_suffix(".md").unwrap_or(s);
945    s.trim().to_string()
946}
947
948/// The comparison key for a canonical link target: identity on a case-sensitive
949/// filesystem, ASCII-lowercased on a case-insensitive one (macOS/Windows), so
950/// the string-keyed edge comparison agrees with the filesystem's case-folding
951/// `is_file()` resolution. Callers compare `link_edge_key(a) == link_edge_key(b)`.
952pub fn link_edge_key(canonical_target: &str) -> String {
953    if fs_is_case_insensitive() {
954        canonical_target.to_ascii_lowercase()
955    } else {
956        canonical_target.to_string()
957    }
958}
959
960/// Extract every wiki-link edge target from a markdown body, fence-aware and
961/// whitespace-trimmed, in document order (duplicates kept — callers dedup).
962/// Returns canonical targets (see [`canonical_link_target`]); the case-fold for
963/// comparison is applied separately via [`link_edge_key`] so the canonical form
964/// (used for rewrites/output) stays case-preserving.
965///
966/// Scans line-by-line tracking the fence state inline (no whole-body
967/// allocation), exactly mirroring validate's `extract_wiki_links`: the fence
968/// state is a `(fence char, run length)` tracked via [`fence_opens`] /
969/// [`fence_closes`] — NOT a bool toggled on any ``` / `~~~` line. The naive
970/// toggle inverts mid-block when a `~~~` block legally contains a ```` ``` ````
971/// line (the standard way to document a backtick fence), or when a `>3`-space-
972/// indented ``` is mistaken for a fence — both of which would let a fenced
973/// example `[[…]]` leak out as a live edge (a false dependent for
974/// backlinks/rename). Fenced lines never yield edges. Within a line, the text
975/// before the first `|` is the target; a target whose trimmed form starts with
976/// `[` is the rejected triple-bracket flow-form list mis-encoding
977/// (`[[[a]], [[b]]]`), not a real link — skipped, matching validate.
978pub fn extract_edge_targets(body: &str) -> Vec<String> {
979    let mut out = Vec::new();
980    let mut fence: Option<(u8, usize)> = None;
981    for line in body.lines() {
982        let content = line.trim_end_matches('\r');
983        if let Some(f) = fence {
984            if fence_closes(content, f) {
985                fence = None;
986            }
987            continue;
988        }
989        if let Some(opened) = fence_opens(content) {
990            fence = Some(opened);
991            continue;
992        }
993        let bytes = line.as_bytes();
994        let mut i = 0usize;
995        while i + 1 < bytes.len() {
996            if bytes[i] == b'[' && bytes[i + 1] == b'[' {
997                if let Some(close) = line[i + 2..].find("]]") {
998                    let inner = &line[i + 2..i + 2 + close];
999                    let raw_target = inner.split('|').next().unwrap_or(inner).trim();
1000                    if !raw_target.is_empty() && !raw_target.starts_with('[') {
1001                        let canonical = canonical_link_target(raw_target);
1002                        if !canonical.is_empty() {
1003                            out.push(canonical);
1004                        }
1005                    }
1006                    i = i + 2 + close + 2;
1007                    continue;
1008                }
1009            }
1010            i += 1;
1011        }
1012    }
1013    out
1014}
1015
1016/// If `line` opens a fenced code block, return `(fence byte, run length)`. The
1017/// single fence-open rule shared by [`extract_edge_targets`] and graph's
1018/// `rewrite_links_to`, mirroring validate's `fence_opens` and the parser's
1019/// `opening_fence` so every link op tracks fences identically: a fence is
1020/// ```` ``` ```` or `~~~` (run ≥ 3) at ≤ 3 spaces of indent, and a backtick
1021/// fence's info string may not itself contain a backtick.
1022pub fn fence_opens(line: &str) -> Option<(u8, usize)> {
1023    let indent = line.len() - line.trim_start_matches(' ').len();
1024    if indent > 3 {
1025        return None;
1026    }
1027    let rest = &line[indent..];
1028    let byte = rest.bytes().next()?;
1029    if byte != b'`' && byte != b'~' {
1030        return None;
1031    }
1032    let run = rest.len() - rest.trim_start_matches(byte as char).len();
1033    if run < 3 {
1034        return None;
1035    }
1036    // A backtick fence's info string may not itself contain a backtick.
1037    if byte == b'`' && rest[run..].contains('`') {
1038        return None;
1039    }
1040    Some((byte, run))
1041}
1042
1043/// True if `line` closes the currently open `fence`: same char, run at least as
1044/// long, nothing but trailing whitespace after. Mirrors validate's
1045/// `fence_closes` / the parser's `is_closing_fence`, so an inner fence of the
1046/// *other* character (a ```` ``` ```` line inside a `~~~` block) does NOT close
1047/// the outer fence.
1048pub fn fence_closes(line: &str, fence: (u8, usize)) -> bool {
1049    let (byte, open_len) = fence;
1050    let indent = line.len() - line.trim_start_matches(' ').len();
1051    if indent > 3 {
1052        return false;
1053    }
1054    let rest = &line[indent..];
1055    let run = rest.len() - rest.trim_start_matches(byte as char).len();
1056    if run < open_len {
1057        return false;
1058    }
1059    rest[run..].trim().is_empty()
1060}
1061
1062/// True when the host filesystem resolves paths case-insensitively (macOS/
1063/// Windows default). Probed once per process against the OS temp dir by creating
1064/// a lowercase marker and stat-ing its uppercase spelling. A probe failure
1065/// conservatively reports `false` (case-sensitive) — the historical behavior —
1066/// so a transient temp-dir issue never silently widens matching.
1067fn fs_is_case_insensitive() -> bool {
1068    use std::sync::OnceLock;
1069    static CASE_INSENSITIVE: OnceLock<bool> = OnceLock::new();
1070    *CASE_INSENSITIVE.get_or_init(|| {
1071        let dir = std::env::temp_dir();
1072        let pid = std::process::id();
1073        let nanos = SystemTime::now()
1074            .duration_since(UNIX_EPOCH)
1075            .map(|d| d.as_nanos())
1076            .unwrap_or(0);
1077        let lower = dir.join(format!(".dbmd-case-probe-{pid}-{nanos}"));
1078        let upper = dir.join(format!(".DBMD-CASE-PROBE-{pid}-{nanos}"));
1079        // Create the lowercase marker; if its uppercase spelling then resolves to
1080        // a file, the filesystem folded the case → case-insensitive.
1081        let result = match std::fs::File::create(&lower) {
1082            Ok(_) => upper.is_file(),
1083            Err(_) => false,
1084        };
1085        let _ = std::fs::remove_file(&lower);
1086        result
1087    })
1088}
1089
1090// ── Free helpers (no `self`) ────────────────────────────────────────────────
1091
1092/// True if a walk entry is a regular file, **following symlinks** so a
1093/// symlinked `.md` content file (or a file inside a symlinked type folder) is
1094/// counted like any other content file.
1095///
1096/// The store walks enable `follow_links(true)`, so a symlink entry's
1097/// `file_type()` still reports `is_symlink()` (the `ignore` walker does not
1098/// rewrite the entry's own type), not the followed target's type. Treat a
1099/// symlink whose target is a regular file as a file: `stat` (follow) the path
1100/// and check. A broken symlink (no target) is not a file.
1101fn is_file_entry(entry: &ignore::DirEntry) -> bool {
1102    match entry.file_type() {
1103        Some(ft) if ft.is_file() => true,
1104        Some(ft) if ft.is_symlink() => std::fs::metadata(entry.path())
1105            .map(|m| m.is_file())
1106            .unwrap_or(false),
1107        // A `None` file type (the walk root itself) or a non-file/non-symlink
1108        // entry is not a content file.
1109        _ => false,
1110    }
1111}
1112
1113/// True if the path ends in a `.md` extension (case-sensitive — db.md files are
1114/// lowercase `.md`).
1115fn has_md_extension(path: &Path) -> bool {
1116    path.extension().and_then(|e| e.to_str()) == Some("md")
1117}
1118
1119/// True if the basename is a non-content meta file (`DB.md`, `index.md`,
1120/// `log.md`) that the content walks must skip.
1121fn is_non_content_basename(path: &Path) -> bool {
1122    match path.file_name().and_then(|n| n.to_str()) {
1123        Some(name) => NON_CONTENT_BASENAMES.contains(&name),
1124        None => false,
1125    }
1126}
1127
1128/// Append `.md` to a bare name; leave an existing `.md` untouched.
1129fn ensure_md_extension(name: &str) -> String {
1130    if name.ends_with(".md") {
1131        name.to_string()
1132    } else {
1133        format!("{name}.md")
1134    }
1135}
1136
1137/// The canonical default folder for a recognized type, per the SPEC type table
1138/// (`email → sources/emails`, `expense → records/expenses`, …). Unrecognized
1139/// types fall back to `records/<type>` (the bare type name, no pluralization
1140/// guess) — see the store findings on the docstring's looser `<type>` phrasing.
1141fn default_type_folder(type_: &str) -> PathBuf {
1142    let path = match type_ {
1143        // sources — documentary
1144        "email" => "sources/emails",
1145        "transcript" => "sources/transcripts",
1146        "pdf-source" => "sources/docs",
1147        // sources — testimonial (a human told the agent X)
1148        "note" => "sources/notes",
1149        // records — entities
1150        "contact" => "records/contacts",
1151        "company" => "records/companies",
1152        // records — events
1153        "expense" => "records/expenses",
1154        "meeting" => "records/meetings",
1155        "decision" => "records/decisions",
1156        "invoice" => "records/invoices",
1157        // unrecognized: bare type name under records/ (conclusions and any
1158        // custom type land here, e.g. `concept` → `records/concept`).
1159        other => return PathBuf::from("records").join(other),
1160    };
1161    PathBuf::from(path)
1162}
1163
1164/// The canonical [`Layer`] a `type_` belongs to, derived from its default
1165/// type-folder (`email` → `Sources`, `contact` → `Records`, a conclusion
1166/// `profile` → `Records`, unrecognized → `Records`). The write path uses this to decide whether
1167/// an agent-supplied folder is in the *right* layer for the type before honouring
1168/// its sub-folder choice.
1169pub fn layer_for_type(type_: &str) -> Layer {
1170    layer_of_folder(&default_type_folder(type_)).unwrap_or(Layer::Records)
1171}
1172
1173/// The [`Layer`] a type-folder path lives in, read from its first component
1174/// (`sources/` → `Sources`, `records/` → `Records`). Used to
1175/// bound [`Store::find_by_type`]'s whole-layer sidecar read to a single layer
1176/// subtree. Returns `None` for a path with no recognized layer prefix; every
1177/// value [`default_type_folder`] produces has one, so in practice this is
1178/// always `Some` on the call path — `None` degrades to a store-wide read.
1179fn layer_of_folder(folder: &Path) -> Option<Layer> {
1180    let first = folder.components().next()?.as_os_str().to_str()?;
1181    Layer::from_dir_name(first)
1182}
1183
1184/// Infer a content file's canonical `type` from its store-relative path — the
1185/// inverse of [`default_type_folder`] and the single source of truth for
1186/// path→type inference (the CLI's `fm init` calls this, never re-derives it).
1187///
1188/// Requires the canonical `<layer>/<type-folder>/<file>` 3-component shape; a
1189/// shorter path (a file directly under a layer) or an unknown leading layer
1190/// yields `None`.
1191///
1192/// Recognized `(layer, folder)` pairs map back to their canonical type. For an
1193/// unrecognized folder the fallback is the **bare folder name verbatim** (no
1194/// pluralization/singularization) so it round-trips with `default_type_folder`,
1195/// whose unrecognized fallback is the bare type name (`task` ⇄ `records/task`).
1196/// Singularizing here would break that round-trip (`records/tasks` → `task`
1197/// while `default_type_folder("task")` → `records/task`). A conclusion record's
1198/// folder (e.g. `records/profiles/`) infers its bare folder name (`profiles`),
1199/// the same custom-type fallback as any other unrecognized folder.
1200pub fn infer_type_from_path(rel: &Path) -> Option<String> {
1201    let mut comps = rel.components().filter_map(|c| c.as_os_str().to_str());
1202    let layer = comps.next()?;
1203    if !matches!(layer, "sources" | "records") {
1204        return None;
1205    }
1206    let folder = comps.next()?;
1207    // The file itself must be a third component (a real type-folder, not the
1208    // file sitting directly under the layer).
1209    comps.next()?;
1210
1211    let mapped = match (layer, folder) {
1212        ("sources", "emails") => "email",
1213        ("sources", "transcripts") => "transcript",
1214        ("sources", "docs") => "pdf-source",
1215        ("sources", "notes") => "note",
1216        ("records", "contacts") => "contact",
1217        ("records", "companies") => "company",
1218        ("records", "expenses") => "expense",
1219        ("records", "meetings") => "meeting",
1220        ("records", "decisions") => "decision",
1221        ("records", "invoices") => "invoice",
1222        // Unrecognized folder: the bare name, verbatim. This is the inverse of
1223        // `default_type_folder`'s unrecognized fallback (`other → records/other`)
1224        // and the round-trip would break if we pluralized/singularized here.
1225        (_, other) => other,
1226    };
1227    Some(mapped.to_string())
1228}
1229
1230/// The primary date field name for a sharding type (the field whose value
1231/// drives `<YYYY>/<MM>`). `None` means "use the `created` fallback only".
1232fn primary_date_field(type_: &str) -> Option<&'static str> {
1233    match type_ {
1234        "email" => Some("date"),
1235        "transcript" => Some("recorded_at"),
1236        "pdf-source" => Some("received_at"),
1237        "note" => Some("told_at"),
1238        "expense" | "invoice" | "meeting" => Some("date"),
1239        // recognized custom event types have no canonical date field name; they
1240        // fall back to `created`.
1241        _ => None,
1242    }
1243}
1244
1245/// Parse a YAML value into an RFC3339 [`DateTime`], accepting both an explicit
1246/// string and a YAML-native scalar rendered to string.
1247fn value_to_datetime(value: &serde_norway::Value) -> Option<DateTime<FixedOffset>> {
1248    let s = yaml_scalar_string(value)?;
1249    DateTime::parse_from_rfc3339(s.trim()).ok()
1250}
1251
1252/// Extract `(YYYY, MM)` from a YAML date/timestamp value. Lenient: matches a
1253/// leading `YYYY-MM` so a bare `2026-05-22` date and a full
1254/// `2026-05-22T10:00:00-07:00` timestamp both work.
1255fn value_to_year_month(value: &serde_norway::Value) -> Option<(String, String)> {
1256    let s = yaml_scalar_string(value)?;
1257    year_month_from_str(s.trim())
1258}
1259
1260/// `(YYYY, MM)` from the leading `YYYY-MM` of a date string.
1261fn year_month_from_str(s: &str) -> Option<(String, String)> {
1262    // Hand-roll the leading-`YYYY-MM` parse to avoid a regex compile on the
1263    // write path. Require: 4 digits, '-', 2 digits.
1264    let bytes = s.as_bytes();
1265    if bytes.len() < 7 {
1266        return None;
1267    }
1268    let is_digit = |b: u8| b.is_ascii_digit();
1269    if !(is_digit(bytes[0])
1270        && is_digit(bytes[1])
1271        && is_digit(bytes[2])
1272        && is_digit(bytes[3])
1273        && bytes[4] == b'-'
1274        && is_digit(bytes[5])
1275        && is_digit(bytes[6]))
1276    {
1277        return None;
1278    }
1279    let month: u8 = (bytes[5] - b'0') * 10 + (bytes[6] - b'0');
1280    if !(1..=12).contains(&month) {
1281        return None;
1282    }
1283    Some((s[0..4].to_string(), s[5..7].to_string()))
1284}
1285
1286/// Render a YAML scalar as a string: a real `String` verbatim, otherwise the
1287/// value's compact YAML serialization (covers timestamps that the YAML engine
1288/// may surface as a non-string scalar).
1289fn yaml_scalar_string(value: &serde_norway::Value) -> Option<String> {
1290    if let Some(s) = value.as_str() {
1291        return Some(s.to_string());
1292    }
1293    match value {
1294        serde_norway::Value::Null => None,
1295        serde_norway::Value::Mapping(_) | serde_norway::Value::Sequence(_) => None,
1296        other => serde_norway::to_string(other)
1297            .ok()
1298            .map(|s| s.trim().to_string()),
1299    }
1300}
1301
1302/// The YAML frontmatter block of a file: the text between a leading `---` fence
1303/// and the next `---` fence, exclusive. `None` if the file does not open with a
1304/// `---` fence on its first line.
1305fn frontmatter_block(text: &str) -> Option<&str> {
1306    // Tolerate a UTF-8 BOM and CRLF, but the fence must be the very first line.
1307    let body = text.strip_prefix('\u{feff}').unwrap_or(text);
1308    let mut rest = body;
1309    // First line must be exactly `---`, tolerating trailing whitespace (CR, but
1310    // also spaces/tabs) — matching the canonical parser (`parser.rs` /
1311    // `index.rs`'s `extract_frontmatter_block`). A strict `\r`-only trim missed a
1312    // `--- ` fence, so `read_updated` returned None and date-sharding silently
1313    // fell back, disagreeing with the sidecar the rest of the toolkit builds.
1314    let (first, after_first) = split_first_line(rest);
1315    if first.trim_end() != "---" {
1316        return None;
1317    }
1318    rest = after_first;
1319    let block_start = rest;
1320    let mut scanned = 0usize;
1321    loop {
1322        let (line, after) = split_first_line(rest);
1323        if line.trim_end() == "---" {
1324            return Some(&block_start[..scanned]);
1325        }
1326        if after.is_empty() && line.is_empty() {
1327            // Reached end of input without a closing fence.
1328            return None;
1329        }
1330        scanned += line.len() + 1; // +1 for the consumed '\n'
1331        if after.is_empty() {
1332            return None;
1333        }
1334        rest = after;
1335    }
1336}
1337
1338/// Split a string into (first line without its trailing `\n`, remainder after
1339/// the `\n`). If there is no newline, the whole string is the line and the
1340/// remainder is empty.
1341fn split_first_line(s: &str) -> (&str, &str) {
1342    match s.find('\n') {
1343        Some(i) => (&s[..i], &s[i + 1..]),
1344        None => (s, ""),
1345    }
1346}
1347
1348/// True if an [`IndexRecord`] has a field `key` equal to `value`, checking the
1349/// typed columns first and then the flattened `fields` map.
1350fn record_matches_field(record: &IndexRecord, key: &str, value: &str) -> bool {
1351    match key {
1352        "type" => record.type_ == value,
1353        "summary" => record.summary == value,
1354        "path" => record.path.to_string_lossy() == value,
1355        "created" => timestamp_matches(record.created, value),
1356        "updated" => timestamp_matches(record.updated, value),
1357        "tags" => record.tags.iter().any(|t| t == value),
1358        "links" => record.links.iter().any(|l| l == value),
1359        other => record
1360            .fields
1361            .get(other)
1362            .map(|v| json_value_matches(v, value))
1363            .unwrap_or(false),
1364    }
1365}
1366
1367/// Compare a record's `created`/`updated` instant against a query `value`.
1368///
1369/// db.md files write timestamps in several equivalent RFC3339 spellings — most
1370/// commonly the `Z` UTC designator (`2026-05-01T00:00:00Z`) but also an explicit
1371/// offset (`...+00:00`, `...-07:00`). A naive `record.created.to_rfc3339() ==
1372/// value` reformats only one side: chrono renders a UTC instant as `+00:00`, so
1373/// the `Z` form an agent reads straight out of the file would never match. We
1374/// instead parse `value` as RFC3339 and compare instants, where `Z` and `+00:00`
1375/// (and any same-instant offset) are equal. A `value` that is not valid RFC3339
1376/// can never equal a real timestamp, so it falls through to `false`.
1377fn timestamp_matches(stored: Option<DateTime<FixedOffset>>, value: &str) -> bool {
1378    match (stored, DateTime::parse_from_rfc3339(value)) {
1379        (Some(stored), Ok(queried)) => stored == queried,
1380        _ => false,
1381    }
1382}
1383
1384/// Match a JSON number against a query string.
1385///
1386/// A FLOAT-valued field is compared NUMERICALLY, not textually: the sidecar
1387/// stores a YAML float through serde_json's canonical f64 rendering, which
1388/// discards the file's source spelling (`1234.00` -> `1234.0`, `12.50` ->
1389/// `12.5`, `1e3` -> `1000.0`). A raw `to_string()` compare therefore made the
1390/// spelling a human reads in the file fail to match (and disagreed with
1391/// free-text `search`), while requiring a canonical form often absent from the
1392/// file. We parse the query as f64 and compare values. Restricted to the float
1393/// case so a large INTEGER field never loses exactness to f64 rounding (integers
1394/// render canonically and round-trip exactly through the textual compare).
1395/// Mirrors the parse-then-compare pattern [`timestamp_matches`] already uses.
1396fn number_matches(n: &serde_json::Number, value: &str) -> bool {
1397    if n.to_string() == value {
1398        return true;
1399    }
1400    if n.is_f64() {
1401        if let (Some(stored), Ok(q)) = (n.as_f64(), value.parse::<f64>()) {
1402            return stored == q;
1403        }
1404    }
1405    false
1406}
1407
1408/// Compare a JSON field value against a query string. A string matches
1409/// verbatim; scalars match their textual form; an array matches if any element
1410/// matches (so a list-valued frontmatter field is membership-queried).
1411fn json_value_matches(v: &serde_json::Value, value: &str) -> bool {
1412    match v {
1413        serde_json::Value::String(s) => s == value,
1414        serde_json::Value::Bool(b) => b.to_string() == value,
1415        serde_json::Value::Number(n) => number_matches(n, value),
1416        serde_json::Value::Array(items) => items.iter().any(|i| json_value_matches(i, value)),
1417        // A present-but-null field never matches — consistent with the in-memory
1418        // post-filter (`query::json_value_matches`, which the first `where`
1419        // clause is NOT re-checked against, so the two must agree here or a
1420        // `--where field=` query would return different rows than `--type X
1421        // --where field=`).
1422        serde_json::Value::Null => false,
1423        serde_json::Value::Object(_) => false,
1424    }
1425}
1426
1427#[cfg(test)]
1428mod tests {
1429    use super::*;
1430    use std::fs;
1431    use tempfile::{tempdir, TempDir};
1432
1433    // ── Fixtures ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
1434
1435    /// Write `contents` to `<root>/<rel>`, creating parent dirs. Returns the
1436    /// store-relative path for convenient assertions.
1437    fn write(root: &Path, rel: &str, contents: &str) -> PathBuf {
1438        let abs = root.join(rel);
1439        fs::create_dir_all(abs.parent().unwrap()).unwrap();
1440        fs::write(&abs, contents).unwrap();
1441        PathBuf::from(rel)
1442    }
1443
1444    /// A minimal content file with the given `updated` timestamp in frontmatter.
1445    fn content_md(updated: &str) -> String {
1446        format!(
1447            "---\ntype: note\ncreated: {updated}\nupdated: {updated}\nsummary: a note\n---\n\nbody\n"
1448        )
1449    }
1450
1451    /// A bare directory with a `DB.md` marker (valid `db-md` frontmatter so the
1452    /// real parser is exercised).
1453    fn empty_store() -> TempDir {
1454        let dir = tempdir().unwrap();
1455        fs::write(
1456            dir.path().join("DB.md"),
1457            "---\ntype: db-md\nscope: company\nowner: Test\n---\n\n# Store\n",
1458        )
1459        .unwrap();
1460        dir
1461    }
1462
1463    /// Open a store rooted at a TempDir; panics if `open` rejects it.
1464    fn open(dir: &TempDir) -> Store {
1465        Store::open(dir.path()).expect("fixture should be a valid store")
1466    }
1467
1468    fn rels(paths: &[PathBuf]) -> Vec<String> {
1469        paths
1470            .iter()
1471            .map(|p| p.to_string_lossy().replace('\\', "/"))
1472            .collect()
1473    }
1474
1475    // ── Layer ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
1476
1477    #[test]
1478    fn layer_dir_name_and_parse_are_inverse() {
1479        for layer in Layer::all() {
1480            assert_eq!(Layer::from_dir_name(layer.dir_name()), Some(layer));
1481        }
1482        assert_eq!(Layer::Sources.dir_name(), "sources");
1483        assert_eq!(Layer::Records.dir_name(), "records");
1484        // `wiki` is no longer a layer (the wiki/ layer was removed); it parses to None.
1485        assert_eq!(Layer::from_dir_name("wiki"), None);
1486        assert_eq!(Layer::from_dir_name("log"), None);
1487        assert_eq!(Layer::from_dir_name("Sources"), None); // case-sensitive
1488    }
1489
1490    #[test]
1491    fn layer_order_is_canonical() {
1492        // stats keys a BTreeMap on Layer; the sort order must be sources<records.
1493        let mut v = [Layer::Records, Layer::Sources];
1494        v.sort();
1495        assert_eq!(v, [Layer::Sources, Layer::Records]);
1496    }
1497
1498    // ── is_db_md_store / open ────────────────────────────────────────────────
1499
1500    #[test]
1501    fn is_store_true_only_with_uppercase_marker() {
1502        let dir = tempdir().unwrap();
1503        assert!(
1504            !Store::is_db_md_store(dir.path()),
1505            "no marker → not a store"
1506        );
1507
1508        fs::write(dir.path().join("DB.md"), "---\ntype: db-md\n---\n").unwrap();
1509        assert!(Store::is_db_md_store(dir.path()), "uppercase DB.md → store");
1510    }
1511
1512    #[test]
1513    fn is_store_false_for_lowercase_db_md() {
1514        // The case-sensitivity contract: a lowercase db.md is the spec name, not
1515        // a marker — even on a case-insensitive filesystem where Path::exists
1516        // would lie. This test must pass on macOS (case-insensitive) too.
1517        let dir = tempdir().unwrap();
1518        fs::write(dir.path().join("db.md"), "---\ntype: db-md\n---\n").unwrap();
1519        assert!(
1520            !Store::is_db_md_store(dir.path()),
1521            "lowercase db.md must NOT be treated as a store marker"
1522        );
1523        assert!(Store::open(dir.path()).is_err());
1524    }
1525
1526    #[test]
1527    fn is_store_false_when_db_md_is_a_directory() {
1528        let dir = tempdir().unwrap();
1529        fs::create_dir(dir.path().join("DB.md")).unwrap();
1530        assert!(
1531            !Store::is_db_md_store(dir.path()),
1532            "a directory named DB.md is not the file marker"
1533        );
1534    }
1535
1536    #[test]
1537    fn open_rejects_non_store_with_path() {
1538        let dir = tempdir().unwrap();
1539        let err = Store::open(dir.path()).unwrap_err();
1540        assert_eq!(err.path, dir.path());
1541    }
1542
1543    #[test]
1544    fn open_succeeds_and_parses_config() {
1545        let dir = tempdir().unwrap();
1546        // A DB.md whose ## Policies declares a frozen page — proves open()
1547        // actually parsed the config rather than substituting a default.
1548        fs::write(
1549            dir.path().join("DB.md"),
1550            "---\ntype: db-md\nscope: company\nowner: Test\n---\n\n# Store\n\n\
1551             ## Policies\n\n### Frozen pages\n- records/decisions/q1.md\n",
1552        )
1553        .unwrap();
1554        let store = Store::open(dir.path()).unwrap();
1555        assert_eq!(store.root, dir.path());
1556        assert!(
1557            store
1558                .config
1559                .frozen_pages
1560                .iter()
1561                .any(|p| p == Path::new("records/decisions/q1.md")),
1562            "open() must surface DB.md ## Policies, got {:?}",
1563            store.config.frozen_pages
1564        );
1565    }
1566
1567    // ── walk / walk_layer / walk_type_folder ─────────────────────────────────
1568
1569    #[test]
1570    fn walk_collects_content_across_layers_skipping_meta_and_log() {
1571        let dir = empty_store();
1572        let root = dir.path();
1573        write(
1574            root,
1575            "sources/emails/2026/05/a.md",
1576            &content_md("2026-05-01T00:00:00Z"),
1577        );
1578        write(
1579            root,
1580            "records/contacts/sarah.md",
1581            &content_md("2026-05-02T00:00:00Z"),
1582        );
1583        write(
1584            root,
1585            "records/profiles/sarah.md",
1586            &content_md("2026-05-03T00:00:00Z"),
1587        );
1588        // Things walk() must SKIP:
1589        write(root, "sources/emails/index.md", "---\ntype: index\n---\n"); // catalog
1590        write(root, "index.md", "---\ntype: index\n---\n"); // root catalog
1591        write(root, "log.md", "---\ntype: log\n---\n"); // log
1592        write(root, "log/2026-04.md", "---\ntype: log\n---\n"); // rotated log archive
1593        write(
1594            root,
1595            "sources/.hidden/secret.md",
1596            &content_md("2026-05-09T00:00:00Z"),
1597        ); // hidden dir
1598        write(root, "records/contacts/notes.txt", "not markdown"); // non-md
1599
1600        let store = open(&dir);
1601        let got = rels(&store.walk().unwrap());
1602        assert_eq!(
1603            got,
1604            vec![
1605                "records/contacts/sarah.md".to_string(),
1606                "records/profiles/sarah.md".to_string(),
1607                "sources/emails/2026/05/a.md".to_string(),
1608            ]
1609        );
1610    }
1611
1612    #[test]
1613    fn walk_includes_content_named_log_md_or_db_md_inside_a_layer() {
1614        let dir = empty_store();
1615        let root = dir.path();
1616        // A content file that merely happens to be named log.md / DB.md INSIDE a
1617        // layer is real content — those names are reserved only at the store root.
1618        write(
1619            root,
1620            "records/configs/log.md",
1621            &content_md("2026-05-01T00:00:00Z"),
1622        );
1623        write(
1624            root,
1625            "sources/docs/DB.md",
1626            &content_md("2026-05-02T00:00:00Z"),
1627        );
1628        // The derived catalog twin is still skipped at any depth.
1629        write(root, "records/configs/index.md", "---\ntype: index\n---\n");
1630        let store = open(&dir);
1631        let got = rels(&store.walk().unwrap());
1632        assert!(
1633            got.contains(&"records/configs/log.md".to_string()),
1634            "layer-internal log.md is content: {got:?}"
1635        );
1636        assert!(
1637            got.contains(&"sources/docs/DB.md".to_string()),
1638            "layer-internal DB.md is content: {got:?}"
1639        );
1640        assert!(
1641            !got.iter().any(|p| p.ends_with("index.md")),
1642            "index.md is still skipped: {got:?}"
1643        );
1644    }
1645
1646    #[test]
1647    fn walk_layer_is_scoped() {
1648        let dir = empty_store();
1649        let root = dir.path();
1650        write(
1651            root,
1652            "sources/emails/2026/05/a.md",
1653            &content_md("2026-05-01T00:00:00Z"),
1654        );
1655        write(
1656            root,
1657            "records/contacts/sarah.md",
1658            &content_md("2026-05-02T00:00:00Z"),
1659        );
1660        let store = open(&dir);
1661
1662        assert_eq!(
1663            rels(&store.walk_layer(Layer::Sources).unwrap()),
1664            vec!["sources/emails/2026/05/a.md".to_string()]
1665        );
1666        assert_eq!(
1667            rels(&store.walk_layer(Layer::Records).unwrap()),
1668            vec!["records/contacts/sarah.md".to_string()]
1669        );
1670        // A layer with no directory is empty, not an error: a store with only a
1671        // sources/ tree has no records/ dir, so walking Records is empty.
1672        let only_sources = empty_store();
1673        write(
1674            only_sources.path(),
1675            "sources/emails/2026/05/a.md",
1676            &content_md("2026-05-01T00:00:00Z"),
1677        );
1678        let s2 = open(&only_sources);
1679        assert!(s2.walk_layer(Layer::Records).unwrap().is_empty());
1680    }
1681
1682    #[test]
1683    fn walk_type_folder_recurses_shards_and_accepts_abs_or_rel() {
1684        let dir = empty_store();
1685        let root = dir.path();
1686        write(
1687            root,
1688            "sources/emails/2026/05/a.md",
1689            &content_md("2026-05-01T00:00:00Z"),
1690        );
1691        write(
1692            root,
1693            "sources/emails/2026/06/b.md",
1694            &content_md("2026-06-01T00:00:00Z"),
1695        );
1696        write(root, "sources/emails/index.md", "---\ntype: index\n---\n"); // skipped
1697                                                                           // A different type folder must not leak in.
1698        write(
1699            root,
1700            "sources/docs/2026/05/c.md",
1701            &content_md("2026-05-04T00:00:00Z"),
1702        );
1703        let store = open(&dir);
1704
1705        let expected = vec![
1706            "sources/emails/2026/05/a.md".to_string(),
1707            "sources/emails/2026/06/b.md".to_string(),
1708        ];
1709        // Relative folder arg.
1710        assert_eq!(
1711            rels(&store.walk_type_folder(Path::new("sources/emails")).unwrap()),
1712            expected
1713        );
1714        // Absolute folder arg under the store resolves identically.
1715        assert_eq!(
1716            rels(
1717                &store
1718                    .walk_type_folder(&root.join("sources/emails"))
1719                    .unwrap()
1720            ),
1721            expected
1722        );
1723    }
1724
1725    // ── recent_in_type_folder ────────────────────────────────────────────────
1726
1727    #[test]
1728    fn recent_orders_by_updated_desc_then_path_and_caps() {
1729        let dir = empty_store();
1730        let root = dir.path();
1731        // newest
1732        write(
1733            root,
1734            "records/meetings/2026/05/c.md",
1735            &content_md("2026-05-03T00:00:00Z"),
1736        );
1737        // tie on updated — path asc decides (a before b)
1738        write(
1739            root,
1740            "records/meetings/2026/05/a.md",
1741            &content_md("2026-05-02T00:00:00Z"),
1742        );
1743        write(
1744            root,
1745            "records/meetings/2026/05/b.md",
1746            &content_md("2026-05-02T00:00:00Z"),
1747        );
1748        // oldest
1749        write(
1750            root,
1751            "records/meetings/2026/04/z.md",
1752            &content_md("2026-04-01T00:00:00Z"),
1753        );
1754        let store = open(&dir);
1755
1756        let all = rels(
1757            &store
1758                .recent_in_type_folder(Path::new("records/meetings"), 10)
1759                .unwrap(),
1760        );
1761        assert_eq!(
1762            all,
1763            vec![
1764                "records/meetings/2026/05/c.md".to_string(), // newest
1765                "records/meetings/2026/05/a.md".to_string(), // tie, path asc
1766                "records/meetings/2026/05/b.md".to_string(),
1767                "records/meetings/2026/04/z.md".to_string(), // oldest
1768            ]
1769        );
1770
1771        // Cap takes the n most-recent.
1772        let top2 = rels(
1773            &store
1774                .recent_in_type_folder(Path::new("records/meetings"), 2)
1775                .unwrap(),
1776        );
1777        assert_eq!(
1778            top2,
1779            vec![
1780                "records/meetings/2026/05/c.md".to_string(),
1781                "records/meetings/2026/05/a.md".to_string(),
1782            ]
1783        );
1784    }
1785
1786    #[test]
1787    fn recent_sorts_undated_files_last() {
1788        let dir = empty_store();
1789        let root = dir.path();
1790        write(
1791            root,
1792            "records/contacts/dated.md",
1793            &content_md("2026-05-01T00:00:00Z"),
1794        );
1795        // No `updated` field at all.
1796        write(
1797            root,
1798            "records/contacts/undated.md",
1799            "---\ntype: contact\nsummary: x\n---\nbody\n",
1800        );
1801        let store = open(&dir);
1802        let got = rels(
1803            &store
1804                .recent_in_type_folder(Path::new("records/contacts"), 10)
1805                .unwrap(),
1806        );
1807        assert_eq!(
1808            got,
1809            vec![
1810                "records/contacts/dated.md".to_string(),
1811                "records/contacts/undated.md".to_string(),
1812            ],
1813            "a file with a real `updated` must outrank one with none"
1814        );
1815    }
1816
1817    // ── type_shards ──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
1818
1819    #[test]
1820    fn type_shards_classification() {
1821        let dir = empty_store();
1822        let store = open(&dir);
1823        for t in [
1824            "email",
1825            "transcript",
1826            "pdf-source",
1827            "expense",
1828            "invoice",
1829            "meeting",
1830            "order",
1831            "ticket",
1832            "transaction",
1833        ] {
1834            assert!(store.type_shards(t), "{t} should shard");
1835        }
1836        for t in [
1837            "contact", "company", "decision", "profile", "index", "log", "db-md", "proposal",
1838        ] {
1839            assert!(!store.type_shards(t), "{t} should stay flat");
1840        }
1841    }
1842
1843    #[test]
1844    fn type_shards_respects_schema_directive_both_directions() {
1845        use crate::parser::{Config, Schema};
1846        let dir = empty_store();
1847        let mut store = open(&dir);
1848        let mut config = Config::default();
1849        // A CUSTOM type (not in the built-in list) opts into date-sharding —
1850        // without the schema override `type_shards` would return false for it.
1851        config.schemas.insert(
1852            "shipment".to_string(),
1853            Schema {
1854                shard: Some(true),
1855                ..Schema::default()
1856            },
1857        );
1858        // A BUILT-IN event type opts OUT (flat) — the override wins over the
1859        // built-in default.
1860        config.schemas.insert(
1861            "expense".to_string(),
1862            Schema {
1863                shard: Some(false),
1864                ..Schema::default()
1865            },
1866        );
1867        // A schema with no `shard:` directive leaves the built-in default intact.
1868        config
1869            .schemas
1870            .insert("meeting".to_string(), Schema::default());
1871        store.config = config;
1872
1873        assert!(
1874            store.type_shards("shipment"),
1875            "custom type with `shard: by-date` must shard"
1876        );
1877        assert!(
1878            !store.type_shards("expense"),
1879            "built-in event type with `shard: flat` must go flat"
1880        );
1881        assert!(
1882            store.type_shards("meeting"),
1883            "schema without a `shard:` directive keeps the built-in default"
1884        );
1885        assert!(
1886            !store.type_shards("contact"),
1887            "unconfigured entity type stays flat"
1888        );
1889    }
1890
1891    // ── shard_path_for ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────
1892
1893    fn fm_with_extra(key: &str, value: &str) -> Frontmatter {
1894        let mut fm = Frontmatter::default();
1895        fm.extra.insert(
1896            key.to_string(),
1897            serde_norway::Value::String(value.to_string()),
1898        );
1899        fm
1900    }
1901
1902    fn fm_with_created(rfc3339: &str) -> Frontmatter {
1903        Frontmatter {
1904            created: Some(DateTime::parse_from_rfc3339(rfc3339).unwrap()),
1905            ..Default::default()
1906        }
1907    }
1908
1909    #[test]
1910    fn shard_path_uses_primary_date_field_per_type() {
1911        let dir = empty_store();
1912        let store = open(&dir);
1913
1914        // expense.date → records/expenses/<YYYY>/<MM>/
1915        let p = store
1916            .shard_path_for("expense", &fm_with_extra("date", "2026-05-22"), "lunch")
1917            .unwrap();
1918        assert_eq!(p, PathBuf::from("records/expenses/2026/05/lunch.md"));
1919
1920        // email.date → sources/emails/<YYYY>/<MM>/
1921        let p = store
1922            .shard_path_for(
1923                "email",
1924                &fm_with_extra("date", "2026-11-02T09:00:00-07:00"),
1925                "e1",
1926            )
1927            .unwrap();
1928        assert_eq!(p, PathBuf::from("sources/emails/2026/11/e1.md"));
1929
1930        // transcript.recorded_at → sources/transcripts/<YYYY>/<MM>/
1931        let p = store
1932            .shard_path_for(
1933                "transcript",
1934                &fm_with_extra("recorded_at", "2025-01-15T12:00:00Z"),
1935                "t1",
1936            )
1937            .unwrap();
1938        assert_eq!(p, PathBuf::from("sources/transcripts/2025/01/t1.md"));
1939    }
1940
1941    #[test]
1942    fn shard_path_falls_back_to_created() {
1943        let dir = empty_store();
1944        let store = open(&dir);
1945        // meeting with no `date` field but a `created` timestamp.
1946        let p = store
1947            .shard_path_for(
1948                "meeting",
1949                &fm_with_created("2024-07-09T08:30:00-04:00"),
1950                "sync",
1951            )
1952            .unwrap();
1953        assert_eq!(p, PathBuf::from("records/meetings/2024/07/sync.md"));
1954    }
1955
1956    #[test]
1957    fn shard_path_primary_field_wins_over_created() {
1958        let dir = empty_store();
1959        let store = open(&dir);
1960        let mut fm = fm_with_created("2020-01-01T00:00:00Z");
1961        fm.extra.insert(
1962            "date".into(),
1963            serde_norway::Value::String("2026-05-22".into()),
1964        );
1965        let p = store.shard_path_for("expense", &fm, "x").unwrap();
1966        // The primary `date` (2026/05), not `created` (2020/01), drives the shard.
1967        assert_eq!(p, PathBuf::from("records/expenses/2026/05/x.md"));
1968    }
1969
1970    #[test]
1971    fn shard_path_flat_types_have_no_shard_segment() {
1972        let dir = empty_store();
1973        let store = open(&dir);
1974        // A contact has a `created` date, but contacts stay flat.
1975        let p = store
1976            .shard_path_for(
1977                "contact",
1978                &fm_with_created("2026-05-22T00:00:00Z"),
1979                "sarah-chen",
1980            )
1981            .unwrap();
1982        assert_eq!(p, PathBuf::from("records/contacts/sarah-chen.md"));
1983
1984        // A conclusion `profile` is a custom (non-built-in) type: it is flat (no
1985        // date shard) and lands under the records-layer fallback folder
1986        // `records/<type>` — `records/profile/<name>.md`, a conforming 3-component
1987        // `<layer>/<type-folder>/<file>` path. A 2-component path would be
1988        // invisible to the index/validate type-folder model.
1989        let p = store
1990            .shard_path_for("profile", &Frontmatter::default(), "renewal-theme")
1991            .unwrap();
1992        assert_eq!(p, PathBuf::from("records/profile/renewal-theme.md"));
1993    }
1994
1995    /// Regression: a type written through the toolkit's own path computation
1996    /// must land at a path the index + validate type-folder model accepts. A
1997    /// 2-component `<layer>/<file>` path is one `type_folder_of` (in both `index`
1998    /// and `validate`) treats as "no type-folder" — it would either crash
1999    /// `Index::on_write` (it tried to create `index.md` inside a file) or be
2000    /// silently dropped from every catalog by `Index::rebuild_all`. A custom
2001    /// (non-built-in) type like a conclusion `profile` falls back to
2002    /// `records/<type>` — still a conforming 3-component
2003    /// `<layer>/<type-folder>/<file>` path.
2004    #[test]
2005    fn shard_path_custom_type_is_indexable_three_component_path() {
2006        let dir = empty_store();
2007        let store = open(&dir);
2008        let p = store
2009            .shard_path_for("profile", &Frontmatter::default(), "renewal-theme")
2010            .unwrap();
2011        // First two components are a layer + a non-empty type-folder segment;
2012        // the file is the third. This is exactly the shape `type_folder_of`
2013        // (`comps.len() >= 3`, `comps[0]` a known layer) requires.
2014        let comps: Vec<&str> = p.iter().filter_map(|c| c.to_str()).collect();
2015        assert_eq!(
2016            comps.len(),
2017            3,
2018            "custom-type path must be <layer>/<type-folder>/<file>, got {p:?}"
2019        );
2020        assert_eq!(
2021            comps[0], "records",
2022            "first component must be the records layer (a custom type is \
2023             filed under the records fallback)"
2024        );
2025        assert!(
2026            !comps[1].is_empty() && comps[1] != "renewal-theme.md",
2027            "second component must be a real type-folder, not the file: {p:?}"
2028        );
2029        assert!(
2030            comps[2].ends_with(".md"),
2031            "third component must be the .md file: {p:?}"
2032        );
2033    }
2034
2035    #[test]
2036    fn shard_path_preserves_and_adds_md_extension() {
2037        let dir = empty_store();
2038        let store = open(&dir);
2039        let with = store
2040            .shard_path_for("contact", &Frontmatter::default(), "sarah.md")
2041            .unwrap();
2042        let without = store
2043            .shard_path_for("contact", &Frontmatter::default(), "sarah")
2044            .unwrap();
2045        assert_eq!(with, PathBuf::from("records/contacts/sarah.md"));
2046        assert_eq!(without, PathBuf::from("records/contacts/sarah.md"));
2047    }
2048
2049    #[test]
2050    fn shard_path_errors_when_sharding_type_has_no_date() {
2051        let dir = empty_store();
2052        let store = open(&dir);
2053        // expense shards, but no `date` and no `created` → NoShardDate.
2054        let err = store
2055            .shard_path_for("expense", &Frontmatter::default(), "mystery")
2056            .unwrap_err();
2057        match err {
2058            StoreError::NoShardDate { file } => {
2059                assert_eq!(file, PathBuf::from("records/expenses/mystery.md"));
2060            }
2061            other => panic!("expected NoShardDate, got {other:?}"),
2062        }
2063    }
2064
2065    // ── find_links_to ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
2066
2067    #[test]
2068    fn find_links_to_matches_all_accepted_spellings() {
2069        let dir = empty_store();
2070        let root = dir.path();
2071        let target = "records/contacts/sarah-chen";
2072
2073        // Plain link.
2074        write(
2075            root,
2076            "records/profiles/sarah.md",
2077            &format!(
2078                "---\ntype: profile\nmeta-type: conclusion\nsummary: s\n---\nSee [[{target}]].\n"
2079            ),
2080        );
2081        // Link with display text.
2082        write(
2083            root,
2084            "records/meetings/2026/05/m.md",
2085            &format!("---\ntype: meeting\nsummary: s\n---\nWith [[{target}|Sarah]].\n"),
2086        );
2087        // Link with .md extension (accepted, warned by validate).
2088        write(
2089            root,
2090            "records/concepts/t.md",
2091            &format!(
2092                "---\ntype: concept\nmeta-type: conclusion\nsummary: s\n---\n[[{target}.md]]\n"
2093            ),
2094        );
2095        // A catalog/index file also contains the link literally — included.
2096        write(
2097            root,
2098            "records/contacts/index.md",
2099            &format!("---\ntype: index\n---\n- [[{target}]] — Sarah\n"),
2100        );
2101        // No link to the target.
2102        write(
2103            root,
2104            "records/profiles/elena.md",
2105            "---\ntype: profile\nmeta-type: conclusion\nsummary: s\n---\nNo links here.\n",
2106        );
2107        // Short-form link must NOT match the full-path target.
2108        write(
2109            root,
2110            "records/profiles/bob.md",
2111            "---\ntype: profile\nmeta-type: conclusion\nsummary: s\n---\n[[sarah-chen]]\n",
2112        );
2113        // A longer path that merely starts with the target must NOT match
2114        // (boundary correctness): target `sarah-chen` vs `sarah-chen-jr`.
2115        write(
2116            root,
2117            "records/profiles/jr.md",
2118            &format!(
2119                "---\ntype: profile\nmeta-type: conclusion\nsummary: s\n---\n[[{target}-jr]]\n"
2120            ),
2121        );
2122
2123        let store = open(&dir);
2124        let got = rels(&store.find_links_to(Path::new(target)).unwrap());
2125        assert_eq!(
2126            got,
2127            vec![
2128                "records/concepts/t.md".to_string(),
2129                "records/contacts/index.md".to_string(),
2130                "records/meetings/2026/05/m.md".to_string(),
2131                "records/profiles/sarah.md".to_string(),
2132            ]
2133        );
2134    }
2135
2136    #[test]
2137    fn find_links_to_distinguishes_sibling_paths() {
2138        // Two contacts whose paths share a prefix; a link to one must not be
2139        // reported as a link to the other.
2140        let dir = empty_store();
2141        let root = dir.path();
2142        write(
2143            root,
2144            "records/concepts/a.md",
2145            "---\ntype: concept\nmeta-type: conclusion\nsummary: s\n---\n[[records/contacts/sarah]]\n",
2146        );
2147        write(
2148            root,
2149            "records/concepts/b.md",
2150            "---\ntype: concept\nmeta-type: conclusion\nsummary: s\n---\n[[records/contacts/sarah-chen]]\n",
2151        );
2152        let store = open(&dir);
2153
2154        assert_eq!(
2155            rels(
2156                &store
2157                    .find_links_to(Path::new("records/contacts/sarah"))
2158                    .unwrap()
2159            ),
2160            vec!["records/concepts/a.md".to_string()]
2161        );
2162        assert_eq!(
2163            rels(
2164                &store
2165                    .find_links_to(Path::new("records/contacts/sarah-chen"))
2166                    .unwrap()
2167            ),
2168            vec!["records/concepts/b.md".to_string()]
2169        );
2170    }
2171
2172    #[test]
2173    fn regression_find_links_to_tolerates_invalid_utf8_on_a_matched_line() {
2174        // Regression: a `.md` file can carry a stray non-UTF-8 byte on the SAME
2175        // line as a `[[target]]` link (a verbatim-ingested `sources/` artifact,
2176        // e.g. a mis-decoded Latin-1 import). The scan must still report the
2177        // link — `find_links_to` / `find_links_to_any` (and `graph backlinks` +
2178        // the working-set validate incoming-linker pass) must not error out and
2179        // drop the legitimate UTF-8 linkers. The content scan reads the file
2180        // with `String::from_utf8_lossy`, so the invalid byte becomes a
2181        // replacement char and the ASCII `[[target]]` link is still extracted.
2182        let dir = empty_store();
2183        let root = dir.path();
2184        let target = "records/contacts/sarah-chen";
2185
2186        // A clean, fully-UTF-8 linker that MUST be returned regardless.
2187        write(
2188            root,
2189            "records/profiles/clean.md",
2190            &format!(
2191                "---\ntype: profile\nmeta-type: conclusion\nsummary: s\n---\nSee [[{target}]].\n"
2192            ),
2193        );
2194
2195        // A linker whose link line ALSO carries a stray 0xFF byte (a mis-decoded
2196        // Latin-1 import). Write raw bytes so the invalid byte survives — a
2197        // `&str` fixture could not express it. The byte-level regex still
2198        // matches `[[target]]` on this line; pre-fix the UTF8 sink aborted here.
2199        let mut bytes: Vec<u8> =
2200            b"---\ntype: email\nsummary: s\n---\nSee [[records/contacts/sarah-chen]] \xFF here\n"
2201                .to_vec();
2202        let dirty_abs = root.join("sources/emails/2026/05/raw.md");
2203        fs::create_dir_all(dirty_abs.parent().unwrap()).unwrap();
2204        fs::write(&dirty_abs, &bytes).unwrap();
2205        // Defensive: confirm the fixture really is invalid UTF-8 (so the test
2206        // exercises the bug, not a coincidentally-valid file).
2207        assert!(
2208            std::str::from_utf8(&bytes).is_err(),
2209            "fixture must contain invalid UTF-8 to exercise the regression"
2210        );
2211        bytes.clear();
2212
2213        let store = open(&dir);
2214        let got = rels(
2215            &store
2216                .find_links_to(Path::new(target))
2217                .expect("a stray non-UTF-8 byte must not abort the backlink scan"),
2218        );
2219        assert_eq!(
2220            got,
2221            vec![
2222                "records/profiles/clean.md".to_string(),
2223                "sources/emails/2026/05/raw.md".to_string(),
2224            ],
2225            "both the clean linker and the one with an invalid byte on the link \
2226             line are reported; the scan degrades, it does not fail"
2227        );
2228    }
2229
2230    // ── find_links_to_any (batch — the O(changed × store) fix) ─────────────────
2231
2232    /// The working-set validate's incoming-linker discovery runs through
2233    /// `find_links_to_any` over the WHOLE changed set in one pass. This pins the
2234    /// batch contract that makes that single-pass behavior correct: the result is
2235    /// the union of incoming linkers across every target, with per-target
2236    /// boundary correctness preserved (no alternation arm bleeds into a
2237    /// prefix-sharing sibling). If a regression reverts the batch finder to a
2238    /// per-object loop, the union below would still hold — but the boundary +
2239    /// union-equivalence assertions are what guard the *correctness* of folding N
2240    /// scans into one regex.
2241    #[test]
2242    fn find_links_to_any_returns_the_union_with_boundary_correctness() {
2243        let dir = empty_store();
2244        let root = dir.path();
2245
2246        // Two distinct targets, each with its own linker.
2247        write(
2248            root,
2249            "records/concepts/links-sarah.md",
2250            "---\ntype: concept\nmeta-type: conclusion\nsummary: s\n---\n[[records/contacts/sarah-chen]]\n",
2251        );
2252        write(
2253            root,
2254            "records/concepts/links-acme.md",
2255            "---\ntype: concept\nmeta-type: conclusion\nsummary: s\n---\nDeal with [[records/companies/acme|Acme]].\n",
2256        );
2257        // One file links to BOTH targets — must appear exactly once (deduped),
2258        // proving the per-file early-exit folds multiple-target hits into a
2259        // single result row rather than one row per matched target.
2260        write(
2261            root,
2262            "records/meetings/2026/05/m.md",
2263            "---\ntype: meeting\nsummary: s\n---\n[[records/contacts/sarah-chen]] re \
2264             [[records/companies/acme]]\n",
2265        );
2266        // A prefix-sharing sibling of a target: a link to `sarah-chen-jr` must NOT
2267        // be reported as a link to `sarah-chen` even though the alternation now
2268        // carries `sarah-chen` as one arm.
2269        write(
2270            root,
2271            "records/concepts/links-jr.md",
2272            "---\ntype: concept\nmeta-type: conclusion\nsummary: s\n---\n[[records/contacts/sarah-chen-jr]]\n",
2273        );
2274        // A file that links to neither requested target.
2275        write(
2276            root,
2277            "records/concepts/unrelated.md",
2278            "---\ntype: concept\nmeta-type: conclusion\nsummary: s\n---\n[[records/concepts/spend]]\n",
2279        );
2280
2281        let store = open(&dir);
2282        let targets = vec![
2283            PathBuf::from("records/contacts/sarah-chen"),
2284            PathBuf::from("records/companies/acme"),
2285        ];
2286
2287        let got = rels(&store.find_links_to_any(&targets).unwrap());
2288        assert_eq!(
2289            got,
2290            vec![
2291                "records/concepts/links-acme.md".to_string(),
2292                "records/concepts/links-sarah.md".to_string(),
2293                "records/meetings/2026/05/m.md".to_string(),
2294            ],
2295            "batch finder must return the deduped union of linkers across all \
2296             targets, excluding the prefix-sibling and the unrelated file"
2297        );
2298
2299        // Equivalence: the batch result must equal the union of the per-target
2300        // single finder. This is the property the working-set path relies on
2301        // when it folds one-scan-per-object into one scan for the whole set.
2302        let mut union: std::collections::BTreeSet<PathBuf> = std::collections::BTreeSet::new();
2303        for t in &targets {
2304            for linker in store.find_links_to(t).unwrap() {
2305                union.insert(linker);
2306            }
2307        }
2308        assert_eq!(
2309            rels(&union.into_iter().collect::<Vec<_>>()),
2310            got,
2311            "find_links_to_any must equal the union of per-target find_links_to"
2312        );
2313    }
2314
2315    /// An empty target set must scan nothing and find nothing — and crucially
2316    /// must NOT compile to a match-everything empty regex (which would report
2317    /// every `.md` as a linker). This is the empty-working-set fast path the
2318    /// `validate` loop hits when nothing changed.
2319    #[test]
2320    fn find_links_to_any_empty_targets_matches_nothing() {
2321        let dir = empty_store();
2322        let root = dir.path();
2323        write(
2324            root,
2325            "records/concepts/a.md",
2326            "---\ntype: concept\nmeta-type: conclusion\nsummary: s\n---\n[[records/contacts/sarah-chen]]\n",
2327        );
2328        let store = open(&dir);
2329
2330        assert!(
2331            store.find_links_to_any(&[]).unwrap().is_empty(),
2332            "no targets ⇒ no linkers (an empty pattern must not match every file)"
2333        );
2334        // A set of only empty/non-link targets is likewise a no-op, not a
2335        // match-everything.
2336        assert!(
2337            store
2338                .find_links_to_any(&[PathBuf::from(""), PathBuf::from("./")])
2339                .unwrap()
2340                .is_empty(),
2341            "targets that render to empty link text contribute no alternation arm"
2342        );
2343    }
2344
2345    // ── read_type_index ──────────────────────────────────────────────────────
2346
2347    #[test]
2348    fn read_type_index_parses_records_and_flattens_fields() {
2349        let dir = empty_store();
2350        let root = dir.path();
2351        let jsonl = "\
2352{\"path\":\"records/expenses/2026/05/a.md\",\"type\":\"expense\",\"summary\":\"lunch\",\"tags\":[\"meals\"],\"links\":[\"records/companies/acme\"],\"created\":\"2026-05-01T00:00:00Z\",\"updated\":\"2026-05-01T00:00:00Z\",\"vendor\":\"acme\",\"amount\":42}
2353{\"path\":\"records/expenses/2026/05/b.md\",\"type\":\"expense\",\"summary\":\"taxi\",\"created\":null,\"updated\":null,\"vendor\":\"yellow\"}
2354";
2355        let p = write(root, "records/expenses/index.jsonl", jsonl);
2356        let store = open(&dir);
2357        let recs = store.read_type_index(&store.abs_path(&p)).unwrap();
2358
2359        assert_eq!(recs.len(), 2);
2360        // Sorted by path asc.
2361        assert_eq!(recs[0].path, PathBuf::from("records/expenses/2026/05/a.md"));
2362        assert_eq!(recs[0].type_, "expense");
2363        assert_eq!(recs[0].summary, "lunch");
2364        assert_eq!(recs[0].tags, vec!["meals".to_string()]);
2365        assert_eq!(recs[0].links, vec!["records/companies/acme".to_string()]);
2366        assert!(recs[0].created.is_some());
2367        // Extra (non-typed) frontmatter flattens into `fields`.
2368        assert_eq!(
2369            recs[0].fields.get("vendor"),
2370            Some(&serde_json::json!("acme"))
2371        );
2372        assert_eq!(recs[0].fields.get("amount"), Some(&serde_json::json!(42)));
2373        // Defaults: missing tags/links → empty.
2374        assert!(recs[1].tags.is_empty());
2375        assert!(recs[1].links.is_empty());
2376    }
2377
2378    #[test]
2379    fn read_type_index_last_write_wins_and_skips_blanks() {
2380        let dir = empty_store();
2381        let root = dir.path();
2382        // Same path twice; the second line supersedes the first. A blank line
2383        // in between must be ignored, not error.
2384        let jsonl = "\
2385{\"path\":\"records/contacts/sarah.md\",\"type\":\"contact\",\"summary\":\"old\",\"created\":null,\"updated\":null}
2386
2387{\"path\":\"records/contacts/sarah.md\",\"type\":\"contact\",\"summary\":\"new\",\"created\":null,\"updated\":null}
2388";
2389        let p = write(root, "records/contacts/index.jsonl", jsonl);
2390        let store = open(&dir);
2391        let recs = store.read_type_index(&store.abs_path(&p)).unwrap();
2392        assert_eq!(recs.len(), 1, "duplicate path collapses to one record");
2393        assert_eq!(recs[0].summary, "new", "later line must win");
2394    }
2395
2396    #[test]
2397    fn read_type_index_errors_on_malformed_line() {
2398        let dir = empty_store();
2399        let root = dir.path();
2400        let p = write(root, "records/contacts/index.jsonl", "{not valid json}\n");
2401        let store = open(&dir);
2402        let err = store.read_type_index(&store.abs_path(&p)).unwrap_err();
2403        assert!(matches!(err, StoreError::BadTypeIndex { .. }));
2404    }
2405
2406    // ── find_by_type / find_by_where ─────────────────────────────────────────
2407
2408    fn jsonl_line(path: &str, type_: &str, summary: &str, extra: &str) -> String {
2409        format!(
2410            "{{\"path\":\"{path}\",\"type\":\"{type_}\",\"summary\":\"{summary}\",\"created\":null,\"updated\":null{extra}}}\n"
2411        )
2412    }
2413
2414    #[test]
2415    fn find_by_type_reads_canonical_folder_sidecar() {
2416        let dir = empty_store();
2417        let root = dir.path();
2418        // Canonical folder for `contact` is records/contacts.
2419        write(
2420            root,
2421            "records/contacts/index.jsonl",
2422            &(jsonl_line("records/contacts/sarah.md", "contact", "Sarah", "")
2423                + &jsonl_line("records/contacts/elena.md", "contact", "Elena", "")),
2424        );
2425        // A different type's sidecar must not leak into a contact query.
2426        write(
2427            root,
2428            "records/companies/index.jsonl",
2429            &jsonl_line("records/companies/acme.md", "company", "Acme", ""),
2430        );
2431        let store = open(&dir);
2432        let recs = store.find_by_type("contact").unwrap();
2433        let names: Vec<_> = recs.iter().map(|r| r.summary.clone()).collect();
2434        assert_eq!(names, vec!["Elena".to_string(), "Sarah".to_string()]); // path-sorted
2435        assert!(recs.iter().all(|r| r.type_ == "contact"));
2436    }
2437
2438    #[test]
2439    fn regression_find_by_type_includes_non_canonical_folder_when_canonical_exists() {
2440        // Regression for the silent-incompleteness bug: once the canonical
2441        // type-folder sidecar exists, `find_by_type` used to read ONLY that
2442        // sidecar and drop same-type records filed in a non-canonical folder in
2443        // the SAME layer — so the result flipped to incomplete the moment a
2444        // canonical record was added. The write path actively enables such a
2445        // layout (`records/clients/` for a `contact`, any `records/<folder>/`
2446        // for a conclusion `profile`), so this is a reachable, dedup-breaking
2447        // omission.
2448        let dir = empty_store();
2449        let root = dir.path();
2450
2451        // CANONICAL folder sidecar exists (`records/contacts/` for `contact`),
2452        // which is exactly the condition that triggered the bug.
2453        write(
2454            root,
2455            "records/contacts/index.jsonl",
2456            &jsonl_line("records/contacts/sarah.md", "contact", "Sarah", ""),
2457        );
2458        // A `contact` filed in a NON-canonical folder within the same (Records)
2459        // layer. Pre-fix this was silently dropped because the canonical
2460        // sidecar existed; it must now come back.
2461        write(
2462            root,
2463            "records/clients/index.jsonl",
2464            &jsonl_line("records/clients/elena.md", "contact", "Elena", ""),
2465        );
2466        // A different type in the same layer must NOT leak in (proves the read
2467        // is type-filtered, not just a blind whole-layer dump).
2468        write(
2469            root,
2470            "records/companies/index.jsonl",
2471            &jsonl_line("records/companies/acme.md", "company", "Acme", ""),
2472        );
2473
2474        let store = open(&dir);
2475        let got: std::collections::BTreeSet<String> = store
2476            .find_by_type("contact")
2477            .unwrap()
2478            .into_iter()
2479            .map(|r| r.path.to_string_lossy().into_owned())
2480            .collect();
2481        assert_eq!(
2482            got,
2483            ["records/clients/elena.md", "records/contacts/sarah.md"]
2484                .into_iter()
2485                .map(String::from)
2486                .collect::<std::collections::BTreeSet<_>>(),
2487            "both the canonical-folder and the non-canonical-folder contact must \
2488             be returned; the company record must be excluded"
2489        );
2490    }
2491
2492    #[test]
2493    fn regression_find_by_type_profile_spans_multiple_topic_folders() {
2494        // Regression for the scoped-backlinks variant of the same bug
2495        // (`graph backlinks --type <conclusion-type>`): a conclusion type like
2496        // `profile` has the canonical fallback folder `records/profile`, but the
2497        // agent may file profiles under ANY records topic folder
2498        // (`records/people/`, `records/clients/`, …). With a
2499        // `records/profile/index.jsonl` present, the old code read only that
2500        // folder and dropped profiles in the other topic folders —
2501        // under-reporting dependents in a blast-radius check. The
2502        // whole-`records/`-layer read must surface all of them.
2503        let dir = empty_store();
2504        let root = dir.path();
2505        write(
2506            root,
2507            "records/profile/index.jsonl",
2508            &jsonl_line("records/profile/billing.md", "profile", "Billing", ""),
2509        );
2510        write(
2511            root,
2512            "records/people/index.jsonl",
2513            &jsonl_line("records/people/sarah-chen.md", "profile", "Sarah Chen", ""),
2514        );
2515        write(
2516            root,
2517            "records/clients/index.jsonl",
2518            &jsonl_line("records/clients/atlas.md", "profile", "Atlas", ""),
2519        );
2520
2521        let store = open(&dir);
2522        let got: std::collections::BTreeSet<String> = store
2523            .find_by_type("profile")
2524            .unwrap()
2525            .into_iter()
2526            .map(|r| r.path.to_string_lossy().into_owned())
2527            .collect();
2528        assert_eq!(
2529            got,
2530            [
2531                "records/clients/atlas.md",
2532                "records/people/sarah-chen.md",
2533                "records/profile/billing.md",
2534            ]
2535            .into_iter()
2536            .map(String::from)
2537            .collect::<std::collections::BTreeSet<_>>(),
2538            "a profile query must return records from every topic folder, not \
2539             just the canonical records/profile/"
2540        );
2541    }
2542
2543    #[test]
2544    fn find_by_type_canonical_absent_falls_back_within_the_layer_only() {
2545        let dir = empty_store();
2546        let root = dir.path();
2547        // A custom `proposal` record filed under a non-canonical folder NAME
2548        // (the natural plural `records/proposals/`) inside the records layer.
2549        // `default_type_folder("proposal")` = `records/proposal` (bare type, no
2550        // pluralization guess), so the canonical sidecar does not exist and
2551        // `find_by_type` falls back. The fallback is bounded to the type's
2552        // layer (records), so this record — same layer, non-canonical folder —
2553        // is still found: completeness within the layer holds.
2554        write(
2555            root,
2556            "records/proposals/index.jsonl",
2557            &jsonl_line("records/proposals/p1.md", "proposal", "Q3 proposal", ""),
2558        );
2559        // A DECOY of the SAME type sitting in a DIFFERENT layer (sources/). The
2560        // old whole-store fallback read every sidecar in the store and would
2561        // have leaked this into the result; the layer-bounded fallback must not.
2562        // It also pins that the fallback is O(entities-in-layer), never O(store).
2563        write(
2564            root,
2565            "sources/proposals/index.jsonl",
2566            &jsonl_line(
2567                "sources/proposals/leak.md",
2568                "proposal",
2569                "cross-layer decoy",
2570                "",
2571            ),
2572        );
2573        let store = open(&dir);
2574        let recs = store.find_by_type("proposal").unwrap();
2575        assert_eq!(
2576            recs.len(),
2577            1,
2578            "only the records-layer proposal, not the sources decoy"
2579        );
2580        assert_eq!(recs[0].summary, "Q3 proposal");
2581        assert_eq!(recs[0].path, PathBuf::from("records/proposals/p1.md"));
2582    }
2583
2584    #[test]
2585    fn find_by_type_canonical_absent_does_not_read_other_layers() {
2586        let dir = empty_store();
2587        let root = dir.path();
2588        // `email`'s canonical folder is `sources/emails` (layer Sources). No
2589        // sidecar there yet, so `find_by_type("email")` falls back — but only
2590        // within the Sources layer. A populated sidecar in the Records layer
2591        // must never be touched: the fallback is layer-bounded, not store-wide.
2592        // Under the old `read_all_type_indexes_in(None)` fallback this records
2593        // sidecar would have been read and filtered (wasted O(store) I/O); now
2594        // it is outside the walk root entirely.
2595        write(
2596            root,
2597            "records/contacts/index.jsonl",
2598            &jsonl_line("records/contacts/sarah.md", "contact", "Sarah", ""),
2599        );
2600        let store = open(&dir);
2601        // No email anywhere ⇒ empty, and the records layer was not in scope.
2602        assert!(store.find_by_type("email").unwrap().is_empty());
2603    }
2604
2605    #[test]
2606    fn find_by_where_matches_typed_columns_and_flat_fields() {
2607        let dir = empty_store();
2608        let root = dir.path();
2609        write(
2610            root,
2611            "records/expenses/index.jsonl",
2612            &(jsonl_line(
2613                "records/expenses/a.md",
2614                "expense",
2615                "lunch",
2616                ",\"vendor\":\"acme\",\"tags\":[\"meals\"]",
2617            ) + &jsonl_line(
2618                "records/expenses/b.md",
2619                "expense",
2620                "taxi",
2621                ",\"vendor\":\"yellow\"",
2622            )),
2623        );
2624        write(
2625            root,
2626            "records/contacts/index.jsonl",
2627            &jsonl_line(
2628                "records/contacts/sarah.md",
2629                "contact",
2630                "Sarah",
2631                ",\"tags\":[\"customer\"]",
2632            ),
2633        );
2634        let store = open(&dir);
2635
2636        // Flat field in `fields`.
2637        let by_vendor = store.find_by_where("vendor", "acme").unwrap();
2638        assert_eq!(by_vendor.len(), 1);
2639        assert_eq!(by_vendor[0].path, PathBuf::from("records/expenses/a.md"));
2640
2641        // Typed column: type (spans both expense records).
2642        assert_eq!(store.find_by_where("type", "expense").unwrap().len(), 2);
2643
2644        // Typed list column: tags membership.
2645        let customers = store.find_by_where("tags", "customer").unwrap();
2646        assert_eq!(customers.len(), 1);
2647        assert_eq!(
2648            customers[0].path,
2649            PathBuf::from("records/contacts/sarah.md")
2650        );
2651
2652        // No match → empty.
2653        assert!(store.find_by_where("vendor", "nobody").unwrap().is_empty());
2654    }
2655
2656    #[test]
2657    fn find_by_where_matches_timestamps_across_rfc3339_spellings() {
2658        let dir = empty_store();
2659        let root = dir.path();
2660        // db.md files most commonly carry the `Z` UTC spelling. The index.jsonl
2661        // serialized from such a file preserves it verbatim.
2662        write(
2663            root,
2664            "records/meetings/index.jsonl",
2665            "{\"path\":\"records/meetings/kickoff.md\",\"type\":\"meeting\",\
2666\"summary\":\"kickoff\",\"created\":\"2026-05-01T00:00:00Z\",\
2667\"updated\":\"2026-05-02T09:30:00-07:00\"}\n",
2668        );
2669        let store = open(&dir);
2670
2671        // The exact value an agent reads out of the file (`Z` form) must match.
2672        let by_z = store
2673            .find_by_where("created", "2026-05-01T00:00:00Z")
2674            .unwrap();
2675        assert_eq!(by_z.len(), 1);
2676        assert_eq!(by_z[0].path, PathBuf::from("records/meetings/kickoff.md"));
2677
2678        // The equivalent explicit-offset spelling of the same instant matches too.
2679        assert_eq!(
2680            store
2681                .find_by_where("created", "2026-05-01T00:00:00+00:00")
2682                .unwrap()
2683                .len(),
2684            1
2685        );
2686
2687        // A non-UTC stored value matches both its own offset spelling and the
2688        // same instant expressed as `Z` (instant comparison, not string compare).
2689        assert_eq!(
2690            store
2691                .find_by_where("updated", "2026-05-02T09:30:00-07:00")
2692                .unwrap()
2693                .len(),
2694            1
2695        );
2696        assert_eq!(
2697            store
2698                .find_by_where("updated", "2026-05-02T16:30:00Z")
2699                .unwrap()
2700                .len(),
2701            1
2702        );
2703
2704        // A different instant does not match.
2705        assert!(store
2706            .find_by_where("created", "2026-05-01T00:00:01Z")
2707            .unwrap()
2708            .is_empty());
2709        // A non-RFC3339 query value never matches a real timestamp.
2710        assert!(store
2711            .find_by_where("created", "2026-05-01")
2712            .unwrap()
2713            .is_empty());
2714    }
2715
2716    #[test]
2717    fn find_by_where_matches_floats_across_serialized_spellings() {
2718        // Adversarial review #5: a float field is stored in index.jsonl via
2719        // serde_json's canonical f64 render, which DISCARDS the file's source
2720        // spelling (`1234.00` -> `1234.0`, `1e3` -> `1000.0`). A textual compare
2721        // made the spelling a human reads in the file miss (and disagree with
2722        // free-text `search`); numeric compare fixes it. `fm query`/`index query`
2723        // is the SPEC pre-write dedup primitive, so a miss here silently writes a
2724        // duplicate record.
2725        let dir = empty_store();
2726        let root = dir.path();
2727        write(
2728            root,
2729            "records/invoices/index.jsonl",
2730            "{\"path\":\"records/invoices/inv.md\",\"type\":\"invoice\",\
2731\"summary\":\"inv\",\"amount\":1234.0,\"score\":1000.0,\"count\":42}\n",
2732        );
2733        let store = open(&dir);
2734
2735        // Every spelling of the same numeric value matches the canonical-f64 store.
2736        for spelling in ["1234.00", "1234.0", "1234"] {
2737            assert_eq!(
2738                store.find_by_where("amount", spelling).unwrap().len(),
2739                1,
2740                "amount spelling `{spelling}` must match the stored 1234.0"
2741            );
2742        }
2743        for spelling in ["1e3", "1000", "1000.0"] {
2744            assert_eq!(
2745                store.find_by_where("score", spelling).unwrap().len(),
2746                1,
2747                "score spelling `{spelling}` must match the stored 1000.0"
2748            );
2749        }
2750        // A genuinely different value does not match.
2751        assert!(store.find_by_where("amount", "1234.5").unwrap().is_empty());
2752        // Integer fields keep exact textual matching (unaffected by the fix).
2753        assert_eq!(store.find_by_where("count", "42").unwrap().len(), 1);
2754    }
2755
2756    #[test]
2757    fn number_matches_is_numeric_for_floats_but_exact_for_integers() {
2758        use serde_json::Number;
2759        // Float-valued field: any equal spelling matches (the bug fix).
2760        let f: Number = serde_json::from_str("1234.0").unwrap();
2761        assert!(number_matches(&f, "1234.00"));
2762        assert!(number_matches(&f, "1234"));
2763        assert!(number_matches(&f, "1234.0"));
2764        assert!(!number_matches(&f, "1234.5"));
2765        // Integer-valued field: EXACT textual compare, never f64-rounded — two
2766        // adjacent large integers that round to the same f64 must NOT collide
2767        // (the safety property that motivates restricting numeric compare to
2768        // floats).
2769        let big: Number = serde_json::from_str("18446744073709551615").unwrap(); // u64::MAX
2770        assert!(number_matches(&big, "18446744073709551615"));
2771        assert!(!number_matches(&big, "18446744073709551614"));
2772    }
2773
2774    #[test]
2775    fn find_by_where_in_layer_reads_only_that_layers_sidecars() {
2776        // The O(entities-in-layer) contract: a layer-scoped where read must walk
2777        // ONLY the named layer's subtree. Proven structurally — a *malformed*
2778        // sidecar in another layer would make `read_type_index` error if it were
2779        // read, so a scoped read that succeeds (and excludes that record) is
2780        // proof the other layer's I/O never happened.
2781        let dir = empty_store();
2782        let root = dir.path();
2783        write(
2784            root,
2785            "records/companies/index.jsonl",
2786            &jsonl_line(
2787                "records/companies/acme.md",
2788                "company",
2789                "Acme",
2790                ",\"domain\":\"acme.com\"",
2791            ),
2792        );
2793        // Same field/value in the sources layer — but the sidecar is corrupt.
2794        write(
2795            root,
2796            "sources/emails/index.jsonl",
2797            "{ this is not valid json and would error if read }\n",
2798        );
2799        let store = open(&dir);
2800
2801        // Scoped to records: the corrupt sources sidecar is out of scope, so the
2802        // read succeeds and returns only the records-layer match.
2803        let in_records = store
2804            .find_by_where_in("domain", "acme.com", Some(Layer::Records))
2805            .expect("a records-scoped read must not touch the sources sidecar");
2806        assert_eq!(
2807            rels(
2808                &in_records
2809                    .iter()
2810                    .map(|r| r.path.clone())
2811                    .collect::<Vec<_>>()
2812            ),
2813            vec!["records/companies/acme.md".to_string()]
2814        );
2815
2816        // The store-wide read DOES reach the corrupt sidecar and surfaces it as
2817        // a parse error — confirming the corrupt file is genuinely in the tree
2818        // and that only the layer scope spares it.
2819        let store_wide = store.find_by_where("domain", "acme.com");
2820        assert!(
2821            matches!(store_wide, Err(StoreError::BadTypeIndex { .. })),
2822            "unscoped read walks every layer and hits the corrupt sidecar"
2823        );
2824
2825        // Scoping to the layer that holds only the corrupt sidecar still errors
2826        // (the scope includes it), proving the scope is a real subtree bound and
2827        // not a silent "skip anything that fails".
2828        let in_sources = store.find_by_where_in("domain", "acme.com", Some(Layer::Sources));
2829        assert!(matches!(in_sources, Err(StoreError::BadTypeIndex { .. })));
2830    }
2831
2832    #[test]
2833    fn find_by_where_in_missing_layer_is_empty_not_an_error() {
2834        // A layer-scoped read over a layer folder that does not exist yet must
2835        // return empty (mirrors `walk_layer`'s missing-dir guard), never a walk
2836        // error from `ignore` over a nonexistent path.
2837        let dir = empty_store();
2838        let root = dir.path();
2839        write(
2840            root,
2841            "records/contacts/index.jsonl",
2842            &jsonl_line(
2843                "records/contacts/sarah.md",
2844                "contact",
2845                "Sarah",
2846                ",\"city\":\"denver\"",
2847            ),
2848        );
2849        let store = open(&dir);
2850
2851        // `sources/` was never created.
2852        let in_sources = store
2853            .find_by_where_in("city", "denver", Some(Layer::Sources))
2854            .expect("missing layer subtree is empty, not an error");
2855        assert!(in_sources.is_empty());
2856
2857        // Same query scoped to the layer that has the record still finds it.
2858        let in_records = store
2859            .find_by_where_in("city", "denver", Some(Layer::Records))
2860            .unwrap();
2861        assert_eq!(in_records.len(), 1);
2862    }
2863
2864    // ── abs_path / rel_path ──────────────────────────────────────────────────
2865
2866    #[test]
2867    fn abs_and_rel_path_roundtrip() {
2868        let dir = empty_store();
2869        let store = open(&dir);
2870        let rel = Path::new("records/contacts/sarah.md");
2871        let abs = store.abs_path(rel);
2872        assert_eq!(abs, dir.path().join(rel));
2873        assert_eq!(store.rel_path(&abs).as_deref(), Some(rel));
2874
2875        // An absolute path is passed through unchanged by abs_path.
2876        assert_eq!(store.abs_path(&abs), abs);
2877
2878        // A path outside the store has no store-relative form.
2879        assert_eq!(store.rel_path(Path::new("/somewhere/else.md")), None);
2880    }
2881
2882    // ── infer_type_from_path (inverse of default_type_folder) ────────────────
2883
2884    #[test]
2885    fn infer_type_maps_every_recognized_folder_back_to_its_type() {
2886        let cases = [
2887            ("sources/emails/x.md", "email"),
2888            ("sources/transcripts/x.md", "transcript"),
2889            ("sources/docs/x.md", "pdf-source"),
2890            ("sources/notes/x.md", "note"),
2891            ("records/contacts/x.md", "contact"),
2892            ("records/companies/x.md", "company"),
2893            ("records/expenses/x.md", "expense"),
2894            ("records/meetings/x.md", "meeting"),
2895            ("records/decisions/x.md", "decision"),
2896            ("records/invoices/x.md", "invoice"),
2897        ];
2898        for (path, expected) in cases {
2899            assert_eq!(
2900                infer_type_from_path(Path::new(path)).as_deref(),
2901                Some(expected),
2902                "path {path} should infer type {expected}"
2903            );
2904        }
2905    }
2906
2907    #[test]
2908    fn infer_type_round_trips_with_default_type_folder() {
2909        // The canonical invariant: inference is the inverse of the forward map.
2910        // Every recognized type, routed through `default_type_folder` and then
2911        // back through `infer_type_from_path`, must return the original type.
2912        let recognized = [
2913            "email",
2914            "transcript",
2915            "pdf-source",
2916            "contact",
2917            "company",
2918            "expense",
2919            "meeting",
2920            "decision",
2921            "invoice",
2922        ];
2923        for type_ in recognized {
2924            let folder = default_type_folder(type_);
2925            let file = folder.join("x.md");
2926            assert_eq!(
2927                infer_type_from_path(&file).as_deref(),
2928                Some(type_),
2929                "recognized type {type_} (folder {folder:?}) must round-trip"
2930            );
2931        }
2932    }
2933
2934    #[test]
2935    fn infer_type_round_trips_custom_types_verbatim_no_singularization() {
2936        // Regression guard for the CLI/core divergence: `default_type_folder`'s
2937        // unrecognized fallback is the BARE type name (`task → records/task`,
2938        // `tasks → records/tasks`). Inference must NOT singularize, or a custom
2939        // type would not round-trip (e.g. `records/tasks` → `task` would clash
2940        // with `default_type_folder("task") → records/task`).
2941        for custom in ["task", "tasks", "playbook", "process", "okrs", "ticket"] {
2942            let folder = default_type_folder(custom);
2943            assert_eq!(folder, PathBuf::from("records").join(custom));
2944            let file = folder.join("x.md");
2945            assert_eq!(
2946                infer_type_from_path(&file).as_deref(),
2947                Some(custom),
2948                "custom type {custom} must round-trip verbatim (no singularization)"
2949            );
2950        }
2951
2952        // The specific case named in the finding: a plural custom folder keeps
2953        // its trailing `s`; it is NOT singularized to `task`.
2954        assert_eq!(
2955            infer_type_from_path(Path::new("records/tasks/x.md")).as_deref(),
2956            Some("tasks"),
2957            "records/tasks must infer `tasks`, not `task`"
2958        );
2959    }
2960
2961    #[test]
2962    fn infer_type_requires_three_component_layer_folder_file_shape() {
2963        // Fewer than 3 components: a file directly under a layer has no
2964        // type-folder, so inference yields None (matches the old CLI contract).
2965        assert_eq!(infer_type_from_path(Path::new("records/x.md")), None);
2966        assert_eq!(infer_type_from_path(Path::new("sources/x.md")), None);
2967        assert_eq!(infer_type_from_path(Path::new("x.md")), None);
2968        // Unknown leading layer is never inferred.
2969        assert_eq!(infer_type_from_path(Path::new("foo/bar/x.md")), None);
2970        // Deeper paths still infer from the first type-folder segment (e.g. a
2971        // sharded record under records/expenses/2026/05/x.md).
2972        assert_eq!(
2973            infer_type_from_path(Path::new("records/expenses/2026/05/x.md")).as_deref(),
2974            Some("expense"),
2975        );
2976    }
2977
2978    // ── ensure_path_within_store (containment) ───────────────────────────────
2979
2980    #[test]
2981    fn ensure_path_within_store_accepts_in_store_and_rejects_escape() {
2982        let dir = tempdir().unwrap();
2983        let root = dir.path();
2984        fs::create_dir_all(root.join("records/contacts")).unwrap();
2985        fs::write(root.join("records/contacts/sarah.md"), "x").unwrap();
2986
2987        // An existing in-store file resolves and is accepted.
2988        let inside = root.join("records/contacts/sarah.md");
2989        let got = ensure_path_within_store(root, &inside).expect("in-store path accepted");
2990        // Canonical, but still under the (canonical) root.
2991        assert!(got.starts_with(root.canonicalize().unwrap()));
2992
2993        // A not-yet-existing in-store leaf is accepted (rename destination).
2994        let new_leaf = root.join("records/contacts/sarah-chen.md");
2995        assert!(
2996            ensure_path_within_store(root, &new_leaf).is_ok(),
2997            "a non-existent in-store leaf must be accepted"
2998        );
2999
3000        // A `..`-escaping path is rejected even though its prefix exists.
3001        let escape = root.join("records/contacts/../../outside/secret.md");
3002        assert!(
3003            ensure_path_within_store(root, &escape).is_err(),
3004            "a `..`-escaping path must be rejected"
3005        );
3006    }
3007
3008    #[test]
3009    fn ensure_path_within_store_rejects_symlink_escape() {
3010        let dir = tempdir().unwrap();
3011        let root = dir.path().join("store");
3012        fs::create_dir_all(&root).unwrap();
3013        let outside_dir = dir.path().join("outside");
3014        fs::create_dir_all(&outside_dir).unwrap();
3015        let secret = outside_dir.join("secret.md");
3016        fs::write(&secret, "TOPSECRET").unwrap();
3017
3018        // A symlink inside the store that points OUTSIDE it must be rejected:
3019        // resolving the symlink lands outside the canonical root.
3020        #[cfg(unix)]
3021        {
3022            use std::os::unix::fs::symlink;
3023            let link = root.join("escape.md");
3024            symlink(&secret, &link).unwrap();
3025            assert!(
3026                ensure_path_within_store(&root, &link).is_err(),
3027                "a symlink resolving outside the store must be rejected"
3028            );
3029        }
3030    }
3031
3032    // ── shared link-edge notion (fence / whitespace / case) ──────────────────
3033
3034    #[test]
3035    fn extract_edge_targets_trims_inner_whitespace() {
3036        // Padded `[[ x ]]` is the same edge as `[[x]]`.
3037        assert_eq!(
3038            extract_edge_targets("See [[ records/contacts/sarah ]] today."),
3039            vec!["records/contacts/sarah".to_string()]
3040        );
3041    }
3042
3043    #[test]
3044    fn extract_edge_targets_skips_fenced_code_blocks() {
3045        // A `[[...]]` inside a ``` fence is a doc example, NOT an edge — matching
3046        // validate's body extractor.
3047        let body = "\
3048Real [[records/contacts/sarah]] link.
3049
3050```markdown
3051[[records/contacts/ghost-example]] is how you link.
3052```
3053
3054After fence [[records/companies/acme]].
3055";
3056        let got = extract_edge_targets(body);
3057        assert_eq!(
3058            got,
3059            vec![
3060                "records/contacts/sarah".to_string(),
3061                "records/companies/acme".to_string(),
3062            ],
3063            "fenced example link must not be an edge"
3064        );
3065    }
3066
3067    #[test]
3068    fn extract_edge_targets_handles_nested_indented_and_long_run_fences() {
3069        // Regression for the naive `starts_with("```")/("~~~")` toggle: a fence
3070        // nested inside another, an over-indented (>3 space) marker, and a
3071        // long-run fence wrapping a shorter inner one must all leave the block's
3072        // links un-extracted (validate treats the whole block as opaque). The
3073        // (char, run-length) tracker keys on the OPENING fence and closes only on
3074        // a matching char with run ≥ the opener.
3075
3076        // (a) A ```` ```` ````-run block (run 4) wrapping a ``` example (run 3).
3077        // The inner ``` does NOT close the outer run-4 fence, so both `[[...]]`
3078        // inside stay fenced.
3079        let nested = "\
3080Doc:
3081
3082````
3083```
3084[[records/contacts/bob]]
3085```
3086still fenced [[records/contacts/bob]]
3087````
3088
3089Real [[records/companies/acme]].
3090";
3091        assert_eq!(
3092            extract_edge_targets(nested),
3093            vec!["records/companies/acme".to_string()],
3094            "a nested ``` inside a ````-run fence must not leak the fenced links"
3095        );
3096
3097        // (b) A `~~~` block containing a ``` line (the standard way to document a
3098        // backtick fence). The inner backtick line must not flip the state.
3099        let tilde_wraps_backtick = "\
3100~~~
3101```
3102[[records/contacts/ghost]]
3103```
3104~~~
3105
3106After [[records/companies/acme]].
3107";
3108        assert_eq!(
3109            extract_edge_targets(tilde_wraps_backtick),
3110            vec!["records/companies/acme".to_string()],
3111            "a ``` line inside a ~~~ block must not invert the fence state"
3112        );
3113
3114        // (c) An over-indented ```` ``` ```` (4 spaces) is NOT a fence; the link
3115        // on the next line is live.
3116        let over_indented = "    ```\nLive [[records/contacts/sarah]].\n";
3117        assert_eq!(
3118            extract_edge_targets(over_indented),
3119            vec!["records/contacts/sarah".to_string()],
3120            "a >3-space-indented ``` is not a fence opener"
3121        );
3122    }
3123
3124    #[test]
3125    fn canonical_link_target_strips_md_dotslash_and_trims() {
3126        assert_eq!(canonical_link_target("  records/x.md  "), "records/x");
3127        assert_eq!(canonical_link_target("./records/y"), "records/y");
3128        assert_eq!(canonical_link_target("/records/z"), "records/z");
3129    }
3130
3131    #[test]
3132    fn link_edge_key_folds_case_only_on_case_insensitive_fs() {
3133        let a = link_edge_key("records/contacts/Sarah-Chen");
3134        let b = link_edge_key("records/contacts/sarah-chen");
3135        if fs_is_case_insensitive() {
3136            assert_eq!(a, b, "case-insensitive FS must fold the key");
3137        } else {
3138            assert_ne!(a, b, "case-sensitive FS must keep the key case-exact");
3139        }
3140    }
3141
3142    // ── walk follows symlinked content ───────────────────────────────────────
3143
3144    #[cfg(unix)]
3145    #[test]
3146    fn walk_includes_symlinked_content_file_and_symlinked_folder() {
3147        use std::os::unix::fs::symlink;
3148        let dir = empty_store();
3149        let root = dir.path();
3150        // A regular file (control).
3151        write(
3152            root,
3153            "records/contacts/sarah.md",
3154            &content_md("2026-05-01T00:00:00Z"),
3155        );
3156        // A symlinked .md content file inside a real folder.
3157        let external_file = root.join("external-elena.md");
3158        fs::write(&external_file, content_md("2026-05-02T00:00:00Z")).unwrap();
3159        symlink(&external_file, root.join("records/contacts/elena.md")).unwrap();
3160        // A symlinked type folder.
3161        let external_dir = dir.path().join("external-companies");
3162        fs::create_dir_all(&external_dir).unwrap();
3163        fs::write(
3164            external_dir.join("acme.md"),
3165            content_md("2026-05-03T00:00:00Z"),
3166        )
3167        .unwrap();
3168        symlink(&external_dir, root.join("records/companies")).unwrap();
3169
3170        let store = open(&dir);
3171        let got = rels(&store.walk().unwrap());
3172        assert!(
3173            got.contains(&"records/contacts/elena.md".to_string()),
3174            "a symlinked content file must be walked: {got:?}"
3175        );
3176        assert!(
3177            got.contains(&"records/companies/acme.md".to_string()),
3178            "a file inside a symlinked type folder must be walked: {got:?}"
3179        );
3180    }
3181
3182    // ── find_links_to: padded / fenced / case ────────────────────────────────
3183
3184    #[test]
3185    fn find_links_to_matches_whitespace_padded_link() {
3186        let dir = empty_store();
3187        let root = dir.path();
3188        write(
3189            root,
3190            "records/profiles/a.md",
3191            "---\ntype: profile\nmeta-type: conclusion\nsummary: s\n---\nSee [[ records/contacts/sarah ]] today.\n",
3192        );
3193        let store = open(&dir);
3194        let got = rels(
3195            &store
3196                .find_links_to(Path::new("records/contacts/sarah"))
3197                .unwrap(),
3198        );
3199        assert_eq!(
3200            got,
3201            vec!["records/profiles/a.md".to_string()],
3202            "a padded `[[ x ]]` link must be found as a backward edge, matching forwardlinks"
3203        );
3204    }
3205
3206    #[test]
3207    fn find_links_to_ignores_fenced_example_link() {
3208        let dir = empty_store();
3209        let root = dir.path();
3210        write(
3211            root,
3212            "records/concepts/howto.md",
3213            "---\ntype: concept\nmeta-type: conclusion\nsummary: s\n---\n```markdown\n[[records/contacts/sarah]]\n```\n",
3214        );
3215        let store = open(&dir);
3216        let got = store
3217            .find_links_to(Path::new("records/contacts/sarah"))
3218            .unwrap();
3219        assert!(
3220            got.is_empty(),
3221            "a `[[...]]` only inside a fenced code block is not a backward edge: {got:?}"
3222        );
3223    }
3224
3225    #[cfg(unix)]
3226    #[test]
3227    fn find_links_to_matches_case_variant_on_case_insensitive_fs() {
3228        // Only meaningful on a case-insensitive filesystem; on a case-sensitive
3229        // one the case-variant link is genuinely a different target.
3230        if !fs_is_case_insensitive() {
3231            return;
3232        }
3233        let dir = empty_store();
3234        let root = dir.path();
3235        write(
3236            root,
3237            "records/profiles/bio.md",
3238            "---\ntype: profile\nmeta-type: conclusion\nsummary: s\n---\nSee [[records/contacts/Sarah-Chen]].\n",
3239        );
3240        let store = open(&dir);
3241        let got = rels(
3242            &store
3243                .find_links_to(Path::new("records/contacts/sarah-chen"))
3244                .unwrap(),
3245        );
3246        assert_eq!(
3247            got,
3248            vec!["records/profiles/bio.md".to_string()],
3249            "a case-variant link must be found on a case-insensitive filesystem"
3250        );
3251    }
3252}