The post-/runda DA pass on 4cd574b found the persist-on-unload wiring
(quit + project switch calling Database::set_mode) had no integration
test — only the db-level set_mode behaviour was covered, not that the
runtime actually invokes it on unload.
Add runtime::switch_persists_the_outgoing_projects_mode, driving the
real handle_project_switch end-to-end and asserting the outgoing
project's project.yaml recorded the mode it was left in. Red-first
verified: with the set_mode call disabled it fails (None vs
Some(Advanced)). The quit unload site shares the same set_mode call;
Action::Quit emission is already covered in app tests.
Updates ADR-0015 Amendment 1 coverage note.
The input mode always started in simple; a learner who quit in advanced
had to re-toggle every launch. Store the mode per-project in project.yaml
(project.mode:, optional, default simple) and restore it on every open.
Mode is live UI state, not schema: the worker stamps the current mode
into project.yaml on every write, so a later command rewrites the live
value rather than clobbering it — no db round-trip needed. The mode is
persisted on unload (quit + project switch) so the mode you leave a
project in is always what reopens; the `mode` command also persists
immediately. A switch saves the outgoing mode, then restores the
incoming project's stored mode.
New --mode simple|advanced CLI flag (precedence --mode > stored >
simple; combines with --resume). A teacher can ship a project that
opens in advanced mode and export it to students (the mode travels in
the zip).
ADR-0015 Amendment 1; ADR-0003 note; help banner; requirements L1b.
The output tag was tinted by submission mode for every line kind, so a
[system] line and an [error] line rendered with an identical leftmost
tag — distinguishable only by body colour. And flooding the whole error
body in red made long messages hard to read.
Colour the tag by message status instead (its OutputKind): [system] →
green, [error] → red; the echo tag keeps the mode tint (ADR-0037's
actual purpose — per-command success rides the ✓/✗ marker). Bodies go
neutral; the error body stays bold for weight (rustc-style: severity-
coloured label, readable bold message). Yields a status traffic-light
matching the ✓/✗ palette.
Narrows ADR-0037's mode side-channel to the echo line it was always for.
ADR-0037 Amendment 1; closes the tag-colour gap ADR-0040 flagged as OOS.
Add src/dsl/sql_functions.rs (KNOWN_SQL_FUNCTIONS) as the shared source
of truth at sql_expr_ident slots:
- #15: offer the functions as Tab candidates under a new
CandidateKind::Function + ninth Theme colour tok_function (blue,
distinct from keyword/identifier/type).
- #16: restore the column-typo flag the #6 fix had dropped wholesale —
invalid_ident_at_cursor now bails only when the partial prefix-matches
a known function, else falls through to the schema-column check.
A column named like a function (e.g. `count`) is deduped (column wins).
`cast` is excluded — CAST(x AS type) is not a plain-call shape.
The no-validation-allowlist posture stands: the list drives completion +
the typo hint only, never parse-time acceptance.
Docs: ADR-0022 Amendment 6, ADR-0031 status note, README index,
requirements I3/I4 + refreshed test baseline.
An audit of the command surface found the `[ok] <verb> <subject>`
summary line duplicated the echo line above it everywhere; its only
unique signal was success-vs-error. Retire it: a command's echo line
now resolves from `running: <input>` to `<input> ✓` / `<input> ✗`
on completion, and the symmetric `"<verb> <subject>" failed:` prefix
is dropped (only the reason remains). Content lines (row counts,
structure, plan tree, teaching echo) are unchanged.
Echo lines carry an EchoStatus; executed commands push Pending and
resolve the oldest-pending echo on their result event (FIFO worker —
correct under interleaving). Parse-time and pre-flight rejections are
not executed and keep their running: + caret rendering. App-command
[ok] lines (rebuild/export/replay) are payload-bearing and untouched.
ADR-0040.
explain now wraps the advanced SQL commands — select, with (CTE),
insert, update, delete — in addition to the DSL show data/update/
delete it already covered, rendering through the same plan tree
(ADR-0039, closing the ADR-0030 OOS-2 gap).
Implemented as a second Advanced `explain` CommandNode under the
shared entry word, reusing the established shared-word dispatch
(SQL-first, DSL-fallback) rather than new grammar machinery.
build_explain_sql slices the inner SQL off the source and reuses the
existing SQL builders; do_explain_plan runs EXPLAIN QUERY PLAN over
the carried text verbatim (never executes, so safe for destructive
verbs). Advanced explain update/delete now route through SQL with an
identical plan; DSL-explain tests pinned to simple mode. Help and
usage text now list the advanced explain forms.
A long prose hint (insert field-value hints, the parse.usage.*
synopses) wrapped but was clipped by the fixed one-row Hint panel,
hiding the most useful tail. The candidate list already scrolled
horizontally, so only prose was affected.
Pre-wrap the prose body and size the Hint panel to the wrapped line
count: one row by default, growing to a 3-row cap and reclaiming the
space when short, with an ellipsis backstop on the last row. Also
shorten the 299-char create-table usage synopsis to a terse one-liner
(the full grammar remains under `help`). ADR-0022 Amendment 5.
The undo/redo confirmation dialog capped at 60 columns and wrapped
even a short insert on wide terminals, showed a lowercase "snapshot
taken", a raw ISO-8601 timestamp, and lowercase yes/no labels.
Grow the dialog to fit its longest line (bounded 34–100), capitalise
Snapshot/Yes/No, and render the snapshot timestamp in local time,
human-formatted (24 May 2026, 11:00) via a new chrono dependency
(clock feature only; English month names). Yes/No capitalisation also
applies to the rebuild-confirm dialog.
Both Node::Ident and Word carried a highlight_override field, and
both were dead — the walker driver discarded the Ident's and
walk_word hardcoded Keyword. So column types (int, serial, …)
rendered identically to table/column names.
Wire both overrides through, and add a dedicated HighlightClass::Type
with its own theme colour (tok_type), distinct from keyword-purple
and identifier-teal. The three type Ident slots opt in, so canonical
types and the advanced-mode single-word SQL aliases (float, varchar,
…) render as types; the two-word `double precision` alias opts in via
a new Word::type_keyword constructor. ADR-0022 Amendment 4.
A wrong-count simple-mode insert now shows the friendly per-column arity
message at typing time (instead of a bare "expected `,`/`)`") and is
blocked from dispatch at submit — unifying simple and advanced mode onto
the one ADR-0027 model (structural parse + ERROR diagnostic), where they
had diverged.
Grammar: a simple-mode-only arity gate (dsl_insert_value_list) routes a
wrong-count DSL insert tuple to the type-blind fallback so it matches
structurally and the per-tuple arity diagnostic fires. The gate is gated
to simple mode, so advanced behaviour is unchanged. count_tuple_values
and the target-column selection (insert_target_columns) are now shared
by both grammars.
Diagnostic: dml_insert_arity_diagnostics is mode-aware — advanced Form B
expects all columns; simple Form B/C expects the user-fillable columns
(serial/shortid auto-fill). It counts the DSL Form A role and scans the
keyword-less Form C tuple. New catalog keys name the fillable/auto split
and the all-auto-table case.
Submit: a wrong-count DSL insert now parses Ok + carries the ERROR
diagnostic, so a unified Ok-arm pre-flight (dsl_insert_count_mismatch_notes)
blocks dispatch and teaches; the previous Err-arm note retires.
advanced_alternative_note's gate now reads the validity verdict so it
still fires for the parse-Ok-with-error shape.
Docs: ADR-0036 Amendment 2 (+ README index) and requirements.md H1a.
The ambient-hint fallback in ambient_hint_core_in_mode parsed
schemalessly, so the type-blind grammar closed an `insert … values
(…)` tuple after the first value and the "Next:" hint pointed at `)`.
With a schema available the walk knows the remaining columns and the
correct next token is `,`. Parse the fallback with the schema cache so
the expected-token prose matches the rest of the (already
schema-aware) hint ladder.
Also corrects wrong-arity closed tuples where the schemaless parse
accepted the input and the hint said "submit with Enter" for a command
the schema-aware parse rejects — the hint now surfaces the accurate
error. Three typing-surface snapshots updated to match.
Docs: ADR-0022 Amendment 3 (+ README index) records the schema-aware
fallback; requirements.md H1a cites the hint-accuracy improvement.
Bug-report intake + triage + fix session — different shape from the
recent feature-development handovers. Fourteen distinct observations
triaged into GitHub issues; six resolved across three commits
(c12ed1d, 6f87ad1, 24c2685). ADR-0033 gained Amendment 5
(`also_valid_sql` fires on validity, not just parse). Two enhancement
trackers spawned from the /runda pass on the function-call validation
work.
Pins for the next session:
- user preference: no issue numbers in commit messages
- tests: 2040 / 0 / 1 (ignored), clippy clean
- open ticket categorisation in §5 with a recommended pairing for
the two enhancement trackers
Three layered fixes for advanced/simple-mode positional INSERT
value-count mismatches (e.g. `insert into T values (...)` with the
wrong number of values for T's column count), plus ADR-0033
Amendment 5 recording the gate refinement.
Walker diagnostic (dml_insert_arity_diagnostics): the function's own
doc-comment recorded the no-column-list (Form B) case as deferred.
This commit closes that gap. Form B mismatches now emit a new
diagnostic.insert_arity_mismatch_form_b ERROR per offending tuple,
keyed off the target table's column count from the schema cache. The
[ERR] validity indicator (ADR-0027) lights up at typing time for the
reported scenario, no longer needing a submit.
Cross-mode pointer gate (advanced_alternative_note): refactored from
a hand-rolled Form B count check to a single input_verdict_in_mode(
input, schema, Mode::Advanced) call. The pointer fires only when the
verdict is None — the ADR-0027 sense of "valid". Any future static
check added to the verdict pipeline participates automatically; no
per-feature maintenance.
Teaching notes for the value-count cases users can hit before the
indicator turns red:
- simple-mode submit: insert.form_b_extra_values_note covers under-,
in-window, and over-supply against the Form B contract; suppressed
when the cross-mode pointer fires (to avoid parallel advice).
- advanced-mode dispatch pre-flight:
insert.form_b_positional_count_mismatch_note catches a submitted
mismatch with a teaching message before the engine produces its
raw NOT-NULL / type error.
The advanced_mode.also_valid_sql pointer wording was reworked to
"trying to write SQL? switch with `mode advanced`, or prefix `:` to
run once". One insta snapshot regenerated.
ADR-0033 Amendment 5 records the gate change: Amendment 3's "would
parse in advanced mode" now reads as "valid in advanced mode" in the
explicit verdict-is-None sense, with the precise definition spelled
out so future readers can't drift back to the syntactic-only reading.
ADR-0000 index entry updated; docs/requirements.md H1a citation added
listing the three new pedagogical strings.
Tests added (8): four walker arity tests (under-supply, over-supply,
match, unknown-table); two app-level teaching-note tests for the
sibling cases (under-supply, over-supply beyond total); one pointer-
gate unit test pinning the bug-case suppression; one gate-precedence
test ensuring only one advice line per error. Existing
simple_mode_submit_of_sql_construct_appends_advanced_pointer updated
to use a known schema (the new validity gate requires it).
Full suite: 2031 passed, 0 failed, 0 unexpected skips. Clippy clean.
Surfaces from a Devil's-Advocate audit of the DSL → SQL teaching echo
(ADR-0038) after Phases 1-3 landed: three doc-drift bugs introduced
by the earlier handoff-47 / ADR-promotion commits — requirements.md
M4 and both ADR-0038 README index entry + Status block still said
"Phase 2 / Phase 3 remain," but `275c726` and `e6ad1ae` shipped them.
Updated to reflect actual state: Buckets A + B complete plus the
category-3 prose; only the §4 styled-runs polish remains. ADR-0037's
README entry also touched to note all four shipping commits of its
consumer.
Plus a missing test slice the DA flagged: explicit no-echo coverage
for the Bucket C cases that flow through command_to_sql's catch-all
(show table, explain, replay, every Command::App variant). The
contract — ADR-0030 §10 / ADR-0038 §7 Bucket C — forbids echoes for
these; a future renderer arm added at the wrong place could silently
leak one. The new bucket_c_no_echo_commands_all_return_none pins
that.
Tests: 2015 passed / 0 failed / 1 ignored (pre-existing); clippy
clean. Nothing to escalate.
Walking skeleton validating the whole echo architecture end to end; the
Command→SQL renderer currently covers `create table`, with the rest of
Bucket A / B / category-3 to follow (ADR-0038 §8).
- Channel (ADR-0037): the three-way EffectiveMode (reusing the existing
enum, not a new SubmissionMode — recorded in the ADR) rides on
Action::ExecuteDsl to the runtime. `replay` bypasses the interactive
spawn, so it never echoes (silent, for free).
- Echo (ADR-0038): built at the runtime's ExecuteDsl dispatch — the worker
gets decomposed calls, not the Command, so ADR §4's "worker builds it"
was corrected to the dispatch layer. Gated by echo_for (advanced
effective mode + DSL-form). Carried on DslSucceeded; rendered by
note_ok_summary as `Executing SQL: …` immediately beneath `[ok]`. New
src/echo.rs renderer; echo.executing_sql i18n key.
- command_to_sql: `create table` → `CREATE TABLE T (id serial PRIMARY KEY)`
(single inline / compound table-level PK), playground type vocabulary,
round-trip-verified against the advanced walker (the §1 contract).
Tests: echo.rs (render, round-trip contract, mode gate, Sql*-not-echoed);
app.rs (submit carries the 3-way mode; echo renders beneath [ok]).
Suite 1970/0/1; clippy clean.
The standard-first ALTER COLUMN constraint gap-fill advanced mode lacked:
- ALTER COLUMN <c> SET DATA TYPE <ty> — ISO canonical synonym for the
PostgreSQL TYPE shorthand (same AlterColumnType action + executor).
- SET NOT NULL / DROP NOT NULL — reuse the ADR-0029 do_add_constraint /
do_drop_constraint executors (dry-run + internal-table guards free).
- SET DEFAULT <expr> / DROP DEFAULT — SET DEFAULT uses a dedicated
raw-SQL executor (do_set_column_default); sql_expr yields no typed
Value, so it can't go through do_add_constraint. DROP DEFAULT reuses
do_drop_constraint.
Grammar: AT_ALTER_COLUMN gains a tail Choice (type / set / drop), reusing
SQL_TYPE and the CREATE TABLE DEFAULT_NODES; builder dispatch routes the
new column-attribute forms; runtime decomposes to the executors.
ADR-0035 Am2 corrected in-place: SET DEFAULT decomposes to
do_set_column_default, not do_add_constraint (Value-based) — found during
build.
Tests (test-first): 6 parse + 7 Tier-3 execution via run_replay. Suite
1962/0/1; clippy clean.
Realises ADR-0030 §10 (the DSL→SQL teaching bridge) as a /runda'd design
set, before implementation:
- ADR-0037 (new): execution-time mode side-channel — SubmissionMode
{Simple, Advanced, AdvancedOneShot} threaded Action→worker, output-only;
redeems ADR-0033 Amendment 3's deferred follow-up. Replay stays silent.
- ADR-0038 (new): the teaching echo + full catalogue (Buckets A/B/C),
the copy-paste round-trip contract, the three-category framework, and
the Value→SQL-literal renderer. DDL + show-data centric (overlapping
DML is SQL-first, so already SQL). Build-order deps recorded.
- ADR-0035 Amendment 2: standard-first dialect stance + ALTER COLUMN
SET/DROP NOT NULL, SET/DROP DEFAULT, ISO SET DATA TYPE gap-fill.
- ADR-0033 Amendment 4: reclassifies the `update … --all-rows`
non-fall-back as a bug; it now falls back to the DSL Update and echoes
(keyed on adjacent `--`; spaced arithmetic preserved).
- ADR-0039 (new): EXPLAIN over advanced SQL — decision recorded, build
deferred; supersedes ADR-0030 §13 OOS-2.
- ADR-0000: out-of-scope discipline (deferred vs rejected). README index
updated for all of the above.
Reconcile CLAUDE.md: simple-mode column ops are implemented, not pending
(requirements.md C2/B2 already [x]).
Flip stale Phase-1 checkboxes whose capability is clearly delivered:
M1/M2/M3 (modes), Q1/Q2 (SQL subset — shipped via the unified walker, not
sqlparser-rs), TT1/TT2/TT3 (test tiers 1–3) → [x]; TT4 (PTY e2e, critical
flows only) → [~].
Fix stale CLAUDE.md claims: the stack no longer uses chumsky (DSL) or a
reserved sqlparser-rs (SQL) — both retired (ADR-0024 §migration Phase F);
the DSL and advanced-mode SQL are both parsed by the unified grammar
walker (ADRs 0024 / 0030–0036). Corrects the stack note, drops the
now-done "SQL handling in advanced mode" deferred bullet, and updates the
parser.rs layout comment.
Lower-confidence items (C1 rename, A1, I1a, I3, I4, T3, V2, export/import,
resume) left for a dedicated per-item reconciliation pass (handoff-45 §5).
A Form-A advanced-mode INSERT that omitted a non-PK serial column left it
silently NULL (the column is INTEGER UNIQUE, not NOT NULL, so SQLite
permits it), while simple-mode do_insert auto-fills it with MAX+1. That
violated ADR-0018 §1's "auto-generated on every path" contract and was the
unprincipled serial-vs-shortid asymmetry the ADR set out to remove
(advanced mode already auto-fills shortid).
Fix (decision: advanced mode matches simple mode): the advanced-mode
auto-fill reconstruction — renamed plan_shortid_autofill →
plan_autogen_autofill — now also fills an omitted non-PK serial with
MAX(col)+1 … MAX+n per row (single- and multi-row), reading MAX once under
the worker's single-writer serialisation. PK serial stays on the rowid
alias; Form B (no column list) still supplies every column. Honours
ADR-0018 §1/§5; no ADR amendment needed (the contract already said "every
path"). requirements.md X4 marked resolved.
Tests: 1949 passing (+1), 0 failed, 0 skipped, 1 ignored; clippy clean.
Give each positional INSERT VALUES position its column identity so a lone
literal gets the column-typed slot (live per-column hint + mismatch
highlight) and any expression falls through to sql_expr — completing the
typed-DML-values feature for the INSERT surface (single/multi-row, Form A
and Form B).
New zero-width Node::SetColumn(&TableColumn) primitive establishes the
active column for the value position that follows (sets current_column +
pending_value_column, like an Ident{writes_column} but without consuming
input); a DynamicSubgrammar emits SetColumn(col) + the shared SET_VALUE
per position. Column mapping mirrors do_sql_insert: Form A → listed
columns; Form B → all columns in declaration order (advanced-mode Form B
auto-fills nothing; an omitted shortid in Form A is auto-filled and has no
VALUES position).
Reconcile with the per-tuple arity diagnostic (ADR-0033 §8.1): a
fixed-length typed Seq would reject wrong-arity tuples and suppress that
post-walk diagnostic, so the tuple value list is an arity-gating lookahead
— a correct-arity tuple uses the typed Seq; a wrong-arity tuple keeps the
type-blind sql_expr repeat so §8.1 fires unchanged. Correct-arity tuples
get full live feedback, including a wrong-kind literal like 'text' into an
int column.
Records ADR-0036 Amendment 1 (Phase 3b detail + the arity reconciliation);
ADR-0036 is now fully implemented.
Tests: 1947 passing (+8), 0 failed, 0 skipped, 1 ignored; clippy clean.
Wire the DSL's column-typed value slots into the advanced-mode SQL
UPDATE/UPSERT `SET col = <rhs>` value position so a learner gets the same
per-column hint ("for `Email`: type a quoted string") and live numeric-
shape mismatch highlight the simple-mode DSL gives.
Discriminate literal-vs-expression with a boundary-aware lookahead
(shared::SET_VALUE), NOT the naive `Choice(typed-slot, sql_expr)` the ADR
originally sketched: the walker's Choice is first-match-wins with no
backtrack, so a typed slot would greedily match the leading `1` of `1 + 2`
and commit, regressing valid SQL (e.g. the existing `values (1, 1 + 2)`
test). The lookahead peeks the whole value position: a literal routes to
the typed slot only when it fills the position up to the next
`,`/`)`/`;`/`where`/`returning`/end; everything else falls through to the
full sql_expr grammar unchanged. The SET column ident gets
`writes_column: true` so `current_column` drives the slot + hint.
Scope: Phase 3a covers UPDATE's assignment list and INSERT's ON CONFLICT
DO UPDATE SET. Phase 3b (INSERT VALUES — needs a per-position grammar
restructure + multi-row) is deferred. Records ADR-0036 Amendment 1 with
the mechanism correction + the 3a/3b split.
Tests: 1939 passing (+5), 0 failed, 0 skipped, 1 ignored; clippy clean.
Mirror Phase 1's capture-at-parse technique on the UPDATE SET assignment
list. build_sql_update calls the new capture_set_literals (data.rs), which
walks the matched tokens (no reparse, no grammar change) and classifies
each top-level `SET col = <rhs>` as a literal (Some, incl. signed numbers)
or an expression (None), using paren depth so a comma inside a function
call or a `where` inside a scalar subquery is not mistaken for a boundary,
and the trailing top-level WHERE is excluded.
Command::SqlUpdate gains set_literals; do_sql_update validates the literals
against their column types via the shared impl_value_for before the still
verbatim update; user_value_for_column reads them so a constraint error
names the offending value. WHERE stays unvalidated; execution and command
identity are unchanged.
Also corrects the stale data.rs header comment (DSL typed slots are wired,
not "deferred") and flips ADR-0036 + README to Phases 1–2 implemented.
Tests: 1934 passing (+4), 0 failed, 0 skipped, 1 ignored; clippy clean.
Narrow ADR-0036 from "bind literals via the DSL path" to "validate literal
values (shared validators) + retain them; execute verbatim, keep auto-fill
and command identity mode-specific" — after a concrete auto-fill difference
(non-PK serial) confirmed the modes aren't identical even for single-row
literals. Augments (no longer supersedes) ADR-0030 §4 / ADR-0033 §10;
Amendment 3 stands. README + forward-notes on 0030/0033 updated. Records
requirements.md X4 (serial auto-fill — possible bug) and X5 (framework
cohesion / share-mechanics-not-commands).
Records the decision that advanced-mode SQL DML should stop handing literal
data values to the engine as text and instead parse/validate/bind them
through the DSL's proven path — closing the value-validation gap, the
hint/highlight gap, and the offending-value-in-errors gap together. Verbatim
text stays for expressions, WHERE, INSERT…SELECT, and SELECT (full SQL
surface preserved; ADR-0026's limited Expr not imposed). Narrows ADR-0030 §4
/ ADR-0033 §10 once accepted; SELECT half of §4 stands.
Includes a characterization test (tests/sql_insert.rs) proving the bind-layer
gap: the DSL rejects the malformed date 2025/01/15, advanced-mode SQL accepts
it. Forward-notes added to ADR-0030/0033; README index updated.
Status: Proposed (design + /runda done; pending go-ahead to implement).
- F2-broad: replay failures now render with real schema context instead of
a contextless friendly_message(). Extract App::build_translate_context into
the shared App::translate_context_for(command, facts, verbosity); run_replay
enriches via enrich_dsl_failure + that builder. ctx_* fallbacks degrade to
neutral prose so the rare non-replay contextless callsites can't leak raw
{name} either. (SQL INSERT/UPDATE values aren't retained — ADR-0033 verbatim
— so those show real table/column + neutral "that value".)
- Gap C: SQL ALTER … ADD FOREIGN KEY on a missing child column refuses with an
SQL-appropriate "add it first", not the DSL-only --create-fk flag.
- Gap B: dropping a single-column-UNIQUE column refuses with a pointer to
`drop constraint unique from T.col` (was an opaque generic refusal).
- Gap D: 4e drop/rename CHECK-guard + 4f change-type FK-guard refusals reworded
to explain why; static_refusal reasons left as-is.
Tests: +4, 3 strengthened. 1926 pass / 0 fail / 0 skip; clippy clean.
F1/F2/F3 from the whole-Phase-4 /runda (handoff-42 §3):
- F3: drop an anonymous composite UNIQUE via a derived, engine-neutral
name `unique_<cols>` — recomputed live, nothing persisted, reusing the
existing `DROP CONSTRAINT <name>` grammar (no new syntax/metadata, the
§4g anonymity decision intact). A name matching more than one UNIQUE is
refused as ambiguous, never guessed. One undo step. `describe`
annotates each composite UNIQUE with its name.
- F1: dropping a column a composite UNIQUE covers is refused up-front
with the derived name + the actionable drop command (was an unhelpful
generic engine refusal).
- F2: contextless friendly_message() no longer leaks a literal `{table}`
in the generic hint (new `error.generic.hint_no_table`, selected when
no table is in context). The table-ful path is unchanged.
Docs: ADR-0035 Amendment 1 + Status + README index + plan
docs/plans/20260526-adr-0035-composite-unique-drop-f1f2f3.md.
Tests: +5 (drop-by-name, ambiguous-refused, one-undo-step, F1 guard,
F2 no-leak) + a describe-render assertion. 1922 pass / 0 fail / 0 skip;
clippy clean.
In advanced mode an entry word like `create`/`drop` has several candidate
nodes (the SQL forms + the DSL fallback), but the walker commits to one,
so completion offered only that node's continuations — `drop ` showed
just `table`, and `drop rel` dead-ended at an empty list even though the
DSL drops parse via fallback.
At the entry-word boundary (advanced mode), walk every candidate, keep the
viable (Incomplete) ones, and union their next-keyword continuations:
`drop ` → table·index·column·relationship·constraint; `drop rel` →
relationship; `create ` → table·unique·index. Deeper positions keep the
committed walk untouched (no change to insert/update/delete/select).
Each continuation is classified by producing category (Both/Advanced/
Simple) and block-ordered Both → Advanced → Simple, so they read as
contiguous groups (the foundation for the 4i(e) colour, landing next).
CompletionProbe carries a parallel expected_modes; the parse path is
unchanged (the merge is completion-only).
Tests: completion merge + partial + block-order cases; the two tests that
encoded the old single-node behaviour updated. Full suite 1911 passing /
0 failing / 1 ignored; clippy clean.
SQL identifiers are case-insensitive, so the engine resolves a table
named in any capitalization — but our metadata tables (keyed by
table_name / parent_table / child_table) and data/<table>.csv files use
case-sensitive TEXT '=', so an operation naming a table in a different
case than stored drifted: schema ops orphaned metadata rows, and a
wrong-case insert/update/delete silently skipped the CSV write, losing
the change on the next reload/rebuild. This contradicted ADR-0009's
stated rule (case-insensitive resolution, case-preserving display).
Add a canonical_table_name helper (resolve to the stored case via
COLLATE NOCASE, excluding sqlite_* and __rdbms_* tables) and apply it at
the entry of every table-naming executor — drop table, add/drop/rename
column, change column type, add/drop constraint, add relationship, add
index, rename table, insert/update/delete, and the advanced SQL DML —
so the live schema, the metadata, and the CSV stay in step regardless of
how the user capitalized the name. This also folds the internal-table
guard into the same lookup (executors that previously lacked it now
refuse __rdbms_*/sqlite_* as "no such table"). do_rename_table now
accepts a case-variant source too.
Column names remain matched case-sensitively (a wrong case is refused as
"no such column" — strict, but never drifting), per the scope agreed
with the user.
Tests: tests/case_insensitive_names.rs — wrong-case rename-column,
insert (survives a fresh rebuild — no data loss), add-column, drop-table,
rename-table, and add-relationship, all with fresh-rebuild round-trips.
Full suite 1909 passing / 0 failing / 1 ignored; clippy clean.
The one genuinely new low-level op in Phase 4: a native engine RENAME TO
plus one-transaction reconciliation (commit-db-last) of everything the
engine does not track —
- every metadata row naming the table: __rdbms_playground_columns, both
ends of __rdbms_playground_relationships (FK parent, child, and
self-referential), and __rdbms_playground_table_checks;
- the CSV file, via the existing persistence rewrite+delete path
(rewritten_tables=[new], deleted_tables=[old]) — no new method;
- CHECK text that qualifies a column with the old table name
(T.age → U.age, column- and table-level): the engine rewrites the live
CHECK but the stored text would drift and break a fresh rebuild (a
planning-/runda finding); rewrite_check_table_qualifier keeps them in
step. Bounded — a CHECK references only its own table.
Grammar: a fifth AlterTableAction (RenameTable { new }), added by
splitting the `rename` verb into one branch with an inner Choice on a
distinct second keyword (column vs to); the new-name slot mirrors the
CREATE TABLE name slot (NewName + reject_internal_table validator).
Refusals are engine-neutral and case-insensitive (the engine matches
names that way): same-name, case-only, existing-target, __rdbms_*, and
non-existent source. Auto-named indexes and relationships keep their
stale names (only table-name columns update — §6 scope). One undo step;
advanced-mode only; closes the rename half of C1.
Tests: 8 Tier-3 e2e + rewrite-helper unit tests + parse-dispatch tests.
Full suite 1903 passing / 0 failing / 1 ignored; clippy clean.
ALTER TABLE <T> ADD [CONSTRAINT <name>] (CHECK | UNIQUE | FOREIGN KEY)
and DROP CONSTRAINT <name>. ADD = table-CHECK + composite UNIQUE + FK
(ADD PRIMARY KEY and a named UNIQUE refused — composite UNIQUE is
anonymous in our model). Each ADD reuses a low-level path with a dry-run
guard (table-CHECK/UNIQUE rebuild; FK -> add_relationship, bare
REFERENCES -> parent single PK). DROP CONSTRAINT resolves the name to a
named table-CHECK then a child-side FK, else refuses. One undo step each.
Named table-CHECKs round-trip: a nullable `name` column on
__rdbms_playground_table_checks (rebuild-only arrival; a named add on a
pre-4g project is refused with a "rebuild first" hint) plus a project.yaml
check_constraints {expr, name} extension (bare-string form still reads).
The internal-__rdbms_* guard was folded into do_add_constraint /
do_add_relationship, completing that guard class.
Grammar: the action Choice keeps one branch per verb (add/drop/rename/
alter) with an inner Choice fanning out on the distinct second keyword,
since the walker's Choice does not backtrack between same-led branches.
Tests: 7 Tier-1 parse + 2 yaml round-trip + 1 internal-guard + 9 Tier-3
e2e. Help/usage refreshed; ADR-0035 §13 4g + README + requirements.md in
lockstep.
Fourth AlterTableAction (AlterColumnType), runtime-decomposed to the
existing change_column_type executor with ForceConversion — which IS the
§7 advanced policy: lossy converts with a note (no force flag),
incompatible + the ADR-0017 static refusals (↔blob, same-type,
date↔datetime, non-int→serial) still refuse, while int→serial is allowed
(auto-fills nulls + UNIQUE, ADR-0018 §8). No new mode/note/persistence;
undo is the advanced safety net.
Grammar adds a fourth action branch leading on `alter`, discriminated in
the builder by the `type` keyword (unique — ADD COLUMN's type is an
ident); the type slot reuses SQL_TYPE. The internal-__rdbms_* guard was
folded into do_change_column_type (user-confirmed), closing the simple
`change column` exposure.
Tests: 7 Tier-3 e2e via run_replay + 4 Tier-1 parse (incl. a column-named-
`type` discriminator probe) + the simple-surface guard. Help/usage
refreshed; ADR-0035 §13 4f + README + requirements.md in lockstep.
- docs/plans/20260525-adr-0035-sql-ddl-4f.md — ALTER TABLE ALTER COLUMN
TYPE plan (/runda'd; forks resolved). Advanced lossy = ForceConversion
(reuse do_change_column_type; existing transformed_lossy note); the
internal-__rdbms_* guard folds into do_change_column_type both surfaces
(user-confirmed); int->serial is ALLOWED (ADR-0018 §8), only non-int
->serial / blob / date<->datetime are static-refused.
- docs/handoff/20260525-handoff-39.md — 4d/4e shipped; 4f is next
(plan ready).
Advanced-only `alter` entry word; ALTER TABLE <T> ADD COLUMN <col> <type>
[constraints] | DROP COLUMN <col> | RENAME COLUMN <old> TO <new> ->
SqlAlterTable, runtime-decomposed to the existing column executors
(do_add_column / do_drop_column / do_rename_column) — one undo step each,
no new worker layer. The COLUMN keyword is required (reserves bare
RENAME TO for 4h, ADD CONSTRAINT for 4g).
- ADD COLUMN takes NOT NULL / UNIQUE / DEFAULT / CHECK (no PK / inline
REFERENCES). do_add_column extended to consume the SQL raw-text
default_sql / check_sql (sql_expr is validate-only, the 4a.2
mechanism), reaching parity with CREATE TABLE's column constraints.
- Drop/rename column refuse a column any CHECK references — table-level
AND column-level (incl. a column's own self-check on rename) — the
4a.3 deferral, detected up-front by tokenizing the raw CHECK text
(skipping string literals). In the shared executors, so it guards both
the simple and SQL surfaces and fixes a latent rename-drift bug that
desynced the stored CHECK text and broke rebuild.
- SQL DROP COLUMN refuses an index-covered column (no --cascade SQL
spelling — matches SQLite + the simple default).
- The column executors and do_add_index gained an internal-__rdbms_*
guard (refuse as "no such table"), closing a pre-existing exposure on
both surfaces. (do_change_column_type / do_add_constraint /
do_add_relationship are a tracked follow-up.)
- `alter` is advanced-only; AlterTableAction::AddColumn is boxed
(clippy::large_enum_variant).
Docs: ADR-0035 status + §13 4e; ADR README; requirements.md Q1. Plan:
docs/plans/20260525-adr-0035-sql-ddl-4e.md.
Tests: 1854 passing / 0 failing / 0 skipped / 1 ignored; clippy clean.
Advanced-mode SQL CREATE [UNIQUE] INDEX [IF NOT EXISTS] [<name>] ON
<T> (cols) -> SqlCreateIndex and DROP INDEX [IF EXISTS] <name> ->
SqlDropIndex, both reusing the ADR-0025 executors (do_add_index /
do_drop_index), like 4c reused do_drop_table.
- CREATE UNIQUE INDEX admitted in advanced mode (ADR-0025 Amendment 1):
ADR-0025 deferred UNIQUE indexes for the simple-mode DSL, but advanced
mode trusts the user like SQL does. Adds an additive IndexSchema.unique
flag (project.yaml, serde-default, version stays 1); rebuild re-emits
CREATE UNIQUE INDEX; the redundant-set guard keys on (columns, unique).
Simple-mode `add unique index` stays deferred.
- IF [NOT] EXISTS on both forms reuses the 4c no-op-with-note skip
(journalled, not snapshotted) via CreateIndexOutcome / DropIndexOutcome.
- Unnamed CREATE INDEX auto-named (ADR-0025 convention); the [UNIQUE]
prefix is a concrete-keyword Choice and the optional name an on-led-first
selector (the drop-index selector precedent) — trap-safe.
- create/drop each gain a second advanced node; the existing all-candidates
dispatch handles it (locked by parse tests).
- Unique indexes marked [unique] in the structure view and items panel.
- do_add_index refuses internal __rdbms_* tables as "no such table",
closing a latent exposure on both the simple `add index` and the new
SQL CREATE INDEX surfaces (ADR-0025 Amendment 1).
Docs: ADR-0035 status + §13 4d + 4i; ADR-0025 Amendment 1; ADR README;
requirements.md Q1/C3. Plan: docs/plans/20260525-adr-0035-sql-ddl-4d.md.
Tests: 1834 passing / 0 failing / 0 skipped / 1 ignored; clippy clean.