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obsidian-livesync/devs.md
2026-01-14 09:41:16 +00:00

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# Self-hosted LiveSync Development Guide
## Project Overview
Self-hosted LiveSync is an Obsidian plugin for synchronising vaults across devices using CouchDB, MinIO/S3, or peer-to-peer WebRTC. The codebase uses a modular architecture with TypeScript, Svelte, and PouchDB.
## Architecture
### Module System
The plugin uses a dynamic module system to reduce coupling and improve maintainability:
- **Service Hub**: Central registry for services using dependency injection
- Services are registered, and accessed via `this.services` (in most modules)
- **Module Loading**: All modules extend `AbstractModule` or `AbstractObsidianModule` (which extends `AbstractModule`). These modules are loaded in main.ts and some modules
- **Module Categories** (by directory):
- `core/` - Platform-independent core functionality
- `coreObsidian/` - Obsidian-specific core (e.g., `ModuleFileAccessObsidian`)
- `essential/` - Required modules (e.g., `ModuleMigration`, `ModuleKeyValueDB`)
- `features/` - Optional features (e.g., `ModuleLog`, `ModuleObsidianSettings`)
- `extras/` - Development/testing tools (e.g., `ModuleDev`, `ModuleIntegratedTest`)
### Key Architectural Components
- **LiveSyncLocalDB** (`src/lib/src/pouchdb/`): Local PouchDB database wrapper
- **Replicators** (`src/lib/src/replication/`): CouchDB, Journal, and MinIO sync engines
- **Service Hub** (`src/modules/services/`): Central service registry using dependency injection
- **Common Library** (`src/lib/`): Platform-independent sync logic, shared with other tools
### File Structure Conventions
- **Platform-specific code**: Use `.platform.ts` suffix (replaced with `.obsidian.ts` in production builds via esbuild)
- **Development code**: Use `.dev.ts` suffix (replaced with `.prod.ts` in production)
- **Path aliases**: `@/*` maps to `src/*`, `@lib/*` maps to `src/lib/src/*`
## Build & Development Workflow
### Commands
```bash
npm run check # TypeScript and svelte type checking
npm run dev # Development build with auto-rebuild (uses .env for test vault paths)
npm run build # Production build
npm run buildDev # Development build (one-time)
npm run bakei18n # Pre-build step: compile i18n resources (YAML → JSON → TS)
npm test # Run vitest tests (requires Docker services)
```
### Environment Setup
- Create `.env` file with `PATHS_TEST_INSTALL` pointing to test vault plug-in directories (`:` separated on Unix, `;` on Windows)
- Development builds auto-copy to these paths on build
### Testing Infrastructure
- **Deno Tests**: Unit tests for platform-independent code (e.g., `HashManager.test.ts`)
- **Vitest** (`vitest.config.ts`): E2E test by Browser-based-harness using Playwright
- **Docker Services**: Tests require CouchDB, MinIO (S3), and P2P services:
```bash
npm run test:docker-all:start # Start all test services
npm run test:full # Run tests with coverage
npm run test:docker-all:stop # Stop services
```
If some services are not needed, start only required ones (e.g., `test:docker-couchdb:start`)
Note that if services are already running, starting script will fail. Please stop them first.
- **Test Structure**:
- `test/suite/` - Integration tests for sync operations
- `test/unit/` - Unit tests (via vitest, as harness is browser-based)
- `test/harness/` - Mock implementations (e.g., `obsidian-mock.ts`)
## Code Conventions
### Internationalisation (i18n)
- **Translation Workflow**:
1. Edit YAML files in `src/lib/src/common/messagesYAML/` (human-editable)
2. Run `npm run bakei18n` to compile: YAML → JSON → TypeScript constants
3. Use `$t()`, `$msg()` functions for translations
You can also use `$f` for formatted messages with Tagged Template Literals.
- **Usage**:
```typescript
$msg("dialog.someKey"); // Typed key with autocomplete
$t("Some message"); // Direct translation
$f`Hello, ${userName}`; // Formatted message
```
- **Supported languages**: `def` (English), `de`, `es`, `ja`, `ko`, `ru`, `zh`, `zh-tw`
### File Path Handling
- Use tagged types from `types.ts`: `FilePath`, `FilePathWithPrefix`, `DocumentID`
- Prefix constants: `CHeader` (chunks), `ICHeader`/`ICHeaderEnd` (internal data)
- Path utilities in `src/lib/src/string_and_binary/path.ts`: `addPrefix()`, `stripAllPrefixes()`, `shouldBeIgnored()`
### Logging & Debugging
- Use `this._log(msg, LOG_LEVEL_INFO)` in modules (automatically prefixes with module name)
- Log levels: `LOG_LEVEL_DEBUG`, `LOG_LEVEL_VERBOSE`, `LOG_LEVEL_INFO`, `LOG_LEVEL_NOTICE`, `LOG_LEVEL_URGENT`
- LOG_LEVEL_NOTICE and above are reported to the user via Obsidian notices
- LOG_LEVEL_DEBUG is for debug only and not shown in default builds
- Dev mode creates `ls-debug/` folder in `.obsidian/` for debug outputs (e.g., missing translations)
- This causes pretty significant performance overhead.
## Common Patterns
### Module Implementation
```typescript
export class ModuleExample extends AbstractObsidianModule {
async _everyOnloadStart(): Promise<boolean> {
/* ... */
}
onBindFunction(core: LiveSyncCore, services: typeof core.services): void {
services.appLifecycle.handleOnInitialise(this._everyOnloadStart.bind(this));
}
}
```
### Settings Management
- Settings defined in `src/lib/src/common/types.ts` (`ObsidianLiveSyncSettings`)
- Configuration metadata in `src/lib/src/common/settingConstants.ts`
- Use `this.services.setting.saveSettingData()` instead of using plugin methods directly
### Database Operations
- Local database operations through `LiveSyncLocalDB` (wraps PouchDB)
- Document types: `EntryDoc` (files), `EntryLeaf` (chunks), `PluginDataEntry` (plugin sync)
## Important Files
- [main.ts](src/main.ts) - Plugin entry point, module registration
- [esbuild.config.mjs](esbuild.config.mjs) - Build configuration with platform/dev file replacement
- [package.json](package.json) - Scripts reference and dependencies
## Contribution Guidelines
- Follow existing code style and conventions
- Please bump dependencies with care, check artifacts after updates, with diff-tools and only expected changes in the build output (to avoid unexpected vulnerabilities).
- When adding new features, please consider it has an OSS implementation, and avoid using proprietary services or APIs that may limit usage.
- For example, any functionality to connect to a new type of server is expected to either have an OSS implementation available for that server, or to be managed under some responsibilities and/or limitations without disrupting existing functionality, and scope for surveillance reduced by some means (e.g., by client-side encryption, auditing the server ourselves).