Implements Phases 1-8 of the TFTSR implementation plan. Rust backend (Tauri 2.x, src-tauri/): - Multi-provider AI: OpenAI-compatible, Anthropic, Gemini, Mistral, Ollama - PII detection engine: 11 regex patterns with overlap resolution - SQLCipher AES-256 encrypted database with 10 versioned migrations - 28 Tauri IPC commands for triage, analysis, document, and system ops - Ollama: hardware probe, model recommendations, pull/delete with events - RCA and blameless post-mortem Markdown document generators - PDF export via printpdf - Audit log: SHA-256 hash of every external data send - Integration stubs for Confluence, ServiceNow, Azure DevOps (v0.2) Frontend (React 18 + TypeScript + Vite, src/): - 9 pages: full triage workflow NewIssue→LogUpload→Triage→Resolution→RCA→Postmortem→History+Settings - 7 components: ChatWindow, TriageProgress, PiiDiffViewer, DocEditor, HardwareReport, ModelSelector, UI primitives - 3 Zustand stores: session, settings (persisted), history - Type-safe tauriCommands.ts matching Rust backend types exactly - 8 IT domain system prompts (Linux, Windows, Network, K8s, DB, Virt, HW, Obs) DevOps: - .woodpecker/test.yml: rustfmt, clippy, cargo test, tsc, vitest on every push - .woodpecker/release.yml: linux/amd64 + linux/arm64 builds, Gogs release upload Verified: - cargo check: zero errors - tsc --noEmit: zero errors - vitest run: 13/13 unit tests passing Co-Authored-By: Claude Sonnet 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> |
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| .. | ||
| inflight.js | ||
| LICENSE | ||
| package.json | ||
| README.md | ||
inflight
Add callbacks to requests in flight to avoid async duplication
USAGE
var inflight = require('inflight')
// some request that does some stuff
function req(key, callback) {
// key is any random string. like a url or filename or whatever.
//
// will return either a falsey value, indicating that the
// request for this key is already in flight, or a new callback
// which when called will call all callbacks passed to inflightk
// with the same key
callback = inflight(key, callback)
// If we got a falsey value back, then there's already a req going
if (!callback) return
// this is where you'd fetch the url or whatever
// callback is also once()-ified, so it can safely be assigned
// to multiple events etc. First call wins.
setTimeout(function() {
callback(null, key)
}, 100)
}
// only assigns a single setTimeout
// when it dings, all cbs get called
req('foo', cb1)
req('foo', cb2)
req('foo', cb3)
req('foo', cb4)