Commit Graph

6 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
LocalAI [bot]
e5d7b84216 fix(distributed): split NATS backend.upgrade off install + dedup loads (#9717)
* feat(messaging): add backend.upgrade NATS subject + payload types

Splits the slow force-reinstall path off backend.install so it can run on
its own subscription goroutine, eliminating head-of-line blocking between
routine model loads and full gallery upgrades.

Wire-level Force flag on BackendInstallRequest is kept for one release as
the rolling-update fallback target; doc note marks it deprecated.

Assisted-by: Claude:claude-sonnet-4-6
Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>

* feat(distributed/worker): add per-backend mutex helper to backendSupervisor

Different backend names lock independently; same backend serializes. This
is the synchronization primitive used by the upcoming concurrent install
handler — without it, wrapping the NATS callback in a goroutine would
race the gallery directory when two requests target the same backend.

Assisted-by: Claude:claude-opus-4-7
Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>

* fix(distributed/worker): run backend.install handler in a goroutine

NATS subscriptions deliver messages serially on a single per-subscription
goroutine. With a synchronous install handler, a multi-minute gallery
download would head-of-line-block every other install request to the
same worker — manifesting upstream as a 5-minute "nats: timeout" on
unrelated routine model loads.

The body now runs in its own goroutine, with a per-backend mutex
(lockBackend) protecting the gallery directory from concurrent operations
on the same backend. Different backend names install in parallel.

Backward-compat: req.Force=true is still honored here, so an older master
that hasn't been updated to send on backend.upgrade keeps working.

Assisted-by: Claude:claude-opus-4-7
Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>

* feat(distributed/worker): subscribe to backend.upgrade as a separate path

Slow force-reinstall now lives on its own NATS subscription, so a
multi-minute gallery pull cannot head-of-line-block the routine
backend.install handler on the same worker. Same per-backend mutex
guards both — concurrent install + upgrade for the same backend
serialize at the gallery directory; different backends are independent.

upgradeBackend stops every live process for the backend, force-installs
from gallery, and re-registers. It does not start a new process — the
next backend.install will spawn one with the freshly-pulled binary.

Assisted-by: Claude:claude-opus-4-7
Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>

* feat(distributed): add UpgradeBackend on NodeCommandSender; drop Force from InstallBackend

Master now sends to backend.upgrade for force-reinstall, with a
nats.ErrNoResponders fallback to the legacy backend.install Force=true
path so a rolling update with a new master + an old worker still
converges. The Force parameter leaves the public Go API surface
entirely — only the internal fallback sets it on the wire.

InstallBackend timeout drops 5min -> 3min (most replies are sub-second
since the worker short-circuits on already-running or already-installed).
UpgradeBackend timeout is 15min, sized for real-world Jetson-on-WiFi
gallery pulls.

Updates the admin install HTTP endpoint
(core/http/endpoints/localai/nodes.go) to the new signature too.

router_test.go's fakeUnloader does not yet implement the new interface
shape; Task 3.2 will catch it up before the next package-level test run.

Assisted-by: Claude:claude-opus-4-7
Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>

* test(distributed): update fakeUnloader for new NodeCommandSender shape

InstallBackend lost its force bool param (Force is not part of the public
Go API anymore — only the internal upgrade-fallback path sets it on the
wire). UpgradeBackend gained a method. Fake records both call slices and
provides an installHook concurrency seam for upcoming singleflight tests.

Assisted-by: Claude:claude-opus-4-7
Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>

* test(distributed): cover UpgradeBackend's new subject + rolling-update fallback

Task 3.1 changed the master to publish UpgradeBackend on the new
backend.upgrade subject; the existing UpgradeBackend tests scripted the
old install subject and so all 3 began failing as expected. Updates them
to script SubjectNodeBackendUpgrade with BackendUpgradeReply.

Adds two new specs for the rolling-update fallback:
  - ErrNoResponders on backend.upgrade triggers a backend.install
    Force=true retry on the same node.
  - Non-NoResponders errors propagate to the caller unchanged.

scriptedMessagingClient gains scriptNoResponders (real nats sentinel) and
scriptReplyMatching (predicate-matched canned reply, used to assert that
the fallback path actually sets Force=true on the install retry).

Assisted-by: Claude:claude-opus-4-7
Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>

* fix(distributed): coalesce concurrent identical backend.install via singleflight

Six simultaneous chat completions for the same not-yet-loaded model were
observed firing six independent NATS install requests, each serializing
through the worker's per-subscription goroutine and amplifying queue
depth. SmartRouter now wraps the NATS round-trip in a singleflight.Group
keyed by (nodeID, backend, modelID, replica): N concurrent identical
loads share one round-trip and one reply.

Distinct (modelID, replica) keys still fire independent calls, so
multi-replica scaling and multi-model fan-out are unaffected.

fakeUnloader gains a sync.Mutex around its recording slices to keep
concurrent test goroutines race-clean.

Assisted-by: Claude:claude-opus-4-7
Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>

* test(e2e/distributed): drop force arg from InstallBackend test calls

Two e2e test call sites still passed the trailing force bool that was
removed from RemoteUnloaderAdapter.InstallBackend in 9bde76d7. Caught
by golangci-lint typecheck on the upgrade-split branch (master CI was
already green because these tests don't run in the standard test path).

Assisted-by: Claude:claude-opus-4-7
Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>

* refactor(distributed): extract worker business logic to core/services/worker

core/cli/worker.go grew to 1212 lines after the backend.upgrade split.
The CLI package was carrying backendSupervisor, NATS lifecycle handlers,
gallery install/upgrade orchestration, S3 file staging, and registration
helpers — all distributed-worker business logic that doesn't belong in
the cobra surface.

Move it to a new core/services/worker package, mirroring the existing
core/services/{nodes,messaging,galleryop} pattern. core/cli/worker.go
shrinks to ~19 lines: a kong-tagged shim that embeds worker.Config and
delegates Run.

No behavior change. All symbols stay unexported except Config and Run.
The three worker-specific tests (addr/replica/concurrency) move with
the code via git mv so history follows them.

Files split as:
  worker.go        - Run entry point
  config.go        - Config struct (kong tags retained, kong not imported)
  supervisor.go    - backendProcess, backendSupervisor, process lifecycle
  install.go       - installBackend, upgradeBackend, findBackend, lockBackend
  lifecycle.go     - subscribeLifecycleEvents (verbatim, decomposition is
                     a follow-up commit)
  file_staging.go  - subscribeFileStaging, isPathAllowed
  registration.go  - advertiseAddr, registrationBody, heartbeatBody, etc.
  reply.go         - replyJSON
  process_helpers.go - readLastLinesFromFile

Assisted-by: Claude:claude-opus-4-7
Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>

* refactor(distributed/worker): decompose subscribeLifecycleEvents into per-event handlers

The 226-line subscribeLifecycleEvents method packed eight NATS subscriptions
inline. Each grew context-shaped doc comments mixed with subscription
plumbing, making it hard to read any one handler without scrolling past the
others. Extract each handler into its own method on *backendSupervisor; the
subscriber becomes a thin 8-line dispatcher.

No behavior change: each method body is byte-equivalent to its corresponding
inline goroutine + handler. Doc comments that were attached to the inline
SubscribeReply calls migrate to the new method godocs.

Adding the next NATS subject is now a 2-line patch to the dispatcher plus
one new method, instead of grafting onto a monolith.

Assisted-by: Claude:claude-opus-4-7
Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>

---------

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>
Co-authored-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>
2026-05-08 16:24:54 +02:00
LocalAI [bot]
447c186089 fix(distributed): make backend upgrade actually re-install on workers (#9708)
* fix(distributed): make backend upgrade actually re-install on workers

UpgradeBackend dispatched a vanilla backend.install NATS event to every
node hosting the backend. The worker's installBackend short-circuits on
"already running for this (model, replica) slot" and returns the
existing address — so the gallery install path was skipped, no artifact
was re-downloaded, no metadata was written. The frontend's drift
detection then re-flagged the same backends every cycle (installedDigest
stays empty → mismatch → "Backend upgrade available (new build)") while
"Backend upgraded successfully" landed in the logs at the same time.
The user-visible symptom: clicking "Upgrade All" silently does nothing
and the same N backends sit on the upgrade list forever.

Two coupled fixes, one PR:

1. Force flag on backend.install. Add `Force bool` to
   BackendInstallRequest and thread it through NodeCommandSender ->
   RemoteUnloaderAdapter. UpgradeBackend (and the reconciler's pending-op
   drain when retrying an upgrade) sets force=true; routine load events
   and admin install endpoints keep force=false. On the worker, force=true
   stops every live process that uses this backend (resolveProcessKeys
   for peer replicas, plus the exact request processKey), skips the
   findBackend short-circuit, and passes force=true into
   gallery.InstallBackendFromGallery so the on-disk artifact is
   overwritten. After the gallery install completes, startBackend brings
   up a fresh process at the same processKey on a new port.

2. Liveness check on the fast path. installBackend's "already running"
   branch read getAddr without verifying the process was alive, so a
   gRPC backend that died without the supervisor noticing left a stale
   (key, addr) entry. The reconciler then dialed that address, got
   ECONNREFUSED, marked the replica failed, retried install — and the
   supervisor said "already running addr=…" again. Loop forever, exactly
   what we observed on a node whose llama-cpp process had died but whose
   supervisor record persisted. Verify s.isRunning(processKey) before
   trusting getAddr; if the entry is stale, stopBackendExact cleans up
   and we fall through to a real install.

Backwards-compatible: the new Force field is omitempty, older workers
ignore it (their default behavior matches force=false). The signature
change on NodeCommandSender.InstallBackend is internal-only.

Verified: unit tests in core/services/nodes pass (108s suite). The
pre-existing core/backend build break (proto regen pending for
word-level timestamps) blocks core/cli and core/http/endpoints/localai
package tests but is unrelated to this change.

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>
Assisted-by: Claude:claude-opus-4-7 [Claude Code]

* test(e2e/distributed): pass force=false to adapter.InstallBackend

NodeCommandSender.InstallBackend gained a final force bool in the
upgrade-force commit; the e2e distributed lifecycle tests still called
the old 8-arg signature and broke compilation. These tests exercise the
routine install path (single replica, default behavior), so force=false
preserves their existing semantics.

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>
Assisted-by: Claude:claude-opus-4-7 [Claude Code]

---------

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>
Co-authored-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>
2026-05-07 17:28:14 +02:00
Ettore Di Giacinto
6b63b47f61 feat(distributed): support multiple replicas of one model on the same node (#9583)
* feat(distributed): support multiple replicas of one model on the same node

The distributed scheduler implicitly assumed `(node_id, model_name)` was
unique, but the schema didn't enforce it and the worker keyed all gRPC
processes by model name alone. With `MinReplicas=2` against a single
worker, the reconciler "scaled up" every 30s but the registry never
advanced past 1 row — the worker re-loaded the model in-place every tick
until VRAM fragmented and the gRPC process died.

This change introduces multi-replica-per-node as a first-class concept,
with capacity-aware scheduling, a circuit breaker, and VRAM
soft-reservation. Operators can declare per-node capacity via the worker
flag `--max-replicas-per-model` (mirrored as auto-label
`node.replica-slots=N`) or override per-node from the UI.

* Schema: BackendNode gains MaxReplicasPerModel (default 1) and
  ReservedVRAM. NodeModel gains ReplicaIndex (composite with node_id +
  model_name). ModelSchedulingConfig gains UnsatisfiableUntil/Ticks for
  the reconciler circuit breaker.

* Registry: replica_index threaded through SetNodeModel, RemoveNodeModel,
  IncrementInFlight, DecrementInFlight, TouchNodeModel, GetNodeModel,
  SetNodeModelLoadInfo and the InFlightTrackingClient. New helpers:
  CountReplicasOnNode, NextFreeReplicaIndex (with ErrNoFreeSlot),
  RemoveAllNodeModelReplicas, FindNodesWithFreeSlot,
  ClusterCapacityForModel, ReserveVRAM/ReleaseVRAM (atomic UPDATE with
  ErrInsufficientVRAM), and the unsatisfiable-flag CRUD.

* Worker: processKey now `<modelID>#<replicaIndex>` so concurrent loads
  of the same model land on distinct ports. Adds CLI flag
  --max-replicas-per-model (env LOCALAI_MAX_REPLICAS_PER_MODEL, default 1)
  and emits the auto-label.

* Router: scheduleNewModel filters candidates by free slot, allocates the
  replica index, and soft-reserves VRAM before installing the backend.
  evictLRUAndFreeNode now deletes the targeted row by ID instead of all
  replicas of the model on the node — fixes a latent bug where evicting
  one replica orphaned its siblings.

* Reconciler: caps scale-up at ClusterCapacityForModel so a misconfig
  (MinReplicas > capacity) doesn't loop forever. After 3 consecutive
  ticks of capacity==0 it sets UnsatisfiableUntil for a 5m cooldown and
  emits a warning. ClearAllUnsatisfiable fires from Register,
  ApproveNode, SetNodeLabel(s), RemoveNodeLabel and
  UpdateMaxReplicasPerModel so a new node joining or label changes wake
  the reconciler immediately. scaleDownIdle removes highest-replica-index
  first to keep slots compact.

* Heartbeat resets reserved_vram to 0 — worker is the source of truth
  for actual free VRAM; the reservation is only for the in-tick race
  window between two scheduling decisions.

* Probe path (reconciler.probeLoadedModels and health.doCheckAll) now
  pass the row's replica_index to RemoveNodeModel so an unreachable
  replica doesn't orphan healthy siblings.

* Admin override: PUT /api/nodes/:id/max-replicas-per-model sets a
  sticky override (preserved across worker re-registration). DELETE
  clears the override so the worker's flag applies again on next
  register. Required because Kong defaults the worker flag to 1, so
  every worker restart would have silently reverted the UI value.

* React UI: always-visible slot badge on the node row (muted at default
  1, accented when >1); inline editor in the expanded drawer with
  pencil-to-edit, Save/Cancel, Esc/Enter, "(override)" indicator when
  the value is admin-set, and a "Reset" button to hand control back to
  the worker. Soft confirm when shrinking the cap below the count of
  loaded replicas. Scheduling rules table gets an "Unsatisfiable until
  HH:MM" status badge surfacing the cooldown.

* node.replica-slots filtered out of the labels strip on the row to
  avoid duplicating the slot badge.

23 new Ginkgo specs (registry, reconciler, inflight, health) cover:
multi-replica row independence, RemoveNodeModel of one replica
preserving siblings, NextFreeReplicaIndex slot allocation including
ErrNoFreeSlot, capacity-gated scale-up with circuit breaker tripping
and recovery on Register, scheduleDownIdle ordering, ClusterCapacity
math, ReserveVRAM admission gating, Heartbeat reset, override survival
across worker re-registration, and ResetMaxReplicasPerModel handing
control back. Plus 8 stdlib tests for the worker processKey / CLI /
auto-label.

Closes the flap reproduced on Qwen3.6-35B against the nvidia-thor
worker (single 128 GiB node, MinReplicas=2): the reconciler now caps
the scale-up at the cluster's actual capacity instead of looping.

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>
Assisted-by: claude-code:opus-4-7 [Read] [Edit] [Bash] [Skill:critique] [Skill:audit] [Skill:polish] [Skill:golang-testing]

* refactor(react-ui/nodes): tighten capacity editor copy + adopt ActionMenu for row actions

* Capacity editor hint trimmed from operator-doc-style ("Sourced from
  the worker's `--max-replicas-per-model` flag. Changing it here makes it
  a sticky admin override that survives worker restarts." → "Saved
  values stick across worker restarts.") and the override-state copy
  similarly compressed. The full mechanic is no longer needed in the UI
  — the override pill carries the meaning and the docs cover the rest.

* Node row actions migrated from an inline cluster of icon buttons
  (Drain / Resume / Trash) to the kebab ActionMenu used by /manage for
  per-row model actions, so dense Nodes tables stay clean. Approve
  stays as a prominent primary button — it's a stateful admission gate,
  not a routine action, and elevating it matches how /manage surfaces
  install-time decisions outside the menu.

* The expanded drawer's Labels section now filters node.replica-slots
  out of the editable label list. The label is owned by the Capacity
  editor above; surfacing it again as an editable label invited
  confusion (the Capacity save would clobber any direct edit).

Both backend and agent workers benefit — they share the row rendering
path, so the action menu and label filter apply to both.

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>
Assisted-by: claude-code:opus-4-7 [Edit] [chrome-devtools-mcp] [Skill:critique] [Skill:audit] [Skill:polish]

* fix(react-ui/nodes): suppress slot badge on agent workers

Agent workers don't load models, so the per-node replica capacity is
inapplicable to them. Showing "1× slots" on agent rows was a tiny
inconsistency from the unified rendering path — gate the badge on
node_type !== 'agent' so it only appears on backend workers.

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>
Assisted-by: claude-code:opus-4-7 [Edit] [chrome-devtools-mcp]

* refactor(react-ui/nodes): distill expanded drawer + restyle scheduling form

The expanded node drawer used to stack five panels — slot badge,
filled capacity box, Loaded Models h4+empty-state, Installed Backends
h4+empty-state, Labels h4+chips+form — making routine inspections feel
like a control panel. The scheduling rule form wrapped its mode toggle
as two 50%-width filled buttons that competed visually with the actual
primary action.

* Drawer: collapse three rarely-touched config zones (Capacity,
  Backends, Labels) into one `<details>` "Manage" disclosure (closed by
  default) with small uppercase eyebrow labels for each zone instead of
  parallel h4 sub-headings. Loaded Models stays as the at-a-glance
  headline with a single-line empty hint instead of a boxed empty state.
  CapacityEditor renders flat (no filled background) — the Manage
  disclosure provides framing.

* Scheduling form: replace the chunky 50%-width button-tabs with the
  project's existing `.segmented` control (icon + label, sized to
  content). Mode hint becomes a single tied line below. Fields stack
  vertically with helper text under inputs and a hairline divider above
  the right-aligned Save / Cancel.

The empty drawer collapses from ~5 stacked sections (~280px tall) to
two lines (~80px). The scheduling form now reads as a designed dialog
instead of raw building blocks. Both surfaces now match the typographic
density and weight of the rest of the admin pages.

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>
Assisted-by: claude-code:opus-4-7 [Edit] [chrome-devtools-mcp] [Skill:distill] [Skill:audit] [Skill:polish]

* feat(react-ui/nodes): replace scheduling form's model picker with searchable combobox

The native <select> made operators scroll through every gallery entry to
find a model name. The project already has SearchableModelSelect (used
in Studio/Talk/etc.) which combines free-text search with the gallery
list and accepts typed model names that aren't installed yet — useful
for pre-staging a scheduling rule before the node it'll run on has
finished bootstrapping.

Also drops the now-unused useModels import (the combobox manages the
gallery hook internally).

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>
Assisted-by: claude-code:opus-4-7 [Edit]

* refactor(react-ui/nodes): consolidate key/value chip editor + add replica preset chips

The Nodes page was rendering the same key=value chip pattern in two
places with subtly different markup: the Labels editor in the expanded
drawer and (post-distill) the Node Selector input in the scheduling
form. The form's input was also a comma-separated string that operators
were getting wrong.

* Extract <KeyValueChips> as a fully controlled chip-builder. Parent
  owns the map and decides what onAdd/onRemove does — form state for the
  scheduling form, API calls for the live drawer Labels editor. Same
  visuals everywhere; one component to change when polish needs apply.

* Replace the comma-separated Node Selector text input with KeyValueChips.
  Operators were copying syntax from docs and missing commas; the chip
  vocabulary makes the key=value structure self-documenting.

* Add <ReplicaInput>: numeric input + quick-pick preset chips for Min/Max
  replicas. Picked over a slider because replica counts are exact specs
  derived from VRAM math (operator decision, not a fuzzy estimate). The
  chips give one-click access to common values (1/2/3/4 for Min,
  0=no-limit/2/4/8 for Max) without the slider's special-value problem
  (MaxReplicas=0 is categorical, not a position on a continuum).

* Drop the now-unused labelInputs state in the Nodes page (the inline
  label editor's per-node draft state lived there and is now owned by
  KeyValueChips).

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>
Assisted-by: claude-code:opus-4-7 [Edit] [Skill:distill]

* test: fix CI fallout from multi-replica refactor (e2e/distributed + playwright)

Two breakages caught by CI that didn't surface in the local run:

* tests/e2e/distributed/*.go — multiple files used the pre-PR2 registry
  signatures for SetNodeModel / IncrementInFlight / DecrementInFlight /
  RemoveNodeModel / TouchNodeModel / GetNodeModel / SetNodeModelLoadInfo
  and one stale adapter.InstallBackend call in node_lifecycle_test.go.
  All updated to pass replicaIndex=0 — these tests don't exercise
  multi-replica behavior, they just need to compile against the new
  signatures. The chip-builder tests in core/services/nodes/ already
  cover the multi-replica logic.

* core/http/react-ui/e2e/nodes-per-node-backend-actions.spec.js — the
  drawer's distill refactor moved Backends inside a "Manage" <details>
  disclosure that's collapsed by default. The test helper expanded the
  node row but never opened Manage, so the per-node backend table was
  never in the DOM. Helper now clicks `.node-manage > summary` after
  expanding the row.

All 100 playwright tests pass locally; tests/e2e/distributed compiles
clean.

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>
Assisted-by: claude-code:opus-4-7 [Edit] [Bash]

---------

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>
2026-04-27 21:20:05 +02:00
Russell Sim
02bb715c0a fix(distributed): pass ExternalURI through NATS backend install (#9446)
When installing a backend with a custom OCI URI in distributed mode,
the URI was captured in ManagementOp.ExternalURI by the HTTP handler
but never forwarded to workers. BackendInstallRequest had no URI field,
so workers fell through to the gallery lookup and failed with
"no backend found with name <custom-name>".

Add URI/Name/Alias fields to BackendInstallRequest and thread them from
ManagementOp through DistributedBackendManager.InstallBackend() and the
RemoteUnloaderAdapter. On the worker side, route to InstallExternalBackend
when URI is set instead of InstallBackendFromGallery. Update all
remaining InstallBackend call sites (UpgradeBackend, reconciler
pending-op drain, router auto-install) to pass empty strings for the
new params.

Assisted-by: Claude Code:claude-sonnet-4-6

Signed-off-by: Russell Sim <rsl@simopolis.xyz>
2026-04-20 23:39:35 +02:00
Ettore Di Giacinto
75a63f87d8 feat(distributed): sync state with frontends, better backend management reporting (#9426)
* fix(distributed): detect backend upgrades across worker nodes

Before this change `DistributedBackendManager.CheckUpgrades` delegated to the
local manager, which read backends from the frontend filesystem. In
distributed deployments the frontend has no backends installed locally —
they live on workers — so the upgrade-detection loop never ran and the UI
silently never surfaced upgrades even when the gallery advertised newer
versions or digests.

Worker-side: NATS backend.list reply now carries Version, URI and Digest
for each installed backend (read from metadata.json).

Frontend-side: DistributedBackendManager.ListBackends aggregates per-node
refs (name, status, version, digest) instead of deduping, and CheckUpgrades
feeds that aggregation into gallery.CheckUpgradesAgainst — a new entrypoint
factored out of CheckBackendUpgrades so both paths share the same core
logic.

Cluster drift policy: when per-node version/digest tuples disagree, the
backend is flagged upgradeable regardless of whether any single node
matches the gallery, and UpgradeInfo.NodeDrift enumerates the outliers so
operators can see *why* it is out of sync. The next upgrade-all realigns
the cluster.

Tests cover: drift detection, unanimous-match (no upgrade), and the
empty-installed-version path that the old distributed code silently
missed.

* feat(ui): surface backend upgrades in the System page

The System page (Manage.jsx) only showed updates as a tiny inline arrow,
so operators routinely missed them. Port the Backend Gallery's upgrade UX
so System speaks the same visual language:

- Yellow banner at the top of the Backends tab when upgrades are pending,
  with an "Upgrade all" button (serial fan-out, matches the gallery) and a
  "Updates only" filter toggle.
- Warning pill (↑ N) next to the tab label so the count is glanceable even
  when the banner is scrolled out of view.
- Per-row labeled "Upgrade to vX.Y" button (replaces the icon-only button
  that silently flipped semantics between Reinstall and Upgrade), plus an
  "Update available" badge in the new Version column.
- New columns: Version (with upgrade + drift chips), Nodes (per-node
  attribution badges for distributed mode, degrading to a compact
  "on N nodes · M offline" chip above three nodes), Installed (relative
  time).
- System backends render a "Protected" chip instead of a bare "—" so rows
  still align and the reason is obvious.
- Delete uses the softer btn-danger-ghost so rows don't scream red; the
  ConfirmDialog still owns the "are you sure".

The upgrade checker also needed the same per-worker fix as the previous
commit: NewUpgradeChecker now takes a BackendManager getter so its
periodic runs call the distributed CheckUpgrades (which asks workers)
instead of the empty frontend filesystem. Without this the /api/backends/
upgrades endpoint stayed empty in distributed mode even with the protocol
change in place.

New CSS primitives — .upgrade-banner, .tab-pill, .badge-row, .cell-stack,
.cell-mono, .cell-muted, .row-actions, .btn-danger-ghost — all live in
App.css so other pages can adopt them without duplicating styles.

* feat(ui): polish the Nodes page so it reads like a product

The Nodes page was the biggest visual liability in distributed mode.
Rework the main dashboard surfaces in place without changing behavior:

StatCards: uniform height (96px min), left accent bar colored by the
metric's semantic (success/warning/error/primary), icon lives in a
36x36 soft-tinted chip top-right, value is left-aligned and large.
Grid auto-fills so the row doesn't collapse on narrow viewports. This
replaces the previous thin-bordered boxes with inconsistent heights.

Table rows: expandable rows now show a chevron cue on the left (rotates
on expand) so users know rows open. Status cell became a dedicated chip
with an LED-style halo dot instead of a bare bullet. Action buttons gained
labels — "Approve", "Resume", "Drain" — so the icons aren't doing all
the semantic work; the destructive remove action uses the softer
btn-danger-ghost variant so rows don't scream red, with the ConfirmDialog
still owning the real "are you sure". Applied cell-mono/cell-muted
utility classes so label chips and addresses share one spacing/font
grammar instead of re-declaring inline styles everywhere.

Expanded drawer: empty states for Loaded Models and Installed Backends
now render as a proper drawer-empty card (dashed border, icon, one-line
hint) instead of a plain muted string that read like broken formatting.

Tabs: three inline-styled buttons became the shared .tab class so they
inherit focus ring, hover state, and the rest of the design system —
matches the System page.

"Add more workers" toggle turned into a .nodes-add-worker dashed-border
button labelled "Register a new worker" (action voice) instead of a
chevron + muted link that operators kept mistaking for broken text.

New shared CSS primitives carry over to other pages:
.stat-grid + .stat-card, .row-chevron, .node-status, .drawer-empty,
.nodes-add-worker.

* feat(distributed): durable backend fan-out + state reconciliation

Two connected problems handled together:

1) Backend delete/install/upgrade used to silently skip non-healthy nodes,
   so a delete during an outage left a zombie on the offline node once it
   returned. The fan-out now records intent in a new pending_backend_ops
   table before attempting the NATS round-trip. Currently-healthy nodes
   get an immediate attempt; everyone else is queued. Unique index on
   (node_id, backend, op) means reissuing the same operation refreshes
   next_retry_at instead of stacking duplicates.

2) Loaded-model state could drift from reality: a worker OOM'd, got
   killed, or restarted a backend process would leave a node_models row
   claiming the model was still loaded, feeding ghost entries into the
   /api/nodes/models listing and the router's scheduling decisions.

The existing ReplicaReconciler gains two new passes that run under a
fresh KeyStateReconciler advisory lock (non-blocking, so one wedged
frontend doesn't freeze the cluster):

  - drainPendingBackendOps: retries queued ops whose next_retry_at has
    passed on currently-healthy nodes. Success deletes the row; failure
    bumps attempts and pushes next_retry_at out with exponential backoff
    (30s → 15m cap). ErrNoResponders also marks the node unhealthy.

  - probeLoadedModels: gRPC-HealthChecks addresses the DB thinks are
    loaded but hasn't seen touched in the last probeStaleAfter (2m).
    Unreachable addresses are removed from the registry. A pluggable
    ModelProber lets tests substitute a fake without standing up gRPC.

DistributedBackendManager exposes DeleteBackendDetailed so the HTTP
handler can surface per-node outcomes ("2 succeeded, 1 queued") to the
UI in a follow-up commit; the existing DeleteBackend still returns
error-only for callers that don't care about node breakdown.

Multi-frontend safety: the state pass uses advisorylock.TryWithLockCtx
on a new key so N frontends coordinate — the same pattern the health
monitor and replica reconciler already rely on. Single-node mode runs
both passes inline (adapter is nil, state drain is a no-op).

Tests cover the upsert semantics, backoff math, the probe removing an
unreachable model but keeping a reachable one, and filtering by
probeStaleAfter.

* feat(ui): show cluster distribution of models in the System page

When a frontend restarted in distributed mode, models that workers had
already loaded weren't visible until the operator clicked into each node
manually — the /api/models/capabilities endpoint only knew about
configs on the frontend's filesystem, not the registry-backed truth.

/api/models/capabilities now joins in ListAllLoadedModels() when the
registry is active, returning loaded_on[] with node id/name/state/status
for each model. Models that live in the registry but lack a local config
(the actual ghosts, not recovered from the frontend's file cache) still
surface with source="registry-only" so operators can see and persist
them; without that emission they'd be invisible to this frontend.

Manage → Models replaces the old Running/Idle pill with a distribution
cell that lists the first three nodes the model is loaded on as chips
colored by state (green loaded, blue loading, amber anything else). On
wider clusters the remaining count collapses into a +N chip with a
title-attribute breakdown. Disabled / single-node behavior unchanged.

Adopted models get an extra "Adopted" ghost-icon chip with hover copy
explaining what it means and how to make it permanent.

Distributed mode also enables a 10s auto-refresh and a "Last synced Xs
ago" indicator next to the Update button so ghost rows drop off within
one reconcile tick after their owning process dies. Non-distributed
mode is untouched — no polling, no cell-stack, same old Running/Idle.

* feat(ui): NodeDistributionChip — shared per-node attribution component

Large clusters were going to break the Manage → Backends Nodes column:
the old inline logic rendered every node as a badge and would shred the
layout at >10 workers, plus the Manage → Models distribution cell had
copy-pasted its own slightly-different version.

NodeDistributionChip handles any cluster size with two render modes:
  - small (≤3 nodes): inline chips of node names, colored by health.
  - large: a single "on N nodes · M offline · K drift" summary chip;
    clicking opens a Popover with a per-node table (name, status,
    version, digest for backends; name, status, state for models).

Drift counting mirrors the backend's summarizeNodeDrift so the UI
number matches UpgradeInfo.NodeDrift. Digests are truncated to the
docker-style 12-char form with the full value preserved in the title.

Popover is a new general-purpose primitive: fixed positioning anchored
to the trigger, flips above when there's no room below, closes on
outside-click or Escape, returns focus to the trigger. Uses .card as
its surface so theming is inherited. Also useful for a future
labels-editor popup and the user menu.

Manage.jsx drops its duplicated inline Nodes-column + loaded_on cell
and uses the shared chip with context="backends" / "models"
respectively. Delete code removes ~40 lines of ad-hoc logic.

* feat(ui): shared FilterBar across the System page tabs

The Backends gallery had a nice search + chip + toggle strip; the System
page had nothing, so the two surfaces felt like different apps. Lift the
pattern into a reusable FilterBar and wire both System tabs through it.

New component core/http/react-ui/src/components/FilterBar.jsx renders a
search input, a role="tablist" chip row (aria-selected for a11y), and
optional toggles / right slot. Chips support an optional `count` which
the System page uses to show "User 3", "Updates 1" etc.

System Models tab: search by id or backend; chips for
All/Running/Idle/Disabled/Pinned plus a conditional Distributed chip in
distributed mode. "Last synced" + Update button live in the right slot.

System Backends tab: search by name/alias/meta-backend-for; chips for
All/User/System/Meta plus conditional Updates / Offline-nodes chips
when relevant. The old ad-hoc "Updates only" toggle from the upgrade
banner folded into the Updates chip — one source of truth for that
filter. Offline chip only appears in distributed mode when at least
one backend has an unhealthy node, so the chip row stays quiet on
healthy clusters.

Filter state persists in URL query params (mq/mf/bq/bf) so deep links
and tab switches keep the operator's filter context instead of
resetting every time.

Also adds an "Adopted" distribution path: when a model in
/api/models/capabilities carries source="registry-only" (discovered on
a worker but not configured locally), the Models tab shows a ghost chip
labelled "Adopted" with hover copy explaining how to persist it — this
is what closes the loop on the ghost-model story end-to-end.
2026-04-19 17:55:53 +02:00
Ettore Di Giacinto
59108fbe32 feat: add distributed mode (#9124)
* feat: add distributed mode (experimental)

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>

* fix data races, mutexes, transactions

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>

* refactorings

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>

* fixups

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>

* fix events and tool stream in agent chat

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>

* use ginkgo

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>

* refactoring and consolidation

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>

* refactoring and consolidation

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>

* refactoring and consolidation

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>

* refactoring and consolidation

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>

* refactoring and consolidation

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>

* refactoring and consolidation

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>

* refactoring and consolidation

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>

* refactoring and consolidation

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>

* fix(cron): compute correctly time boundaries avoiding re-triggering

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>

* enhancements, refactorings

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>

* do not flood of healthy checks

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>

* do not list obvious backends as text backends

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>

* tests fixups

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>

* refactoring and consolidation

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>

* Drop redundant healthcheck

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>

* enhancements, refactorings

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>

---------

Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>
2026-03-30 00:47:27 +02:00