The knowledge-note return path in create_note_tool reads note.project_id;
the SimpleNamespace fake didn't define it, so the tool crashed with
AttributeError instead of returning. The task-branch test already
included project_id; mirror that here.
New Tasks section in the General tab with a single checkbox controlling
whether the consolidation pipeline fires automatically. Persists to the
auto_consolidate_tasks user setting (string 'true'/'false'). Manual
'Re-consolidate' in the task editor bypasses the gate.
When consolidated_at is set on a task, the editor:
- shows a banner above the body indicating the body is auto-summarized
- hides the Write tab; locks the body view to read-only preview
- exposes a Re-consolidate button that calls POST /api/tasks/:id/consolidate
and refreshes the body from the response
Pre-consolidation behavior is unchanged — the Write tab and TiptapEditor
remain available.
Note type gains description and consolidated_at fields. TaskEditorView
adds a Goal textarea above the body editor (wired through dirty/save/
autosave paths). TaskViewerView renders Goal as a subordinate block
above the body, plus a subtle 'Auto-summarized from work logs' banner
when consolidated_at is set.
Also adds a consolidateTask client function for the upcoming
re-consolidate button (Task 11).
New endpoint manually triggers a consolidation pass for a single task.
Bypasses the auto_consolidate_tasks setting since the user is asking
explicitly. Returns the task with the freshly-written body and
consolidated_at timestamp.
Also un-aliases description and body in the create/update task routes
(was: description folded into body as legacy fallback). With separate
fields under the task-as-durable-record design, both flow through as
distinct kwargs to create_note / update_note.
log_work description now mentions that logs feed the task's auto-summary,
nudging the LLM toward specific log content (commands, decisions, failures)
rather than vague entries.
create_note description gains a runbook-shape clause: code blocks, numbered
procedures, and explicit 'save this as a note/runbook' signals should
spawn standalone notes. Task-specific work-in-progress routes to log_work
instead.
create_note tool:
- New 'description' parameter accepted and forwarded to the service.
- When status is set (creating a task), 'body' is dropped before the
service call. Task bodies are owned by the consolidation pipeline.
update_note tool:
- New 'description' parameter; routed through update_fields.
- When the resolved target has is_task=True and 'body' is in the
arguments, the call errors with a message nudging toward log_work or
description. Knowledge notes are unaffected.
HTTP routes (POST/PATCH/PUT /api/notes) accept body freely — the
restriction is only at the LLM tool layer.
log_work tool now invokes maybe_consolidate(reason='log_added') after a
successful create_log. The gate inside the consolidation service handles
threshold + setting checks.
update_note service snapshots old_status before mutation and fires
maybe_consolidate(reason='task_closed') when the status transitions into
'done' or 'cancelled'. Re-saving an already-terminal status doesn't
retrigger — only transitions count.
consolidate_task reads the task title, description (read-only context),
and chronological work logs; builds a prompt via _build_consolidation_prompt;
calls generate_completion with the user's background_model setting; on a
non-empty result, writes back to Note.body, stamps consolidated_at, and
re-runs the embedding pipeline.
Errors are caught and logged. LLM failures leave body untouched so the
next trigger retries cleanly. Per-task asyncio lock prevents simultaneous
passes for the same task.
New services/consolidation.py module with maybe_consolidate() — the
debounced trigger gate. Two reasons:
- log_added: gated by DEFAULT_LOG_THRESHOLD (3) counted since the task's
consolidated_at timestamp.
- task_closed: bypasses the count gate; fires whenever status flips to
done/cancelled.
Both reasons gated by the auto_consolidate_tasks user setting (default
on). Per-task asyncio.Lock prevents two simultaneous passes for the same
task. consolidate_task is a stub here — full implementation in the next
commit.
create_note service accepts a new description kwarg and forwards it to the
Note constructor. PUT/PATCH/POST routes include description in the field
whitelist. update_note already passed **fields through setattr, so the new
column is reachable without touching that signature.
Spec: docs/superpowers/specs/2026-05-13-task-as-durable-record-design.md
- description: user-stated goal / initial context for tasks (NULL for
knowledge notes).
- consolidated_at: timestamp of the most recent auto-summary pass (NULL
until first consolidation).
- Migration 0044 backfills description from body for existing rows where
status IS NOT NULL (i.e. tasks). Body left in place; first consolidation
pass will overwrite it.
CI surfaced three issues:
- 'famous supply project' didn't substring-match 'Famous-Supply Work topics'
because the trailing filler word 'project' blocked the substring tier.
Strip {project, projects} from the query before the substring check.
- SequenceMatcher fallback against `combined` (title + description +
summary) diluted ratios to ~0.5 for plausible matches. Use title
directly; the 0.70 tier already handles description/summary mentions.
- Test patches used patch.object on a consumer module where
list_projects is imported locally — patch the source module instead.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Two related gaps in the journal weather panel:
1. Saving locations via PUT /journal/config didn't trigger a weather
fetch, so newly-entered sites had no cache row (or a stale one) until
the user manually clicked the panel's refresh button. The panel
rendered "two sites with empty values" against pre-existing cache
rows that no longer matched what the user had configured.
2. get_cached_weather_rows returned every WeatherCache row for the user
regardless of whether the location was still in journal_config.
Briefing-era rows survived migration 0040 (which only deleted the
briefing_config setting, not the cache table) and showed up as
ghost tabs in the UI.
Changes:
- get_cached_weather_rows accepts an optional valid_keys filter; rows
whose location_key is not in the set are excluded.
- routes/journal.py:
- put_config kicks off a background refresh_location_cache for any
saved location with valid lat/lon.
- GET /weather and POST /weather/refresh both pass valid_keys derived
from the current config so orphaned rows don't surface.
- services/journal_prep.py filters the weather section to currently-
configured locations as well; uses a lazy import of get_journal_config
to avoid a cycle (journal_scheduler imports journal_prep).
153 tests pass.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Adds a "Repeat" select (None / Daily / Weekly / Monthly / Yearly) that
reads/writes the existing Event.recurrence RRULE. CalDAV-imported rules
with extra parts (e.g. FREQ=WEEKLY;BYDAY=MO,WE,FR) surface as a disabled
"Custom" option with the raw rule shown read-only — visible but
preserved unless the user explicitly picks a preset to replace it.
EventUpdatePayload.recurrence is now string | null so we can clear via
PATCH; backend service already treats null as "clear" (recurrence is in
the nullable set in update_event).
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Root cause of the 2026-04-29 dentist-appointment incident: the model
called update_event(query="Appointment") when two events had
"Appointment" in their titles. find_events_by_query returned both,
upcoming-first ordered by start_dt — matches[0] was id=2 (a stale
pre-existing event with garbage end_dt), not id=15 (the one the user
just created via the journal flow). update_event_tool silently took
matches[0] and mutated the wrong event.
Fix: a new resolver helper `_resolve_event_for_action` funnels both
update_event_tool and delete_event_tool through one disambiguation
path. Lookup precedence:
- `event_id` → exact get_event lookup, no query at all
- `query` matching exactly one event → proceed
- `query` matching zero → return success=False, "no event found"
- `query` matching 2+ events → return success=False with a
`candidates` array of {id, title, start_dt, location} so the
model can pick one and call again with `event_id`
The candidates list is capped at 8 to keep the model's context tight.
The error message names the count and the next-step ("pass event_id
or refine the query") so the model can self-correct in one turn.
For delete_event, the disambiguation is even more important — the
silent-matches[0] path would have deleted the wrong event outright
rather than just mutating it. The tool description leans into that:
"Deleting the wrong event is a costly user error; never guess."
Tool surface change: `query` and `event_id` are now both optional;
the tool errors clearly when neither is supplied. The model already
knows id values from prior tool results (returned in `data.id`),
which is the natural feeder for the disambiguation flow.
5 new tests in test_calendar_tool_tz.py cover:
- ambiguous query → success=False with candidate list, no mutation
- event_id supplied → bypasses query lookup entirely
- non-existent event_id → clear "no event found" error
- neither identifier → "query or event_id required" error
- same disambiguation enforced for delete_event_tool
46 calendar/events tests pass; ruff clean.
Closes Fable #161.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Structural fix for the "end before start" bug class observed on prod
2026-04-29. Bad data became inexpressible at the schema level instead
of getting trapped in defensive read-path filters.
The hotfix that landed earlier today (94b169f) is reverted by the
preceding revert commit; this commit supersedes it cleanly with a
proper data-model change.
## Schema (migration 0043)
- Add `duration_minutes INTEGER NULLABLE` column on `events`.
- CHECK constraint: ``duration_minutes IS NULL OR duration_minutes >= 0``.
- Backfill from existing `end_dt`:
- end_dt valid (end > start) → duration_minutes = total minutes
- end_dt == start → duration_minutes = 0 (zero-duration point)
- end_dt NULL or end_dt < start → duration_minutes = NULL
(the corrupt prod row collapses cleanly to a point event)
- Drop the `end_dt` column. The wire format is preserved — `to_dict()`
emits `end_dt` as a derived `start_dt + duration_minutes`. Existing
API consumers (Flutter app, web frontend, CalDAV sync) keep
receiving the same response shape; they just no longer have a way
to PUT a stored `end_dt` that disagrees with `start_dt`.
## Service layer
- `Event.end_dt` becomes a `@property`. Setting it would require a
setter we deliberately don't define — writes always go through
`duration_minutes`.
- `_normalize_duration` is the single source-of-truth for input
reduction. Accepts (start, end_dt, duration_minutes), returns the
canonical `duration_minutes`, raises `ValueError` for negative
durations, end-before-start, or end/duration disagreement.
- `create_event` and `update_event` accept either `end_dt` or
`duration_minutes` for ergonomic compat; both convert via
`_normalize_duration`. Update validates the post-update state when
the patch includes either.
- `list_events` filter is simpler now: a coarse SQL prefilter
(`start_dt <= date_to`) plus Python-side refinement using the
derived `end_dt`. Avoids Postgres-specific interval arithmetic in
the WHERE clause; refinement runs over a per-user result set so
there's no scan-cost concern at personal scale.
- Recurring-event expansion uses `event.duration_minutes` directly
instead of computing `end - start`. No more negative-timedelta
hazard.
## CalDAV sync (incoming + outgoing)
- `caldav_sync.py` (pull) and `calendar_sync.py` (Radicale upsert)
both convert iCal `DTEND` → `duration_minutes` on the way in.
Outbound iCal still emits `DTEND` as `start_dt + duration_minutes`
via the model's derived property. iCal interop is unchanged.
## Behavioral upgrade for `update_event`
Pure end_dt model: moving start past the existing end_dt would either
silently corrupt or hard-reject. Duration model: the duration is
preserved by default, so moving start slides the effective end
forward — which is what users mean when they "move" an event.
Explicit clear is still possible via `end_dt=None`.
## Tests
`tests/test_events_service.py`:
- 6 new `_normalize_duration` unit tests (sugar conversion, zero
duration valid as point event, end-before-start rejected, negative
duration rejected, inconsistent end+duration rejected, none → None)
- New behavioral test: `update_event` preserves duration when only
start_dt changes (sliding semantics)
- New: clearing `end_dt=None` on update collapses to point event
- New: list_events surfaces a point event in the upcoming window
- New: list_events excludes a timed event whose effective end has
already passed
- Existing mock-event helper updated to use `duration_minutes`
instead of stored `end_dt`.
44 event-related tests pass; ruff clean.
## Out of scope (separate task)
Fable #161 — `find_events_by_query` returning multiple matches and
silently picking matches[0]. The exact root cause of how event id=2
got mutated in the first place; orthogonal to the storage model.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 <noreply@anthropic.com>
A prod event surfaced today with `start_dt=2026-05-01T12:00Z` and
`end_dt=2026-03-30T12:00Z` — end was 32 days BEFORE start, almost
certainly from an earlier tool-call mishap (Fable #161). The
list_events filter trusted the bogus end_dt and excluded the event
from every read path that hit the upcoming window, even though
start_dt was correctly in range. The event stayed visible in the
calendar grid (different range) but vanished from "Upcoming",
search, briefings, and journal prep events list.
This is the hotfix half of the response. The structural follow-up is
Fable #160 — replace end_dt with a duration column so invalid state
becomes inexpressible.
## A. Filter robustness in list_events
Treat `end_dt <= start_dt` as if no end_dt exists. The filter now
splits into two branches:
- valid duration: end_dt IS NOT NULL AND end_dt > start_dt AND
end_dt >= date_from
- no/invalid duration: (end_dt IS NULL OR end_dt <= start_dt) AND
start_dt >= date_from
Same change applied to the recurring-event expansion's `duration`
calculation, which was producing negative timedeltas for corrupted
rows and computing nonsensical occurrence end times.
## B. Write-side validation in create/update
`create_event` and `update_event` now raise ValueError when the
resulting state would have end_dt <= start_dt. Update validates
against the *post-update* state, not just the field being changed —
so pushing start_dt past an existing end_dt also fails loudly. Bad
data shouldn't be persistable from any write path.
Surfaced cleanly:
- Calendar tool wrappers (create_event_tool / update_event_tool)
catch ValueError and return `{success: false, error: ...}`, which
the model can read and self-correct.
- Route handlers (POST /api/events, PATCH /api/events/<id>) catch
and return HTTP 400 with the validator's message instead of
letting it bubble to a 500.
4 new tests in test_events_service.py:
- create rejects end before start
- create rejects equal start/end (zero duration)
- update validates the post-update state (start pushed past existing end)
- list_events surfaces an event whose end_dt is before its start_dt
34 event-related tests pass; ruff clean.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 <noreply@anthropic.com>
User feedback: the right-edge slide-over panel pinned its action buttons
to a thin floor band where the destructive ghost-style Delete button was
functionally invisible against the dark surface. Save / Cancel / Delete
all sat in the same floor strip, isolated from the form content.
This refactor changes the surface and the commit model.
## Centered modal, not slide-over
Backdrop dim covers the whole viewport; the panel sits centered with a
12px corner radius and a soft shadow. The form scrolls internally when
content overflows the viewport (max-height: calc(100vh - 2.5rem)).
File kept as `EventSlideOver.vue` to avoid touching the three consumers
(CalendarView, HomeView, ToolCallCard).
## Action buttons removed; close = save
- Save button: gone. Auto-save fires when the user closes via X, Esc,
backdrop click, or pressing Enter inside a text field.
- Cancel button: gone. Esc / X / backdrop click already cover dismiss;
a labeled "Cancel" was redundant.
- Delete button: moved to the header as a Trash2 icon (edit mode only).
Click → header swaps to inline confirm "Delete this event? [Yes,
delete] [No]" — same two-step flow, just relocated. Esc during the
confirm cancels back to edit mode rather than closing the modal,
giving the user a clear way out of the destructive prompt.
## Validity-aware close
All exit paths funnel through `attemptClose`:
- Form valid → save (POST or PATCH), then close.
- Form invalid in EDIT mode → discard the in-memory change and
close, with a toast naming the missing field
("Title required — change discarded"). Keeps the user from
silently corrupting an event.
- Form invalid in CREATE mode → close silently. Nothing was
committed; calling that out adds noise.
Emit signature unchanged (close / created / updated / deleted), so the
three consumers continue to work without edits.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Reproducer (2026-04-29 dentist appointment): user said "this Friday,
I have an appointment" with no other details. The model immediately
called create_event with title="Appointment", description="User
mentioned an appointment this Friday but hasn't provided details
yet.", all_day=true. THEN it asked the user for time/location in
its reply. When the user came back with "8am at my dentist for
permanent crown fitting", the model called update_event — but never
updated the title, leaving the placeholder "Appointment" in the
calendar permanently.
The bug isn't about the tool surface, it's that the model created
an event before it had real content. The system prompt had no rule
against this, so the model hedged: "log a placeholder, ask for
details, then update". That pattern pollutes the calendar with
garbage titles and forces immediate update_event calls.
create_event tool description now includes an explicit anti-pattern:
record a moment, ask for the missing pieces, and only call create_event
once you have actual title + time + location. Stand-in titles like
"Appointment" / "Meeting" / "Event" with "details TBD" descriptions
are explicitly named as the failure mode.
Pure prompt change. 18 tests pass; ruff clean.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Two filtering issues that made the daily prep noisy and trained the
user to ignore it.
## Tasks: bucket into due-today / upcoming / overdue
The prep was calling `list_notes(due_before=day_date)` and labeling the
result as "tasks due today". That filter is strictly less-than, so it
returned only OVERDUE tasks (a single 68-day-stale task in this user's
case), while the prompt still framed them as fresh today's work. Each
day of the prep treated the same overdue task as new — the user
learned to ignore the line entirely.
`gather_daily_sections` now runs three queries:
- `tasks_due_today` — `due_after=day_date AND due_before=day_date+1`
- `tasks_upcoming` — next 7 days, exclusive of today
- `tasks_overdue` — strictly before today
Overdue entries carry a `days_overdue` count. `_render_sections_for_prompt`
emits three labeled headers ("TASKS DUE TODAY", "UPCOMING TASKS",
"OVERDUE TASKS (still on the list, not currently due)"). The system
prompt has a new TASK BUCKETS rule telling the model: don't call
overdue items "due today"; surface them with their staleness duration
("still on the list 68 days") and frame as a backlog reminder rather
than today's work.
Backwards-compat: `sections["tasks"]` still exists, now as the union
of all three buckets — strictly more useful than the prior overdue-
only behavior any frontend consumer was getting before.
## Events: tz-aware window + proximity filter
The user's "Birthday — 2026-09-29 (FREQ=YEARLY)" event was surfacing
in every daily prep, 5 months out. Root cause: `gather_daily_sections`
built `day_start`/`day_end` as NAIVE datetimes; `list_events` then
called `rrulestr(...).between(naive_from, naive_to)` against an
aware `dtstart`, which throws TypeError, hits the `except Exception`
fallback, and appends the canonical event row — regardless of whether
today is anywhere near a recurrence.
Fix:
1. Construct the day window as TZ-aware in the user's local timezone
and convert to UTC before the query. RRULE expansion now runs
correctly.
2. Defense-in-depth `_filter_proximate_events` drops events whose
start_dt is more than 7 days from `day_date` (in the user's local
TZ — not UTC, so a Friday 23:00 NY event isn't misclassified as
Saturday). If list_events ever leaks a far-future row again, the
prep doesn't surface it.
10 new tests in `tests/test_journal_prep_filtering.py` cover task
bucketing (overdue marker, due-today no-marker, no-due-date), the
proximity filter (the 4/29 reproducer, in-window keeps, local-vs-UTC
boundary, unparseable dates kept rather than suppressed), and the
rendering (overdue staleness shown, due-today doesn't repeat the date,
correct section ordering).
53 tests pass across journal_prep + journal_search + record_moment +
calendar_tool + events. Ruff clean.
Closes Fable task #159.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Belt-and-suspenders to the prompt-layer changes in 6c309f1. Even when
the model emits bogus task or place links, the server now refuses to
persist them.
## Task auto-linking guard
Reproducer (2026-04-27): a moment about restaging Docker on the swarm
ended up with `task_ids: [2]` (Weston's ADHD Evaluation) — the only
task in that day's prep. The model picked it up as filler.
`_filter_task_ids_by_keyword_overlap` now runs after id resolution: it
fetches each linked task's title, tokenizes both content and title
through `_content_keywords` (lowercased, stopwords stripped, <3-char
tokens dropped), and drops any link whose title shares no meaningful
keyword with the moment content. The drop is logged at INFO so we can
observe how often it fires post-deploy.
The guard runs against the merged id list, so it covers both the
preferred `task_titles` resolution path and the discouraged explicit
`task_ids` path.
## Place placeholder guard
Reproducer (2026-04-27): `place_names=["work"]` got passed to
`record_moment`. "work" / "home" / "office" aren't places — they're
role-labels for already-known geocoded locations.
`_filter_placeholder_places` drops a small set of generic single-word
labels before name resolution. Real user-named places that happen to
be one word (e.g. "Akron") pass through.
## Tests
9 new unit tests in `tests/test_record_moment_guards.py` cover:
- keyword tokenization & stopword stripping
- placeholder place filtering (generic, case-insensitive, real-place
pass-through)
- keyword-overlap filtering (the exact 4/27 reproducer, the genuine-
reference case, mixed/partial relevance, empty input)
13 tests pass; ruff clean.
Closes Fable task #158.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Three related rough edges in the journal voice surfaced from real
journal usage 2026-04-27 → 2026-04-29:
1. **Persona overhelps.** When the user logged "today I'm prepping for
an ISP migration at Branch 14 Bedford for work at famous supply",
the assistant came back with "ISP migrations can be tricky. Are you
handling the network configuration yourself, or is there a team
supporting you? Also, are there any specific tasks or checks you
need to complete before the switch?" — pushing IT-helpdesk advice
the user didn't ask for. The user had to push back. JOURNAL_PERSONA
now leads with "CAPTURE first, advise only if asked" and the
RESPONSE STYLE block has an explicit anti-pattern banning
troubleshooting / checklist / process-advice follow-ups unless the
user explicitly invites them.
2. **Moments stored in third-person observer voice.** The dentist
appointment beat got written as "The user mentioned having an
appointment this Friday but hasn't provided details yet." — reads
like an LLM transcript annotation, not a journal jot. The
record_moment tool's `content` description previously said "in the
user's voice or third-person", which was the literal source of the
bug. New phrasing requires first-person/imperative with concrete
GOOD/BAD examples, and the JOURNAL_CALIBRATION block reinforces it.
3. **Inconsistent emoji use.** 4/27 was clinical, 4/29 had 😊 and 🛠️
in the appointment confirmation. RESPONSE STYLE now bans emojis
outright — the journal is a thinking-companion surface and the
emoji warmth reads as out-of-register chat-bot tone.
Bonus while in here:
- New MOMENT ENTITY LINKING section explicitly forbids attaching a
task_titles link unless the user references the task by name (the
4/27 Docker→ADHD auto-link bug; rest of that fix is in #158).
- Same section rejects generic place placeholders ("work" / "home" /
"office") in favor of letting the user name the real place.
22 tests pass (4 journal + 18 calendar tool); ruff clean.
Closes Fable task #157.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 <noreply@anthropic.com>
A user asked Fable to schedule "this Friday at 8am" on Wednesday 4/29
2026. The model picked 4/30 (Thursday) and confidently labeled it
"Friday." The TZ pipeline did everything correctly given the model's
date — the bug was upstream: the model was guessing weekdays from ISO
dates without an anchor, and the calendar tools had no way to verify.
Three layered fixes:
1. **System prompts now name the weekday alongside the ISO date.**
Both the journal-conversation prompt and the general chat prompt
used to say "Today is 2026-04-29 (America/New_York)." They now say
"Today is Wednesday, 2026-04-29 (...)." LLMs are unreliable at
deriving weekday names from ISO dates; supplying the name removes
the guess.
2. **`expected_weekday` parameter on create_event / update_event.**
When the model passes `expected_weekday="friday"`, the backend
computes the resolved start_date's weekday in the user's local
timezone and rejects mismatches with a self-correcting error
("Date 2026-04-30 falls on Thursday, not Friday. Recompute..."),
without creating the event. The check is local-aware: a Friday
23:00 event in Tokyo crosses midnight UTC but the local view
stays Friday, and the validator respects that.
3. **Tool descriptions instruct echo-and-confirm.** create_event and
update_event descriptions now tell the model: when the user names
a weekday, state the resolved date in the reply BEFORE calling
the tool, and pass `expected_weekday`. Costs nothing in code,
reinforces the validator.
6 new tests — match success, mismatch rejection (with create/update
not invoked), omitted-param backcompat, invalid weekday name, local-
not-UTC weekday computation, and the update_event variant. All 18
calendar-tool tests + 33 event-related tests pass; ruff clean.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 <noreply@anthropic.com>
A user reported "next Friday at 8am" landing on the wrong day. The
current `start` parameter accepts a combined ISO datetime string — when
the model emits something like `"2026-05-01T00:00:00Z"`, the parser
correctly honors the UTC tag and stores `2026-05-01 00:00 UTC`, which
displays as `2026-04-30 19:00` for a UTC-5 user. The bug isn't in our
parser; it's that we let the model TZ-tag the calendar day at all.
The fix moves the foot-gun: `create_event` and `update_event` now
prefer split fields (`start_date` + `start_time`, plus end variants).
A `YYYY-MM-DD` string carries no TZ metadata for a model to mis-tag,
and the backend builds the local datetime explicitly via
`datetime.combine(date, time, tzinfo=user_tz).astimezone(UTC)`. Strict
regex validation rejects anything with a TZ suffix on either field.
The legacy combined `start` / `end` fields are kept as a fallback so
saved tool-call payloads in conversation history still replay; new
calls are steered toward the split shape via the tool description.
7 new regression tests cover Eastern, Pacific, Tokyo (positive offset),
all-day inference, strict-shape rejection on both fields, backcompat
with the legacy `start` field, and the same fix for `update_event`.
27 of the event-related tests pass; ruff clean.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 <noreply@anthropic.com>
The MCP server's briefing introspection tools were replaced with journal
equivalents in c549827, but the package version stayed at 0.2.6 — so
pipx upgrades against existing installs were no-ops and production MCP
clients still served the obsolete briefing tools (which 404 against the
migrated backend).
Bumping minor since this is a breaking tool-surface change (briefing
tools removed). Reinstall via `pipx install --force` to pick up.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Adds a "Flutter app port — shipped 2026-04-28" section between the
web Surface phase and Open threads. Records the two FabledApp commits
(foundation 0f05f47, surface b9e68e3), explains the ActionColors
ThemeExtension shape, points to reference call sites for the
ActionColors.primary (calendar event Save) and ActionColors.destructive
(confirm-Delete dialogs across notes/tasks/chat/calendar) patterns so
downstream screens have a template to follow when reclassifying their
own buttons opportunistically.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 <noreply@anthropic.com>