New signal infrastructure for the lobby-first UI:
- PresenceUser struct: { fingerprint, alias }
- SignalMessage::PresenceList: relay broadcasts full user list
to all signal clients on every register/deregister
- SignalHub::presence_list(): builds the list from connected clients
- SignalHub::broadcast(): sends to ALL signal clients
- Relay calls broadcast on register + unregister
- Desktop emits "presence_list" signal-event to JS frontend
This gives clients real-time visibility of who's online via the
signal channel, without needing to join a voice room first.
603 tests pass, 0 regressions.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
New SignalMessage variants for P2P quality coordination:
UpgradeProposal/UpgradeResponse/UpgradeConfirm (#28):
- Consensual quality upgrade flow — proposer sends desired profile,
peer accepts/rejects based on own conditions, confirm commits both
- All carry call_id for relay routing
QualityCapability (#30):
- Peer reports its max sustainable profile — enables asymmetric
encoding where each side uses its own best quality instead of
forcing everyone to the weakest link
Relay forwards all 4 signals to the call peer (same pattern as
MediaPathReport, CandidateUpdate, HardNatProbe).
Desktop signal recv loop handles all 4 with debug logging.
Encoder switching TODOs noted for wiring into CallEngine.
4 new serde roundtrip tests. 603 total, 0 regressions.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
When --key <64-char-hex> is provided with --replay, the analyzer
decrypts each packet's ChaCha20-Poly1305 payload using the session
key and logs plaintext frame sizes. Prints first 5 + every 100th
decrypt result, and a summary at the end.
This completes all 5 protocol analyzer tasks (#13-17):
- #13: Observer mode (live passive listener) — was done
- #14: TUI with Ratatui (per-participant panels) — was done
- #15: Capture and replay (.wzp format) — was done
- #16: HTML report (Chart.js loss/jitter graphs) — was done
- #17: Encrypted decode (--key for replay) — done now
Usage:
wzp-analyzer --replay session.wzp --key <64-hex-chars> --html report.html
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Birthday attack for random symmetric NATs:
- birthday.rs: open_acceptor_ports() opens N sockets, STUN-probes
each to learn external ports. generate_dialer_targets() builds
hit list (known ports first, then random fill). spray_dialer()
sprays QUIC connects with rate limiting, first success wins.
- Default: 32 acceptor ports, 128 dialer probes, 20ms interval
Signal coordination:
- HardNatBirthdayStart { acceptor_ports, external_ip } sent by
Acceptor when peer's HardNatProbe shows random/sequential NAT
- Relay forwards it like other call signals
- Desktop recv loop handles and logs it
Hybrid waterfall integration:
- On receiving HardNatProbe with non-cone allocation, Acceptor
auto-opens birthday ports and sends BirthdayStart
- Sockets kept alive 10s for NAT mapping persistence
- Dialer spray integration into race() pending (needs transport
hot-swap for background upgrade)
6 new tests, 599 total, 0 regressions.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Fixes from real-world 5G↔Starlink testing:
NAT tickle fix:
- tokio::net::UdpSocket::bind() doesn't set SO_REUSEADDR, so binding
to the same port as quinn silently failed. Now uses socket2::Socket
with explicit SO_REUSEADDR + SO_REUSEPORT (via libc on unix).
- Tickle now logs success/failure for debugging.
Diagnostic fixes:
- connect:dual_path_race_start shows both dial_order_raw and
dial_order_smart so we can see what filtering removed
- Grace-period timeout (relay wins first, direct still running)
now fills "timeout:grace" diags for unrecorded candidates
- Previously candidate_diags was empty when relay won the race
Dependencies:
- Added socket2 = "0.5" to wzp-client
593 tests pass, 0 regressions.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Major P2P improvements for cross-network calls:
Smart candidate filtering (smart_dial_order):
- Strip LAN candidates when peer's public IP differs from ours
(172.16.x.x is unreachable from a different network)
- Strip all IPv6 candidates (Phase 7 disabled, wastes dial slots)
- Only keep mapped + reflexive for cross-network calls
- LAN candidates preserved when both peers share the same public IP
Acceptor NAT tickle:
- A-role sends a 1-byte UDP packet to each peer candidate BEFORE
accepting. This opens the NAT pinhole for return traffic from
the Dialer's IP — critical for address-restricted NATs that only
allow inbound from IPs they've seen outbound traffic to.
- Uses SO_REUSEADDR on the same port as the quinn endpoint.
Direct timeout increased from 2s to 4s:
- Cross-network QUIC handshakes through CGNAT can take 2-3s
- 2s was too aggressive for 5G/LTE networks
Diagnostic fix:
- Record "timeout:4s" for candidates still in-flight when the
timeout fires (previously these had no diagnostic entry)
5 new tests for smart_dial_order edge cases.
593 tests pass, 0 regressions.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Added CandidateDiag struct to RaceResult with per-candidate:
- address attempted
- result (ok / skipped:ipv6 / error:reason)
- elapsed time in ms
Surfaced in call-debug events:
- connect:dual_path_race_start now includes dial_order + peer_mapped
- connect:dual_path_race_done now includes candidate_diags array
Upgraded dual_path tracing from debug to info for IPv6 skips and
dial failures so they appear in logcat/console.
Helps diagnose why P2P fails on specific networks (5G CGNAT,
address-restricted NATs, etc).
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Phase A of hard NAT traversal (PRD-hard-nat.md):
- PortAllocation enum: PortPreserving / Sequential{delta} / Random / Unknown
- detect_port_allocation(): sequential STUN probes from single socket,
analyzes port sequence for allocation pattern
- classify_port_allocation(): pure function with jitter tolerance,
wraparound handling, 60% threshold for noisy sequences
- predict_ports(): generates target port range from last_port + delta
- HardNatProbe signal message: carries port_sequence, allocation
pattern, external_ip for peer coordination
- Relay forwards HardNatProbe to call peer
- Netcheck gains port_allocation field + format_report display
588 tests pass (17 new), 0 regressions.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
#15 - Replay mode: --replay <file.wzp> reads captured sessions offline,
feeds packets through the same stats engine, prints summary.
CaptureReader mirrors CaptureWriter's binary format.
#16 - HTML report: --html <report.html> generates self-contained HTML
with Chart.js line charts (loss% and jitter over time per-stream),
participant summary table, dark theme. Works with live sessions
(after exit) or replay mode.
#17 - Encrypted decode: --key <hex> flag accepted and stored. Full audio
decode deferred — SFU E2E encryption requires session key + nonce
context from both endpoints. Header-only analysis (loss, jitter,
codec, packet count) works without decryption.
Usage:
wzp-analyzer --replay session.wzp --html report.html
wzp-analyzer relay:4433 --room test --capture out.wzp --html report.html
372 tests passing, 0 regressions.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
P2P calls now adapt codec quality based on observed network conditions,
matching what relay calls already had.
Three-layer implementation:
- QualityReport::from_path_stats(): construct reports from local quinn
stats (loss%, RTT, jitter) without needing relay-generated reports
- CallEncoder.pending_quality_report: one-shot attachment to next
source packet (consumed on encode, not repeated)
- Engine send tasks: generate quality report every 50 frames (~1s)
from quinn_path_stats() and attach via set_pending_quality_report()
- Engine recv tasks: self-observe from own QUIC path stats every 50
packets, feed to AdaptiveQualityController for P2P adaptation
(works even if peer isn't sending quality reports yet)
Both relay and P2P calls now have adaptive quality. On relay calls,
both peer-sent reports AND local observations feed the controller.
Hysteresis (3 consecutive bad reports to downgrade) prevents thrashing.
372 tests passing (+4 new: from_path_stats encoding, clamping, zero
values, encoder quality report attachment).
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
- Wire AdaptiveQualityController into desktop engine send/recv tasks
(mirrors Android pattern: AtomicU8 pending_profile, auto-mode check)
- Wire same into Android engine send task (was only in recv before)
- QualityDirective SignalMessage variant for relay-initiated codec switch
- ParticipantQuality tracking in relay RoomManager (per-participant
AdaptiveQualityController, weakest-link tier computation)
- Relay broadcasts QualityDirective to all participants when room-wide
tier degrades (coordinated codec switching)
- Oboe stream state polling: poll getState() for up to 2s after
requestStart() to ensure both streams reach Started before proceeding
(fixes intermittent silent calls on cold start, Nothing Phone A059)
Tasks: #7, #25, #26, #31, #35
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Root cause: Hangup had no call_id field. The relay forwarded hangups to
ALL active calls for a user. When user A hung up call 1 and user B
immediately placed call 2, the relay's processing of A's hangup would
also kill call 2 (race window ~1-2s).
Fix: add optional call_id to Hangup (backwards-compatible via serde
skip_serializing_if). When present, the relay only ends the named call.
Old clients send call_id=None and get the legacy broadcast behavior.
Also: clear pending_path_report in Hangup recv handler and
internal_deregister to prevent stale oneshot channels from blocking
subsequent call setups.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
PRD 4: Disable IPv6 direct dial/accept temporarily. IPv6 QUIC
handshakes succeed but connections die immediately on datagram
send ("connection lost"). IPv4 candidates work reliably. IPv6
candidates still gathered but filtered at dial time.
PRD 1: Close losing transport after Phase 6 negotiation. The
non-selected transport now gets an explicit QUIC close frame
instead of silently dropping after 30s idle timeout. Prevents
phantom connections from polluting future accept() calls.
PRD 2: Harden accept loop with max 3 stale retries. Stale
connections are explicitly closed (conn.close) and counted.
After 3 stale connections, the accept loop aborts instead of
spinning until the race timeout.
PRD 3: Resource cleanup — close old IPv6 endpoint before
creating a new one in place_call/answer_call. Add Drop impl
to CallEngine so tasks are signalled to stop on ungraceful
shutdown.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
The Acceptor's accept() on the shared signal endpoint can dequeue
a stale QUIC connection from a previous call that the Dialer has
already dropped. This results in "connection lost" errors when
media datagrams are sent — 100% drops on both sides.
Fix: after accepting a connection, check close_reason(). If the
connection is already closed, log a warning and re-accept. Also
verify max_datagram_size() is available before returning.
Additionally: emit transport details (remote addr, max_datagram,
close_reason) in the call_engine_starting debug event so stale
connection issues are visible in the user-facing debug log.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
When direct P2P calls show 100% datagram drops, we need to know
WHY send_media() fails. This commit adds:
- Remote address + stable_id logging on A-role accept and D-role
dial success (dual_path.rs) — tells us which candidate won
- Remote address + max_datagram_size on engine transport init —
verifies datagrams are negotiated
- last_send_err in send heartbeat — captures the actual error
from send_datagram() failures
- QuinnTransport::remote_address() helper
Also fixes UI badge: was looking for wrong event name
("dual_path_race_won" → "path_negotiated").
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
CLI binary was missing the new caller_build_version and
callee_build_version fields, causing E0063 compile errors on
Linux relay/client builds.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Adds a dedicated IPv6 QUIC endpoint (IPV6_V6ONLY=1 via socket2)
alongside the existing IPv4 signal endpoint for proper dual-stack
P2P connectivity. Previous [::]:0 dual-stack attempt broke IPv4
on Android; this uses separate sockets per address family like
WebRTC/libwebrtc.
- create_ipv6_endpoint(): socket2-based IPv6-only UDP socket,
tries same port as IPv4 signal EP, falls back to ephemeral
- local_host_candidates(v4_port, v6_port): now gathers IPv6
global-unicast (2000::/3) and unique-local (fc00::/7) addrs
- dual_path::race(): A-role accepts on both v4+v6 via select!,
D-role routes each candidate to matching-AF endpoint
- Graceful fallback: if IPv6 unavailable, .ok() → None → pure
IPv4 behavior identical to pre-Phase-7
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Two fixes:
## Revert [::]:0 dual-stack sockets → back to 0.0.0.0:0
Android's IPV6_V6ONLY=1 default on some kernels (confirmed on
Nothing Phone) makes [::]:0 IPv6-only, silently killing ALL
IPv4 traffic. This broke P2P direct calls: IPv4 LAN candidates
(172.16.81.x) couldn't complete QUIC handshakes through the
IPv6-only socket, causing local_direct_ok=false and relay
fallback on every call after the first.
Reverted all bind sites to 0.0.0.0:0 (reliable IPv4). IPv6 host
candidates are disabled in local_host_candidates() until a
proper dual-socket approach (one IPv4 + one IPv6 endpoint,
Phase 7) is implemented.
## Fix A (task #35): Oboe playout callback stall auto-restart
The Nothing Phone's Oboe playout callback fires once (cb#0) and
then stops draining the ring on ~50% of cold-launch calls. Fix
D+C (stop+prime from previous commit) didn't help because
audio_stop is a no-op on cold launch.
New approach: self-healing watchdog in audio_write_playout.
Tracks the playout ring's read_idx across writes. If read_idx
hasn't advanced in 50 consecutive writes (~1 second), the Oboe
playout callback has stopped:
1. Log "playout STALL detected"
2. Call wzp_oboe_stop() to tear down the stuck streams
3. Clear both ring buffers (prevent stale data reads)
4. Call wzp_oboe_start() to rebuild fresh streams
5. Log success/failure
6. Return 0 (caller retries on next frame)
This is the same teardown+rebuild that "rejoin" does — but
triggered automatically from the first stalled call instead of
requiring the user to hang up and redial. The watchdog runs
on every write so it fires within 1s of the stall starting.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Every QUIC endpoint was bound to 0.0.0.0:0 (IPv4-only). This
silently killed ALL IPv6 host candidates: the Dialer couldn't
send packets to [2a0d:...] addresses (wrong address family on
the socket), and the Acceptor couldn't receive incoming IPv6
QUIC handshakes. The IPv6 candidates were gathered and advertised
in DirectCallOffer/Answer but were completely non-functional.
On same-LAN with dual-stack (which both test phones have), this
meant:
- JoinSet fanned out 3+ candidates (2× IPv6 + 1× IPv4)
- IPv6 dials failed silently or timed out
- IPv4 dial worked but competed with failed IPv6 for JoinSet
attention
- Sometimes the JoinSet returned an IPv6 failure before the
IPv4 success, causing unnecessary fallback to relay
Fix: bind to [::]:0 (IPv6 any) instead of 0.0.0.0:0. On
dual-stack systems (Linux/Android default), [::]:0 creates a
socket that handles BOTH:
- IPv6 natively (global unicast, ULA)
- IPv4 via v4-mapped addresses (::ffff:172.16.81.x)
One socket, both protocols. All 7 bind sites updated:
- register_signal (signal endpoint)
- do_register_signal
- ping_relay
- probe_reflect_addr (fresh endpoint fallback)
- dual_path::race (A-role fresh, D-role fresh, relay fresh)
With this fix, same-LAN P2P should prefer the IPv6 path (no
NAT, direct routing, lower latency) and fall through to IPv4
if IPv6 fails — relay is the last resort after ALL candidates
are exhausted.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Before Phase 6, each side's dual-path race ran independently and
committed to whichever transport completed first. When one side
picked Direct and the other picked Relay, they sent media to
different places — TX > 0 RX: 0 on both, completely silent call.
Phase 6 adds a negotiation step: after the local race completes,
each side sends a MediaPathReport { call_id, direct_ok, winner }
to the peer through the relay. Both wait for the other's report
before committing a transport to the CallEngine. The decision
rule is simple: if BOTH report direct_ok = true, use direct; if
EITHER reports false, BOTH use relay.
## Wire protocol
New `SignalMessage::MediaPathReport { call_id, direct_ok,
race_winner }`. The relay forwards it to the call peer via the
same signal_hub routing used for DirectCallOffer/Answer. The
cross-relay dispatcher also forwards it.
## dual_path::race restructured
Returns `RaceResult` instead of `(Arc<QuinnTransport>, WinningPath)`:
- `direct_transport: Option<Arc<QuinnTransport>>`
- `relay_transport: Option<Arc<QuinnTransport>>`
- `local_winner: WinningPath`
Both paths are run as spawned tasks. After the first completes,
a 1s grace period lets the loser also finish. The connect
command gets BOTH transports (when available) and picks the
right one based on the negotiation outcome. The unused transport
is dropped.
## connect command flow (revised)
1. Run race() → RaceResult with both transports
2. Send MediaPathReport to relay with our direct_ok
3. Install oneshot; wait for peer's report (3s timeout)
4. Decision: both direct_ok → use direct; else → use relay
5. Start CallEngine with the agreed transport
If the peer never responds (old build, timeout), falls back to
relay — backward compatible.
## Relay forwarding
MediaPathReport is forwarded like DirectCallOffer/Answer: via
signal_hub.send_to(peer_fp) for same-relay calls, and via
cross-relay dispatcher for federated calls.
## Debug log events
- `connect:dual_path_race_done` — local race result
- `connect:path_report_sent` — our report to the peer
- `connect:peer_report_received` — peer's report
- `connect:peer_report_timeout` — peer didn't respond (3s)
- `connect:path_negotiated` — final agreed path with reasons
Full workspace test: 423 passing (no regressions).
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Three fixes from a field-test log where same-LAN calls were
still losing the dual-path race to the relay path, peers were
getting stuck on an empty call screen when the other side
hung up, and 1-way audio was hard to diagnose because the
GUI debug log had no media-level events.
## 1. Direct-path 500ms head start (dual_path.rs)
The race was resolving in ~105ms with Relay winning even when
both phones were on the same MikroTik LAN with valid IPv6 host
candidates. Root cause: the relay dial is a plain outbound QUIC
connect that completes in whatever the client→relay RTT is
(~100ms), while the direct path needs the PEER to also process
its CallSetup, spin up its own race, and complete at least one
LAN dial back to us. That cross-client sequence reliably takes
longer than 100ms, so relay always won.
Fix: delay the relay_fut with `tokio::time::sleep(500ms)` before
starting its connect. Same-LAN direct dials complete in 30-50ms
typically, so the head start gives direct plenty of time to win
cleanly. Users on setups where direct genuinely can't work
(LTE-to-LTE cross-carrier) pay 500ms extra on the relay fallback,
which is invisible for a call setup.
## 2. Hangup propagation via a new hangup_call command (lib.rs + main.ts)
The hangup button was calling `disconnect` which stopped the
local media engine but never sent a SignalMessage::Hangup to
the relay. The peer never got notified and was stuck on the
call screen with silent audio. My earlier fix (commit e75b045)
only handled the RECEIVE side — auto-dismiss call screen on
recv:Hangup — but the SEND side was still missing.
New Tauri command `hangup_call`:
1. Acquire state.signal.lock(), send SignalMessage::Hangup
over the signal transport (best-effort; log + continue if
signal is down)
2. Acquire state.engine.lock(), stop the CallEngine
JS hangupBtn click handler now calls hangup_call with a fallback
to raw disconnect if the command is missing (older builds).
## 3. Media debug events (engine.rs + lib.rs)
Threaded tauri::AppHandle into CallEngine::start so the send/
recv tasks can emit call-debug events when the user has debug
logs enabled. Added on the Android branch (desktop branch
accepts the arg for API symmetry but doesn't emit yet):
- media:first_send — emitted when the first encoded frame is
handed to the transport. Useful for 1-way audio diagnosis:
if this fires on side A but side B never sees media:first_recv,
A's outbound is broken.
- media:first_recv — emitted when the first packet from the
peer arrives. Mirror of first_send.
- media:send_heartbeat — every 2s with frames_sent, last_rms,
last_pkt_bytes, short_reads, drops. A stalled last_rms
(== 0) tells you the mic isn't producing samples; a frozen
frames_sent tells you the encode pipeline hung.
- media:recv_heartbeat — every 2s with recv_fr, decoded_frames,
last_written, written_samples, decode_errs, codec. Mirror
invariants for the inbound direction.
All four are gated by `call_debug_logs_enabled()` via
`emit_call_debug`, so they only show up in the GUI log when the
user has the Call Flow Debug Logs checkbox on. Tracing::info!
still runs unconditionally so logcat (adb) keeps its copy
regardless.
The `emit_call_debug` fn in lib.rs is now `pub(crate)` so
engine.rs can call it via `crate::emit_call_debug`.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Same-LAN P2P was failing because MikroTik masquerade (like most
consumer NATs) doesn't support NAT hairpinning — the advertised
WAN reflex addr is unreachable from a peer on the same LAN as
the advertiser. Phase 5 got us Cone NAT classification and fixed
the measurement artifact, but same-LAN direct dials still had
nowhere to land.
Phase 5.5 adds ICE-style host candidates: each client enumerates
its LAN-local network interface addresses, includes them in the
DirectCallOffer/Answer alongside the reflex addr, and the
dual-path race fans out to ALL peer candidates in parallel.
Same-LAN peers find each other via their RFC1918 IPv4 + ULA /
global-unicast IPv6 addresses without touching the NAT at all.
Dual-stack IPv6 is in scope from the start — on modern ISPs
(including Starlink) the v6 path often works even when v4
hairpinning doesn't, because there's no NAT on the v6 side.
## Changes
### `wzp_client::reflect::local_host_candidates(port)` (new)
Enumerates network interfaces via `if-addrs` and returns
SocketAddrs paired with the caller's port. Filters:
- IPv4: RFC1918 (10/8, 172.16/12, 192.168/16) + CGNAT (100.64/10)
- IPv6: global unicast (2000::/3) + ULA (fc00::/7)
- Skipped: loopback, link-local (169.254, fe80::), public v4
(already covered by reflex-addr), unspecified
Safe from any thread, one `getifaddrs(3)` syscall.
### Wire protocol (wzp-proto/packet.rs)
Three new `#[serde(default, skip_serializing_if = "Vec::is_empty")]`
fields, backward-compat with pre-5.5 clients/relays by
construction:
- `DirectCallOffer.caller_local_addrs: Vec<String>`
- `DirectCallAnswer.callee_local_addrs: Vec<String>`
- `CallSetup.peer_local_addrs: Vec<String>`
### Call registry (wzp-relay/call_registry.rs)
`DirectCall` gains `caller_local_addrs` + `callee_local_addrs`
Vec<String> fields. New `set_caller_local_addrs` /
`set_callee_local_addrs` setters. Follow the same pattern as
the reflex addr fields.
### Relay cross-wiring (wzp-relay/main.rs)
Both the local-call and cross-relay-federation paths now track
the local_addrs through the registry and inject them into the
CallSetup's peer_local_addrs. Cross-wiring is identical to the
existing peer_direct_addr logic — each party's CallSetup
carries the OTHER party's LAN candidates.
### Client side (desktop/src-tauri/lib.rs)
- `place_call`: gathers local host candidates via
`local_host_candidates(signal_endpoint.local_addr().port())`
and includes them in `DirectCallOffer.caller_local_addrs`.
The port match is critical — it's the Phase 5 shared signal
socket, so incoming dials to these addrs land on the same
endpoint that's already listening.
- `answer_call`: same, AcceptTrusted only (privacy mode keeps
LAN addrs hidden too, for consistency with the reflex addr).
- `connect` Tauri command: new `peer_local_addrs: Vec<String>`
arg. Builds a `PeerCandidates` bundle and passes it to the
dual-path race.
- Recv loop's CallSetup handler: destructures + forwards the
new field to JS via the signal-event payload.
### `dual_path::race` (wzp-client/dual_path.rs)
Signature change: takes `PeerCandidates` (reflex + local Vec)
instead of a single SocketAddr. The D-role branch now fans out
N parallel dials via `tokio::task::JoinSet` — one per candidate
— and the first successful dial wins (losers are aborted
immediately via `set.abort_all()`). Only when ALL candidates
have failed do we return Err; individual candidate failures are
just traced at debug level and the race waits for the others.
LAN host candidates are tried BEFORE the reflex addr in
`PeerCandidates::dial_order()` — they're faster when they work,
and the reflex addr is the fallback for the not-on-same-LAN
case.
### JS side (desktop/main.ts)
`connect` invoke now passes `peerLocalAddrs: data.peer_local_addrs ?? []`
alongside the existing `peerDirectAddr`.
### Tests
All existing test callsites updated for the new Vec<String>
fields (defaults to Vec::new() in tests — they don't exercise
the multi-candidate path). `dual_path.rs` integration tests
wrap the single `dead_peer` / `acceptor_listen_addr` in a
`PeerCandidates { reflexive: Some(_), local: Vec::new() }`.
Full workspace test: 423 passing (same as before 5.5).
## Expected behavior on the reporter's setup
Two phones behind MikroTik, both on the same LAN:
place_call:host_candidates {"local_addrs": ["192.168.88.21:XXX", "2001:...:YY:XXX"]}
recv:DirectCallAnswer {"callee_local_addrs": ["192.168.88.22:ZZZ", "2001:...:WW:ZZZ"]}
recv:CallSetup {"peer_direct_addr":"150.228.49.65:NN",
"peer_local_addrs":["192.168.88.22:ZZZ","2001:...:WW:ZZZ"]}
connect:dual_path_race_start {"peer_reflex":"...","peer_local":[...]}
dual_path: direct dial succeeded on candidate 0 ← LAN v4 wins
connect:dual_path_race_won {"path":"Direct"}
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Before Phase 5 WarzonePhone used THREE separate UDP sockets per
client:
1. Signal endpoint (register_signal, client-only)
2. Reflect probe endpoints (one fresh socket per relay probe)
3. Dual-path race endpoint (fresh per call setup)
This broke two things in production on port-preserving NATs
(MikroTik masquerade, most consumer routers):
a. Phase 2 NAT detection was WRONG. Each probe used a fresh
internal port, so MikroTik mapped each one to a different
external port, and the classifier saw "different port per
relay" and labeled it SymmetricPort. The real NAT was
cone-like but measurement via fresh sockets hid that.
b. Phase 3.5 dual-path P2P race was BROKEN. The reflex addr
we advertised in DirectCallOffer was observed by the signal
endpoint's socket. The actual dual-path race listened on a
DIFFERENT fresh socket, on a different internal (and
therefore external) port. Peers dialed the advertised addr
and hit MikroTik's mapping for the signal socket, which
forwarded to the signal endpoint — a client-only endpoint
that doesn't accept incoming connections. Direct path
silently failed, relay always won the race.
Nebula-style fix: one socket for everything. The signal endpoint
is now dual-purpose (client + server_config), and both the
reflect probes and the dual-path race reuse it instead of
creating fresh ones. MikroTik's port-preservation then gives us
a stable external port across all flows → classifier correctly
sees Cone NAT → advertised reflex addr is the actual listening
port → direct dials from peers land on the right socket →
`endpoint.accept()` in the A-role branch of the dual-path race
picks up the incoming connection.
## Changes
### `register_signal` (desktop/src-tauri/src/lib.rs)
- Endpoint now created with `Some(server_config())` instead of
`None`. The socket can now accept incoming QUIC connections as
well as dial outbound.
- Every code path that previously read `sig.endpoint` for the
relay-dial reuse benefits automatically — same socket is now
ALSO listening for peer dials.
### `probe_reflect_addr` (wzp-client/src/reflect.rs)
- New `existing_endpoint: Option<Endpoint>` arg. `Some` reuses
the caller's socket (production: pass the signal endpoint).
`None` creates a fresh one (tests + pre-registration).
- Removed the `drop(endpoint)` at the end — was correct for
fresh endpoints (explicit early socket close) but incorrect
for shared ones. End-of-scope drop does the right thing in
both cases via Arc semantics.
### `detect_nat_type` (wzp-client/src/reflect.rs)
- New `shared_endpoint: Option<Endpoint>` arg, forwarded to
every probe in the JoinSet fan-out. One shared socket means
the classifier sees the true NAT type.
### `detect_nat_type` Tauri command (desktop/src-tauri/src/lib.rs)
- Reads `state.signal.endpoint` and passes it as the shared
endpoint. Falls back to None when not registered. NAT detection
now produces accurate classifications against MikroTik / most
consumer NATs.
### `dual_path::race` (wzp-client/src/dual_path.rs)
- New `shared_endpoint: Option<Endpoint>` arg.
- A-role: when `Some`, reuses it for `accept()`. This is the
critical change — the reflex addr advertised to peers is now
the address listening for incoming direct dials.
- D-role: when `Some`, reuses it for the outbound direct dial.
MikroTik keeps the same external port for the dial as for
the signal flow → direct dial through a cone-mapped NAT.
- Relay path: also reuses the shared endpoint so MikroTik has
a single consistent mapping across the whole call (saves one
extra external port and makes firewall traces cleaner).
- When `None`, falls back to fresh per-role endpoints as before.
### `connect` Tauri command (desktop/src-tauri/src/lib.rs)
- Reads `state.signal.endpoint` once when acquiring own reflex
addr and passes it through to `dual_path::race`.
### Tests
- `wzp-client/tests/dual_path.rs` and
`wzp-relay/tests/multi_reflect.rs` updated to pass `None` for
the new endpoint arg — tests use fresh sockets and that's
fine because the loopback harness doesn't care about
port-preserving NAT behavior.
Full workspace test: 423 passing (no regressions).
## Expected behavior after this commit on real hardware
Behind MikroTik + Starlink-bypass (the reporter's setup):
- Phase 2 NAT detect → **Cone NAT** (was SymmetricPort — false
positive from the measurement artifact)
- Phase 3.5 direct-P2P dial → succeeds for both cone-cone and
cone-CGNAT cases where the remote side was previously blocked
by our own socket mismatch
- LTE ↔ LTE cross-carrier → still likely relay fallback; that's
genuinely strict symmetric and needs Phase 5.5 port prediction.
## Phase 5.5 (next, separate PRD)
Multi-candidate port prediction + ICE-style candidate aggregation
for truly strict symmetric NATs. Not needed for the 95% case —
Phase 5 alone fixes most consumer-router setups.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Real-world report: a user with one LAN relay + one internet relay
got "Multiple IPs — treating as symmetric" because the LAN relay
saw the client's LAN IP (172.16.81.172) while the internet relay
saw the WAN IP (150.228.49.65). Two observations of "different
public IPs" from the classifier's perspective, but semantically
they describe two different network paths and shouldn't be
compared.
The LAN relay's reflection is always true, just not useful for
public NAT classification: there's no NAT between the client and
the LAN relay, so that path's reflex addr is always the LAN
interface IP regardless of what the public-facing NAT beyond it
looks like.
Fix: new `is_private_or_loopback` helper filters the probe set
before classification. Drops:
- 127.0.0.0/8 loopback
- 10/8, 172.16/12, 192.168/16 RFC1918 private
- 169.254/16 link-local
- 100.64/10 CGNAT shared-transition (same reasoning: a relay
that sees the client with a CGNAT addr is on the same carrier
network and can't describe public NAT state)
- IPv6 loopback, unspecified, fe80::/10 link-local
Failed probes still filtered out of classification (they were
already) but now dimmed in the UI list instead of highlighted
amber. Same rationale: a momentarily-offline probe target isn't
a warning-worthy state, it's just a fact about the probe run.
UI palette rebalance: only Cone gets green, everything else
neutral text-dim. Wording changed from warning-tone
"⚠ must use relay" to informational "ℹ P2P falls back to relay,
calls still work" — symmetric NAT isn't broken state, it just
means media takes the relay path.
Tests added (4 new in wzp_client::reflect):
- classify_drops_private_ip_probes — LAN + public → Unknown
- classify_drops_loopback_probes — loopback + 2 public → Cone
- classify_drops_cgnat_probes — CGNAT + 2 public same-IP-
diff-port → SymmetricPort
- classify_two_lan_probes_is_unknown_not_cone — all LAN → Unknown
Existing multi_reflect integration test updated: two loopback
relays now correctly classify as Unknown (because loopback reflex
addrs are filtered) with the plumbing-works invariant preserved.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Teaches the relay pair to route direct-call signaling across an
existing federation link. Alice on Relay A can now place a direct
call to Bob on Relay B if A and B are federation peers — the
wire protocol, call registry, and signal dispatch all learn to
track and route the cross-relay flow.
Phase 3.5's dual-path QUIC race then carries the media directly
peer-to-peer using the advertised reflex addrs, with zero
changes needed on the client side.
## Wire protocol (wzp-proto)
New `SignalMessage::FederatedSignalForward { inner, origin_relay_fp }`
envelope variant, appended at end of enum — JSON serde is
name-tagged so pre-Phase-4 relays just log "unknown variant" and
drop it. 2 new roundtrip tests (any-inner nesting + single
DirectCallOffer case).
## Call registry (wzp-relay)
`DirectCall.peer_relay_fp: Option<String>` — federation TLS fp
of the peer relay that forwarded the offer/answer for this call.
`None` on local calls, `Some` on cross-relay. Used by the answer
path to route the reply back through the same federation link
instead of trying (and failing) to deliver via local signal_hub.
New `set_peer_relay_fp` setter + 1 new unit test.
## FederationManager (wzp-relay)
Three new methods:
- `local_tls_fp()` — exposes the relay's own federation TLS fp
so main.rs can build `origin_relay_fp` fields.
- `broadcast_signal(msg) -> usize` — fan out any signal message
(in practice `FederatedSignalForward`) to every active peer
link, returning the reach count. Used when Relay A doesn't
know which peer has the target fingerprint.
- `send_signal_to_peer(fp, msg)` — targeted send for the reply
path where the registry already knows which peer relay to
hit.
Plus a new `cross_relay_signal_tx: Mutex<Option<Sender<...>>>`
field that `set_cross_relay_tx()` wires at startup so the
federation `handle_signal` can push unwrapped inner messages
into the main signal dispatcher.
## Federation handle_signal (wzp-relay)
New match arm for `FederatedSignalForward`:
- Loop prevention: drops forwards whose `origin_relay_fp` equals
this relay's own fp (prevents A→B→A echo loops without needing
TTL yet).
- Otherwise pulls the inner message out and pushes it through
`cross_relay_signal_tx` so the main loop's dispatcher task
handles it as if it had arrived locally.
## Main signal loop (wzp-relay)
### DirectCallOffer when target not local
Before falling through to Hangup, try the federation path:
- Wrap the offer in `FederatedSignalForward` with
`origin_relay_fp = this relay's tls_fp`
- `fm.broadcast_signal(forward)` — returns peer count
- If any peers reached, stash the call in local registry with
`caller_reflexive_addr` set, `peer_relay_fp` still None
(broadcast — the answer-side will identify itself when it
replies)
- Send `CallRinging` to caller immediately for UX feedback
- Only if no federation or no peers → legacy Hangup path
### DirectCallAnswer when peer is remote
- Registry lookup now reads both `peer_fingerprint` and
`peer_relay_fp` in one acquisition
- If `peer_relay_fp.is_some()`:
* Reject → forward a `Hangup` over federation via
`send_signal_to_peer` instead of local signal_hub
* Accept → wrap the raw answer in `FederatedSignalForward`,
route to the specific origin peer, then emit the LOCAL
CallSetup to our callee with `peer_direct_addr =
caller_reflexive_addr` (caller is remote; this side only
has the callee)
- If `peer_relay_fp.is_none()` → existing Phase 3 same-relay
path with both CallSetups (caller + callee)
### Cross-relay signal dispatcher task
New long-running task reading `(inner, origin_relay_fp)` from
`cross_relay_rx`. In Phase 4 MVP handles:
- `DirectCallOffer` — if target is local, create the call in
the registry with `peer_relay_fp = origin_relay_fp`, stash
caller addr, deliver offer to local callee. If target isn't
local, drop (no multi-hop in Phase 4 MVP).
- `DirectCallAnswer` — look up local caller by call_id, stash
callee addr, forward raw answer to local caller via
signal_hub, emit local CallSetup with `peer_direct_addr =
callee_reflexive_addr` (peer is local now; this side only
has the caller).
- `CallRinging` — best-effort forward to local caller for UX.
- `Hangup` — logged for now; Phase 4.1 will target by call_id.
## Integration tests
`crates/wzp-relay/tests/cross_relay_direct_call.rs` — 3 tests
that reproduce the main.rs cross-relay dispatcher logic inline
and assert the invariants without spinning up real binaries:
1. `cross_relay_offer_forwards_and_stashes_peer_relay_fp` —
Relay A gets Alice's offer, broadcasts. Relay B's dispatcher
creates the call with `peer_relay_fp = relay_a_tls_fp`.
2. `cross_relay_answer_crosswires_peer_direct_addrs` — full
round trip; both CallSetups (one on each relay) carry the
OTHER party's reflex addr.
3. `cross_relay_loop_prevention_drops_self_sourced_forward` —
explicit loop-prevention check.
Full workspace test goes from 413 → 419 passing. Clippy clean
on touched files.
## Non-goals (deferred to Phase 4.1+)
- Relay-mediated media fallback across federation — if P2P
direct fails (symmetric NAT on either side), the call errors
out with "no media path". Making the existing federation
media pipeline carry ephemeral call-<id> rooms is the Phase
4.1 lift.
- Multi-hop federation (A → B → C). Phase 4 MVP supports a
direct federation link between A and B only.
- Fingerprint → peer-relay routing gossip.
PRD: .taskmaster/docs/prd_phase4_cross_relay_p2p.txt
Tasks: 70-78 all completed
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Two features in one commit because they ship and test together:
Phase 3.5 closes the hole-punching loop and the call-flow debug
logs give the user live visibility into every step of a call so
real-hardware testing of the new P2P path is debuggable.
## Phase 3.5 — dual-path QUIC connect race
Completes the hole-punching work Phase 3 scaffolded. On receiving
a CallSetup with peer_direct_addr, the client now actually races a
direct QUIC handshake against the relay dial and uses whichever
completes first. Symmetric role assignment avoids the two-conns-
per-call problem:
- Both peers compare `own_reflex_addr` vs `peer_reflex_addr`
lexicographically.
- Smaller addr → **Acceptor** (A-role): builds a server-capable
dual endpoint, awaits an incoming QUIC session. Does NOT dial.
- Larger addr → **Dialer** (D-role): builds a client-only
endpoint, dials the peer's addr with `call-<id>` SNI. Does NOT
listen.
- Both sides always dial the relay in parallel as fallback.
- `tokio::select!` with `biased` preference for direct, `tokio::pin!`
so each branch can await the losing opposite as fallback.
- Direct timeout 2s, relay fallback timeout 5s (so 7s worst case
from CallSetup to "no media path" error).
New crate module `wzp_client::dual_path::{race, WinningPath}`
(moved here from desktop/src-tauri so it's testable from a
workspace test). `determine_role` in `wzp_client::reflect` is
pure-function and unit-tested.
### CallEngine integration
- New `pre_connected_transport: Option<Arc<QuinnTransport>>` arg
on both android + desktop `CallEngine::start` branches. Skips
the internal wzp_transport::connect step when Some. Backward-
compat: None keeps Phase 0 relay-only behavior.
- `connect` Tauri command reads own_reflex_addr from SignalState,
computes role, runs the race, passes the winning transport
into CallEngine. If ANY input is missing (no peer addr, no own
addr, equal addrs), falls back to classic relay path —
identical to pre-Phase-3.5 behavior.
### Tests (9 new, all passing)
- 6 unit tests for `determine_role` truth table in
`wzp-client/src/reflect.rs` (smaller=Acceptor, larger=Dialer,
port-only diff, equal, missing-side, symmetry)
- 3 integration tests in `crates/wzp-client/tests/dual_path.rs`:
* `dual_path_direct_wins_on_loopback` — two-endpoint test
rig, Dialer wins direct path vs loopback mock relay
* `dual_path_relay_wins_when_direct_is_dead` — dead peer
port, 2s direct timeout, relay fallback wins
* `dual_path_errors_cleanly_when_both_paths_dead` — <10s
error, no hang
## GUI call-flow debug logs
Runtime-toggled structured events at every step of a call so the
user can see where a call progressed or stalled on real hardware.
Modeled on the existing DRED_VERBOSE_LOGS pattern.
### Rust side
- `static CALL_DEBUG_LOGS: AtomicBool` + `emit_call_debug(&app,
step, details)` helper. Always logs via `tracing::info!`
(logcat always has a copy); GUI Tauri `call-debug-log` event
only fires when the flag is on.
- Tauri commands `set_call_debug_logs` / `get_call_debug_logs`.
### Instrumented steps (24 emit_call_debug sites)
- `register_signal`: start, identity loaded, endpoint created,
connect failed/ok, RegisterPresence sent, ack received/failed,
recv loop spawning
- Recv loop: CallRinging, DirectCallOffer (w/ caller_reflexive_addr),
DirectCallAnswer (w/ callee_reflexive_addr), CallSetup (w/
peer_direct_addr), Hangup
- `place_call`: start, reflect query start/ok/none, offer sent,
send failed
- `answer_call`: start, reflect query start/ok/none or privacy
skip, answer sent, send failed
- `connect`: start, dual_path_race_start (w/ role), won (w/
path), failed, skipped (w/ reasons), call_engine_starting/
started/failed
### JS side
- New `callDebugLogs: boolean` field on Settings type.
- Boot-time hydrate of the Rust flag from localStorage so the
choice survives restarts (like `dredDebugLogs`).
- Settings panel: new "Call flow debug logs" checkbox alongside
the DRED toggle.
- New "Call Debug Log" section that ONLY shows when the flag is
on. Rolling in-memory buffer of the last 200 events, rendered
as monospace `HH:MM:SS.mmm step {details}` lines with auto-
scroll and a Clear button.
- `listen("call-debug-log", ...)` subscribed at app startup,
appends to the buffer, re-renders on every event.
Full workspace test goes from 404 → 413 passing. Clippy clean
on touched crates.
PRD: .taskmaster/docs/prd_phase35_dual_path_race.txt
Tasks: 61-69 all completed
Next: APK + desktop build carrying everything — Phase 2 NAT
detect, Phase 3 advertising, Phase 3.5 dual-path + call debug
logs, plus the earlier Android first-join diagnostics — so the
user can validate the P2P path on real hardware with live
per-step visibility into where any failures happen.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Completes the signal-plane plumbing for P2P direct calling: both
peers now learn their own server-reflexive address (Phase 1
Reflect), include it in DirectCallOffer / DirectCallAnswer, and
the relay cross-wires them into each side's CallSetup so the
client knows the OTHER party's direct addr. Dual-path QUIC race
is scaffolded but deferred to Phase 3.5 — this commit ships the
full advertising layer so real-hardware testing can confirm the
addrs flow end-to-end before adding the concurrent-connect logic.
Wire protocol (wzp-proto/src/packet.rs):
- DirectCallOffer gains optional `caller_reflexive_addr`
- DirectCallAnswer gains optional `callee_reflexive_addr`
- CallSetup gains optional `peer_direct_addr`
- All #[serde(default, skip_serializing_if = "Option::is_none")] so
pre-Phase-3 peers and relays stay backward compatible by
construction — the new fields are elided from the JSON on the
wire when None, and older clients parse the JSON ignoring any
fields they don't know.
- 2 new roundtrip tests (Some + None cases, old-JSON parse-back).
Call registry (wzp-relay/src/call_registry.rs):
- DirectCall gains caller_reflexive_addr + callee_reflexive_addr.
- set_caller_reflexive_addr / set_callee_reflexive_addr setters.
- 2 new unit tests: stores and returns addrs, clearing works.
Relay cross-wiring (wzp-relay/src/main.rs):
- On DirectCallOffer: stash the caller's addr in the registry.
- On DirectCallAnswer: stash the callee's addr (only set by
AcceptTrusted answers — privacy-mode leaves it None).
- Send two different CallSetup messages: one to the caller with
peer_direct_addr=callee_addr, and one to the callee with
peer_direct_addr=caller_addr. The cross-wiring means each side
gets the OTHER party's direct addr, not its own.
- Logs `p2p_viable=true` when both sides advertised.
Client advertising (desktop/src-tauri/src/lib.rs):
- New `try_reflect_own_addr` helper that reuses the Phase 1
oneshot pattern WITHOUT holding state.signal.lock() across the
await (critical: the recv loop reacquires the same mutex to
fire the oneshot, so holding it would deadlock).
- `place_call` queries reflect first and includes the returned
addr in DirectCallOffer. Falls back to None on any failure —
call still proceeds via the relay path.
- `answer_call` queries reflect ONLY on AcceptTrusted so
AcceptGeneric keeps the callee's IP private by design. Reject
and AcceptGeneric both pass None.
- recv loop's CallSetup handler destructures and forwards
peer_direct_addr to the JS layer in the signal-event payload.
Client scaffolding for dual-path (desktop/src-tauri/src/lib.rs +
desktop/src/main.ts):
- `connect` Tauri command gets a new optional `peer_direct_addr`
argument. Currently LOGS the addr but still uses the relay
path for the media connection — Phase 3.5 will swap in a
tokio::select! race between direct dial + relay dial. Scaffolding
lands here so the JS wire is stable, real-hardware testing can
confirm advertising works end-to-end, and Phase 3.5 is a pure
Rust change with no JS touches.
- JS setup handler forwards `data.peer_direct_addr` to invoke.
Back-compat with the CLI client (crates/wzp-client/src/cli.rs):
- CLI test harness updated for the new fields — always passes
None for both reflex addrs (no hole-punching). Also destructures
peer_direct_addr: _ in its CallSetup handler.
Tests (8 new, all passing):
- wzp-proto: hole_punching_optional_fields_roundtrip,
hole_punching_backward_compat_old_json_parses
- wzp-relay call_registry: call_registry_stores_reflexive_addrs,
call_registry_clearing_reflex_addr_works
- wzp-relay integration: crates/wzp-relay/tests/hole_punching.rs
* both_peers_advertise_reflex_addrs_cross_wire_in_setup
* privacy_mode_answer_omits_callee_addr_from_setup
* pre_phase3_caller_leaves_both_setups_relay_only
* neither_peer_advertises_both_setups_are_relay_only
Full workspace test goes from 396 → 404 passing.
PRD: .taskmaster/docs/prd_hole_punching.txt
Tasks: 53-60 all completed (58 = scaffolding-only; 3.5 follow-up)
Next up: **Phase 3.5 — dual-path QUIC connect race**. With the
advertising layer live, this becomes a focused change: on
CallSetup-with-peer_direct_addr, start a server-capable dual
endpoint, and tokio::select! across (direct dial, relay dial,
inbound accept). Whichever QUIC handshake completes first wins,
the losers drop, 2s direct timeout falls back to relay.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Builds on Phase 1's SignalMessage::Reflect to probe N relays in
parallel through transient QUIC connections and classify the
client's NAT type for the future P2P hole-punching path. No wire
protocol changes — Phase 1's Reflect/ReflectResponse pair is
reused unchanged.
New client-side module (crates/wzp-client/src/reflect.rs):
- probe_reflect_addr(relay, timeout_ms): opens a throwaway
quinn::Endpoint (fresh ephemeral source port per probe,
essential for NAT-type detection — sharing one endpoint would
make a symmetric NAT look like a cone NAT), connects to _signal,
sends RegisterPresence with zero identity, consumes the Ack,
sends Reflect, awaits ReflectResponse, cleanly closes.
- detect_nat_type(relays, timeout_ms): parallel probes via
tokio::task::JoinSet (bounded by slowest probe not sum) and
returns a NatDetection with per-probe results + aggregate
classification.
- classify_nat(probes): pure-function classifier split out for
network-free unit tests. Rules:
* 0-1 successful probes → Unknown
* 2+ successes, same ip same port → Cone (P2P viable)
* 2+ successes, same ip diff ports → SymmetricPort (relay)
* 2+ successes, different ips → Multiple (treat as
symmetric)
Tauri command (desktop/src-tauri/src/lib.rs):
- detect_nat_type({ relays: [{ name, address }] }) -> NatDetection
as JSON. Takes the relay list from JS because localStorage
owns the config. Parse-up-front so a malformed entry fails
clean instead of as a probe error. 1500ms per-probe timeout.
UI (desktop/index.html + src/main.ts):
- New "NAT type" row + "Detect NAT" button in the Network
settings section. Renders per-probe status (name, address,
observed addr, latency, or error) plus the colored verdict:
* green Cone — shows consensus addr
* amber SymmetricPort / Multiple — must relay
* gray Unknown — not enough data
Tests:
- 7 unit tests in wzp-client/src/reflect.rs covering every
classifier branch (empty, 1 success, 2 identical, 2 diff ports,
2 diff ips, success+failure mix, pure-failure).
- 3 integration tests in crates/wzp-relay/tests/multi_reflect.rs:
* probe_reflect_addr_happy_path — single mock relay end-to-end
* detect_nat_type_two_loopback_relays_is_cone — two concurrent
relays, asserts both see 127.0.0.1 and classifier returns
Cone or SymmetricPort (accepted because the test harness
uses fresh ephemeral ports per probe which look like
SymmetricPort on single-host loopback)
* detect_nat_type_dead_relay_is_unknown — alive + dead port
mix, asserts the dead probe surfaces an error string and
the aggregator returns Unknown (only 1 success)
Full workspace test goes from 386 → 396 passing.
PRD: .taskmaster/docs/prd_multi_relay_reflect.txt
Tasks: 47-52 all completed
Next up: hole-punching (Phase 3) — use the reflected address in
DirectCallOffer/Answer and CallSetup so peers attempt a direct
QUIC handshake to each other, with relay fallback on timeout.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Lets a client ask its registered relay "what IP:port do you see for
me?" over the existing TLS-authenticated signal channel, returning
the client's server-reflexive address as a SocketAddr. Replaces the
need for a classic STUN deployment and becomes the bootstrap step
for future P2P hole-punching: once both peers know their own reflex
addrs, they can advertise them in DirectCallOffer and attempt a
direct QUIC handshake to each other.
Wire protocol (wzp-proto):
- SignalMessage::Reflect — unit variant, client -> relay
- SignalMessage::ReflectResponse { observed_addr: String } — relay -> client
- JSON-serde, appended at end of enum: zero ordinal concerns,
backward compat with pre-Phase-1 relays by construction (older
relays log "unexpected message" and drop; newer clients time out
cleanly within 1s).
Relay handler (wzp-relay/src/main.rs, signal loop):
- New match arm next to Ping reuses the already-bound `addr` from
connection.remote_address() and replies with observed_addr as a
string. debug!-level log on success, warn!-level on send failure.
Client side (desktop/src-tauri/src/lib.rs):
- SignalState gains pending_reflect: Option<oneshot::Sender<SocketAddr>>.
- get_reflected_address Tauri command installs the oneshot before
sending Reflect and awaits it with a 1s timeout; cleans up on
every exit path (send failure, timeout, parse error).
- recv loop's new ReflectResponse arm fires the pending sender or
emits a debug log for unsolicited responses — never crashes the
loop on malformed input.
- Integrated into invoke_handler! alongside the other signal
commands.
UI (desktop/index.html + src/main.ts):
- New "Network" section in settings panel with a "Detect" button
that displays the reflected address or a categorized warning
("register first" / "relay does not support reflection" / error).
Tests (crates/wzp-relay/tests/reflect.rs — 3 new, all passing):
- reflect_happy_path: client on loopback gets back 127.0.0.1:<its own port>
- reflect_two_clients_distinct_ports: two concurrent clients see
their own distinct ports, proving per-connection remote_address
- reflect_old_relay_times_out: mock relay that ignores Reflect —
client times out between 1000-1200ms and does not hang
Also pre-existing test bit-rot unrelated to this PR — fixed so the
full workspace `cargo test` goes green:
- handshake_integration tests in wzp-client, wzp-relay and
featherchat_compat in wzp-crypto all missed the `alias` field
addition to CallOffer and the 3-arg form of perform_handshake
plus 4-tuple return of accept_handshake. Updated to the current
API surface.
Results:
cargo test --workspace --exclude wzp-android: 386 passed
cargo check --workspace: clean
cargo clippy: no new warnings in touched files
Verification excludes wzp-android because it's dead code on this
branch (Tauri mobile uses wzp-native instead) and can't link -llog
on macOS host — unchanged status quo.
PRD: .taskmaster/docs/prd_reflect_over_quic.txt
Tasks: 39-46 all completed
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Addressed every rustc warning surfaced by \`cargo check --workspace
--release --lib --bins\` on opus-DRED-v2. Split across three
categories:
## Real bugs surfaced by the audit (fix, don't silence)
- **crates/wzp-relay/src/federation.rs** — the per-peer RTT monitor
task computed \`rtt_ms\` every 5 s and threw it on the floor. The
\`wzp_federation_peer_rtt_ms\` gauge has been registered in
metrics.rs the whole time but was never receiving samples, leaving
the Grafana panel blank. Wired it up: the task now calls
\`fm_rtt.metrics.federation_peer_rtt_ms.with_label_values(&[&label_rtt]).set(rtt_ms)\`
on every sample. Fixes three warnings (\`rtt_ms\`, \`fm_rtt\`,
\`label_rtt\` were all captured for this task and all dead).
## Dead code removal
- **crates/wzp-relay/src/federation.rs** — removed \`local_delivery_seq:
AtomicU16\` field and its initializer. It was described in comments
as "per-room seq counter for federation media delivered to local
clients" but was declared, initialized to 0, and never read or
written anywhere else. Genuine half-wired feature; deletable with
zero behavior change.
- **crates/wzp-relay/src/room.rs** — removed \`let recv_start =
Instant::now()\` at the top of a recv loop that was never read.
Separate variable \`last_recv_instant\` already measures the actual
gap that's used for the \`max_recv_gap_ms\` stat.
- **crates/wzp-client/src/cli.rs** — removed \`let my_fp = fp.clone()\`
from the signal loop setup. Cloned but never used in any match arm.
## Stub-intent warnings (underscore + explanatory comment)
- **crates/wzp-relay/src/handshake.rs** — \`choose_profile\` hardcodes
\`QualityProfile::GOOD\` and ignores its \`supported\` parameter.
Comment already documented "Cap at GOOD (24k) for now — studio
tiers not yet tested for federation reliability". Renamed to
\`_supported\`, expanded the comment to explicitly note the future
plan (pick highest supported ≤ relay ceiling).
- **crates/wzp-relay/src/federation.rs** — \`forward_to_peers\` takes
\`room_name: &str\` but only uses \`room_hash\`. The caller
(handle_datagram) passes the name for caller-site symmetry with
other helpers; kept the param shape and underscored the binding
with a comment noting it's reserved for future per-name logging.
## Cosmetic fixes
- **crates/wzp-relay/src/event_log.rs** — dropped \`use std::sync::Arc\`
(unused).
- **crates/wzp-relay/src/signal_hub.rs** — trimmed \`use tracing::{info,
warn}\` to \`use tracing::info\`. Also removed unnecessary \`mut\` on
\`hub\` binding in the \`register_unregister\` test.
- **crates/wzp-relay/src/room.rs** — trimmed \`use tracing::{debug,
error, info, trace, warn}\` to \`{error, info, warn}\`. Also removed
unnecessary \`mut\` on \`mgr\` binding in the \`room_join_leave\` test.
- **crates/wzp-relay/src/main.rs** — removed unnecessary \`mut\` on the
\`config\` destructured binding from \`parse_args()\`; and dropped
\`ref caller_alias\` from the \`DirectCallOffer\` match pattern since
the relay just forwards the full \`msg\` (caller_alias is preserved
end-to-end, we don't need to read it on the relay).
- **crates/wzp-crypto/tests/featherchat_compat.rs** — dropped
\`CallSignalType\` from a \`use wzp_client::featherchat::{...}\`
(unused in the test body). Note: this test file has pre-existing
compile errors from SignalMessage schema drift unrelated to this
sweep; that's tracked separately.
## Crate-level annotation
- **crates/wzp-android/src/lib.rs** — added
\`#![allow(dead_code, unused_imports, unused_variables, unused_mut)]\`
with a doc block explaining the crate is dead code since the Tauri
mobile rewrite. The legacy Kotlin+JNI Android app that consumed
this crate was replaced by desktop/src-tauri (live Android recv
path) + crates/wzp-native (Oboe bridge). Rather than piecemeal
cleanup of a crate that shouldn't be maintained, the whole-crate
allow keeps CI clean until someone removes the crate entirely. Kills
all 6 wzp-android warnings (4 unused imports/vars, 1 unused \`mut\`
on a JNI env param, 1 dead \`command_rx\` field) in one line.
## Not touched
- **deps/featherchat/warzone/crates/warzone-protocol/src/x3dh.rs** —
3 unused-variable warnings in \`alice_spk_secret\`, \`alice_bundle\`,
\`bob_bundle_bytes\`. This is a vendored third-party submodule;
upstream's problem, not ours. Would need to be reported to
featherchat upstream if we care.
## Verification
- \`cargo check --workspace --release --lib --bins\` → 0 warnings, 0 errors
- \`cargo check --workspace --release --all-targets\` → only the 3
featherchat submodule warnings remain, plus the pre-existing 3
broken integration tests (SignalMessage schema drift from Phase 2,
tracked separately and explicitly out of scope).
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
AudioCapture and AudioPlayback no longer expose the old read_frame()
and write_frame() methods — they were replaced with ring() returning
&Arc<AudioRing> when the lock-free SPSC ring was introduced. The CLI
live-mode loop still referenced the removed methods, which broke every
workspace build that touched wzp-client bin (including the remote
Linux x86_64 docker build).
- Send loop: allocate a 960-sample scratch buffer, fill it in a loop
via capture.ring().read() until a full 20 ms frame is available,
sleep 2 ms between empty reads to avoid hot-spinning.
- Recv loop: write decoded PCM into playback.ring() instead of
calling write_frame(). Short writes on full ring drop the tail,
which is the correct real-time behavior for CLI live mode.
No behavioral change on the wire or in the call pipeline — this is
purely a compile fix for cli.rs bitrot that accumulated since the
ring API landed.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Phase 4 lays the telemetry foundation for distinguishing DRED recoveries
from classical PLC in production: a new SignalMessage variant, two new
per-session Prometheus counters on the relay side, and a highlighted
loss-recovery section in the Android DebugReporter.
The periodic emitter (client → relay) and Grafana panel are deferred to
Phase 4b — this commit ships the protocol surface, the relay sink, and
the immediate user-visible debug output. Once 4b lands the full path
(emitter → relay → Prometheus → Grafana), the metrics here will
automatically start receiving data.
Scope decision — why not extend QualityReport instead:
The existing wire-format QualityReport is a fixed 4-byte media packet
trailer. Adding counter fields to it would shift the binary layout and
break backward compatibility (old receivers would parse the last 4
bytes of the extended trailer as QR, corrupting audio). Using a
new SignalMessage variant on the reliable QUIC signal stream sidesteps
the wire-format problem entirely — serde JSON enums tolerate unknown
variants gracefully on old receivers, and the signal channel is the
right layer for periodic telemetry aggregates.
Changes:
wzp-proto/src/packet.rs:
- New SignalMessage::LossRecoveryUpdate variant carrying:
* dred_reconstructions: u64 (monotonic since call start)
* classical_plc_invocations: u64 (monotonic)
* frames_decoded: u64 (for rate calculation)
- All three fields tagged #[serde(default)] for forward compat.
wzp-client/src/featherchat.rs:
- Added a match arm so signal_to_call_type() handles the new
variant (treat as Offer for featherChat bridging purposes).
wzp-relay/src/metrics.rs:
- Two new IntCounterVec metrics on the relay, labeled by session_id:
* wzp_relay_session_dred_reconstructions_total
* wzp_relay_session_classical_plc_total
- New method update_session_loss_recovery(session_id, dred, plc)
applies monotonic deltas: if the incoming totals exceed the
current counter, the difference is inc_by'd. If the incoming
totals are LOWER (client restart or counter reset), the
Prometheus counter holds steady until the client catches up.
This matches the existing update_session_buffer delta pattern.
- remove_session_metrics() now cleans up the two new labels.
- New test session_loss_recovery_monotonic_delta exercises:
* initial population (10 DRED, 2 PLC)
* forward advance (25, 5 → delta +15, +3)
* lower values ignored (client reset → counters unchanged)
* client catches up (30, 8 → advances to new max)
- Existing session_metrics_cleanup test extended to cover the
new counters.
android/app/src/main/java/com/wzp/debug/DebugReporter.kt:
- Phase 4 users — and incident responders — need to quickly see
whether DRED is actually firing during a call. The stats JSON
already carries the counters (after Phase 3c), but they were
buried in the trailing JSON dump. Added a dedicated
"=== Loss Recovery ===" section to the meta preamble that
extracts dred_reconstructions, classical_plc_invocations,
frames_decoded, and fec_recovered from the JSON and displays
them plainly, plus computed percentages when frames_decoded > 0.
- New extractLongField helper: tiny hand-rolled JSON integer
extractor. We don't want to pull in a full JSON parser for this
single use case and CallStats has a flat, well-known schema.
Verification:
- cargo check --workspace: zero errors
- cargo test -p wzp-proto --lib: 63 passing
- cargo test -p wzp-codec --lib: 68 passing
- cargo test -p wzp-client --lib: 35 passing (+1 ignored probe)
- cargo test -p wzp-relay --lib: 68 passing (+1 new Phase 4 test)
- cargo check -p wzp-android --lib: zero errors
- Android APK build verified earlier today (unridden-alfonso.apk
via the remote Docker builder) — Phase 0–3c confirmed to compile
end-to-end on the NDK target.
Phase 4b remaining (not blocking this commit):
- Periodic LossRecoveryUpdate emitter in wzp-client/src/call.rs and
wzp-android/src/engine.rs (every ~5 s)
- Relay-side handler in main.rs that matches the new variant and
calls metrics.update_session_loss_recovery
- Grafana "Loss recovery breakdown" panel in docs/grafana-dashboard.json
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Phase 3b of the DRED integration — wires the Phase 3a FFI primitives
into the desktop receive path. When the jitter buffer reports a missing
Opus frame, CallDecoder now attempts to reconstruct the audio from the
most recently parsed DRED side-channel state before falling through to
classical PLC.
Architectural refinement vs the PRD's literal wording: the PRD said
"jitter buffer takes a Box<dyn DredReconstructor>". After checking deps,
wzp-transport depends only on wzp-proto (not wzp-codec). Putting DRED
state in the jitter buffer would require a new cross-crate dep and
couple the codec-agnostic buffer to libopus. Instead, this commit keeps
the DRED state ring and reconstruction dispatch inside CallDecoder (one
layer up from the jitter buffer), intercepting the existing
PlayoutResult::Missing signal. Same lookahead/backfill semantics,
cleaner layering, zero change to wzp-transport.
Changes:
CallDecoder field type: Box<dyn AudioDecoder> → AdaptiveDecoder.
Required because Phase 3b calls the inherent reconstruct_from_dred
method, which cannot live on the AudioDecoder trait without dragging
libopus DredState through wzp-proto. In practice AdaptiveDecoder was
the only AudioDecoder implementor anyway — the trait abstraction was
buying nothing. Method call sites unchanged because AdaptiveDecoder
also implements AudioDecoder.
New CallDecoder fields:
- dred_decoder: DredDecoderHandle
- dred_parse_scratch: DredState (scratch for parse_into)
- last_good_dred: DredState (cached most-recent valid state)
- last_good_dred_seq: Option<u16>
- dred_reconstructions: u64 (Phase 4 telemetry)
- classical_plc_invocations: u64 (Phase 4 telemetry)
CallDecoder::ingest — on Opus non-repair packets, parse DRED into the
scratch state. On success (samples_available > 0), std::mem::swap the
scratch into last_good_dred and record the seq. This is O(1) per
packet, zero allocation after construction (the two DredState buffers
are allocated once in new() and reused forever).
CallDecoder::decode_next — on PlayoutResult::Missing(seq) for Opus
profiles: if last_good_dred_seq > seq and the seq delta × frame_samples
fits within samples_available, call audio_dec.reconstruct_from_dred
and bump dred_reconstructions. Otherwise fall through to classical
PLC and bump classical_plc_invocations. The Codec2 path always falls
through to classical PLC since DRED is libopus-only and
AdaptiveDecoder::reconstruct_from_dred rejects Codec2 tiers
explicitly.
OpusDecoder and AdaptiveDecoder: new inherent reconstruct_from_dred
method that delegates to the underlying DecoderHandle. Needed to
bridge CallDecoder's wzp-client code to the Phase 3a FFI wrappers
without touching the AudioDecoder trait.
CRITICAL FINDING — raised DRED loss floor from 5% to 15%:
Phase 3b testing discovered that libopus 1.5's DRED emission window
scales aggressively with OPUS_SET_PACKET_LOSS_PERC. Empirical data
(see probe_dred_samples_available_by_loss_floor, an #[ignore]'d
diagnostic test in call.rs):
loss_pct samples_available effective_ms
5% 720 15 ms (useless!)
10% 2640 55 ms
15% 4560 95 ms
20% 6480 135 ms
25%+ 8400 (capped) 175 ms (~87% of 200 ms configured)
The Phase 1 default of 5% produced only a 15 ms reconstruction window
— too small to even cover a single 20 ms Opus frame. DRED was
effectively disabled even though it was emitting bytes. Raised the
floor to 15% (95 ms window) as the minimum that actually provides
single-frame loss recovery. This updates Phase 1's DRED_LOSS_FLOOR_PCT
constant in opus_enc.rs and the accompanying module docstring.
Trade-off: 15% assumed loss slightly increases encoder bitrate overhead
on clean networks. Measured via the existing phase1 bitrate probe:
Before (5% floor): 3649 bytes/sec at Opus 24k + 300 Hz sine
After (15% floor): 3568 bytes/sec at Opus 24k + 300 Hz sine
The delta is within noise — 15% isn't meaningfully more expensive than
5% on this signal, which suggests the DRED emission size is signal-
dependent rather than loss-dependent for small values. Net result: we
get a 6x larger reconstruction window for essentially free.
Tests (+3 DRED recovery, +1 #[ignore]'d probe):
- opus_single_packet_loss_is_recovered_via_dred — full encode → ingest
→ decode_next loop with one packet dropped mid-stream. Asserts
dred_reconstructions ≥ 1 and observes the exact counter deltas.
- opus_lossless_ingest_never_triggers_dred_or_plc — baseline behavior,
lossless stream never takes the Missing branch.
- codec2_loss_falls_through_to_classical_plc — Codec2 never
reconstructs via DRED even if state were populated (which it won't
be — Codec2 packets don't carry DRED bytes).
- probe_dred_samples_available_by_loss_floor — #[ignore]'d diagnostic
that sweeps loss_pct values and prints the resulting DRED window
sizes. Kept for future tuning work.
New CallDecoder introspection accessors (public but undocumented in
the PRD): last_good_dred_seq() and last_good_dred_samples_available()
for test diagnostics and future telemetry surfaces in Phase 4.
Verification:
- cargo check --workspace: zero errors
- cargo test -p wzp-codec --lib: 68 passing (Phase 3a baseline held)
- cargo test -p wzp-client --lib: 35 passing (+3 Phase 3b tests,
+1 ignored diagnostic, no regressions)
Next up: Phase 3c mirrors this on the Android engine.rs receive path.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>