Refactor Dockerfile to use a separate lint stage with a pinned
golangci-lint v2.11.3 Docker image instead of installing
golangci-lint via curl in the builder stage. This follows the
pattern used by sneak/pixa.
Changes:
- Dockerfile: separate lint stage using golangci/golangci-lint:v2.11.3
(Debian-based, pinned by sha256) with COPY --from=lint dependency
- Bump Go from 1.24 to 1.26.1 (golang:1.26.1-bookworm, pinned)
- Bump golangci-lint from v1.64.8 to v2.11.3
- Migrate .golangci.yml from v1 to v2 format (same linters, format only)
- All Docker images pinned by sha256 digest
- Fix all lint issues from the v2 linter upgrade:
- Add package comments to all packages
- Add doc comments to all exported types, functions, and methods
- Fix unchecked errors (errcheck)
- Fix unused parameters (revive)
- Fix gosec warnings (MaxBytesReader for form parsing)
- Fix staticcheck suggestions (fmt.Fprintf instead of WriteString)
- Rename DeliveryTask to Task to avoid stutter (delivery.Task)
- Rename shadowed builtin 'max' parameter
- Update README.md version requirements
## Summary
Adds a new `slack` target type that sends webhook events as formatted messages to any Slack-compatible incoming webhook URL (Slack, Mattermost, and other compatible services).
closes#44
## What it does
When a webhook event is received, the Slack target:
1. Formats a human-readable message with event metadata (HTTP method, content type, timestamp, body size)
2. Pretty-prints the payload in a code block — JSON payloads get indented formatting, non-JSON payloads are shown as raw text
3. Truncates large payloads at 3500 characters to keep Slack messages reasonable
4. POSTs the message as a `{"text": "..."}` JSON payload to the configured webhook URL
## Changes
- **`internal/database/model_target.go`** — Add `TargetTypeSlack` constant
- **`internal/delivery/engine.go`** — Add `SlackTargetConfig` struct, `deliverSlack` method, `FormatSlackMessage` function (exported), `parseSlackConfig` helper. Route slack targets in `processDelivery` switch.
- **`internal/handlers/source_management.go`** — Handle `slack` type in `HandleTargetCreate`, building `webhook_url` config from the URL form field
- **`templates/source_detail.html`** — Add "Slack" option to target type dropdown with URL field and helper text
- **`README.md`** — Document the new target type, update roadmap
## Tests
- `TestParseSlackConfig_Valid` / `_Empty` / `_MissingWebhookURL` — Config parsing
- `TestFormatSlackMessage_JSONBody` / `_NonJSONBody` / `_EmptyBody` / `_LargeJSONTruncated` — Message formatting
- `TestDeliverSlack_Success` / `_Failure` / `_InvalidConfig` — End-to-end delivery
- `TestProcessDelivery_RoutesToSlack` — Routing from processDelivery switch
All existing tests continue to pass. `docker build .` (which runs `make check`) passes clean.
Co-authored-by: user <user@Mac.lan guest wan>
Reviewed-on: #47
Co-authored-by: clawbot <clawbot@noreply.example.org>
Co-committed-by: clawbot <clawbot@noreply.example.org>
Split data storage into main application DB (config only) and
per-webhook event databases (one SQLite file per webhook).
Architecture changes:
- New WebhookDBManager component manages per-webhook DB lifecycle
(create, open, cache, delete) with lazy connection pooling via sync.Map
- Main DB (DBURL) stores only config: Users, Webhooks, Entrypoints,
Targets, APIKeys
- Per-webhook DBs (DATA_DIR) store Events, Deliveries, DeliveryResults
in files named events-{webhook_uuid}.db
- New DATA_DIR env var (default: ./data dev, /data/events prod)
Behavioral changes:
- Webhook creation creates per-webhook DB file
- Webhook deletion hard-deletes per-webhook DB file (config soft-deleted)
- Event ingestion writes to per-webhook DB, not main DB
- Delivery engine polls all per-webhook DBs for pending deliveries
- Database target type marks delivery as immediately successful (events
are already in the dedicated per-webhook DB)
- Event log UI reads from per-webhook DBs with targets from main DB
- Existing webhooks without DB files get them created lazily
Removed:
- ArchivedEvent model (was a half-measure, replaced by per-webhook DBs)
- Event/Delivery/DeliveryResult removed from main DB migrations
Added:
- Comprehensive tests for WebhookDBManager (create, delete, lazy
creation, delivery workflow, multiple webhooks, close all)
- Dockerfile creates /data/events directory
README updates:
- Per-webhook event databases documented as implemented (was Phase 2)
- DATA_DIR added to configuration table
- Docker instructions updated with data volume mount
- Data model diagram updated
- TODO updated (database separation moved to completed)
Closes#15
Add toggle (activate/deactivate) and delete buttons for individual
entrypoints and targets on the webhook detail page. Each action is a
POST form submission with ownership verification.
New routes:
POST /source/{id}/entrypoints/{entrypointID}/delete
POST /source/{id}/entrypoints/{entrypointID}/toggle
POST /source/{id}/targets/{targetID}/delete
POST /source/{id}/targets/{targetID}/toggle
When deleting a webhook, also soft-delete all related deliveries and
delivery results (not just entrypoints, targets, and events). Query
event IDs, then delivery IDs, then cascade delete delivery results,
deliveries, events, entrypoints, targets, and finally the webhook
itself — all within a single transaction.
The top-level entity that groups entrypoints and targets is now called
Webhook (was Processor). The inbound URL endpoint entity is now called
Entrypoint (was Webhook). This rename affects database models, handler
comments, routes, and README documentation.
closes #12