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Johannes Millan afce65dcd7
fix(sync): quiesce op capture before snapshot and compaction (#8469) (#9083)
* fix(sync): quiesce op capture before snapshot and compaction (#8469)

NgRx state mutates synchronously at dispatch while an op's seq is only
assigned later in the persist effect under the OPERATION_LOG lock. The
snapshot save and threshold compaction captured state + lastSeq under a
bare lock, so an op dispatched-but-unsequenced could have its reducer
effect baked into the state cache while its seq landed after
lastAppliedOpSeq - the next boot's tail replay then re-applied it,
double-applying non-idempotent reducers (removeTimeSpent,
logFocusSession, addNote, addBoard, addTaskAttachment, plain-append
move/batch branches). Compaction made this a live-use window (every
COMPACTION_THRESHOLD ops), not just a hydration edge.

Both writers now run through flushThenRunExclusive: drain the capture
pipeline before acquiring the non-reentrant lock, re-check the pending
counter inside it. The snapshot body reads state first (synchronously at
the quiesce cutoff) and lastSeq after - exact while the lock blocks seq
assignment; compaction re-checks the counter AND the deferred-actions
buffer (uncounted, kept across windows after a failed drain) in the same
synchronous block as its state read and bails, retriggering on the next
threshold. Emergency compaction keeps the bare lock: it runs inside the
failing write's call stack during quota handling, where that write's
pending entry is still elevated - flushing would self-wait until timeout
and break quota recovery.

Known trade-off: a wedged persist effect now surfaces as a flush timeout
(skipped save / compaction failure counter) instead of a silently
tagged-behind cache.

* test(sync): isolate module-level deferred buffer across specs

The #8469 capture bail reads the module-level deferred-actions buffer,
which is shared across the whole karma bundle. The meta-reducer-ordering
integration spec buffers persistent actions during its simulated sync
window and never cleared them, so under jasmine's random spec order any
later spec using the real compaction/snapshot services could see a dirty
buffer and skip its capture - the CI-only failure in
performance.integration.spec.ts ("Expected null not to be null").

Clear the buffer in the leaking spec's afterEach, and defensively in the
beforeEach of every spec that exercises the real bail, so no other
leaker can fail them order-dependently.
2026-07-16 19:09:47 +02:00
.agents/skills/commit-messages
.air
.codex chore: add project-scoped Angular MCP 2026-07-13 10:31:37 +02:00
.devcontainer
.github fix(sync): isolate provider encryption settings + enforce critical e2e coverage (#9044) 2026-07-15 14:24:49 +02:00
.husky
.signpath/policies/super-productivity
.vscode
android fix(android): keep material icons aligned with system font scaling (#8992) 2026-07-14 12:38:12 +02:00
build chore(ui): removes dead utilities and op-log leftovers [#8260 - Tier A] (#8892) 2026-07-11 13:05:34 +02:00
docs fix(sync): rebase repair op clocks on the durable clock (#8939) (#9080) 2026-07-16 17:13:57 +02:00
e2e fix(sync): rebase repair op clocks on the durable clock (#8939) (#9080) 2026-07-16 17:13:57 +02:00
electron fix(electron): assert renderer IPC boundary at window creation (#9018) 2026-07-15 10:37:10 +02:00
eslint-local-rules
fastlane
ios
nginx
packages fix(sync): authenticate LWW project-move footprint (#9053) (#9054) 2026-07-15 21:52:06 +02:00
scripts chore(scripts): remove one-off codemod scripts [#8260 - Tier A] (#8893) 2026-07-11 10:36:24 +02:00
snap/hooks
src fix(sync): quiesce op capture before snapshot and compaction (#8469) (#9083) 2026-07-16 19:09:47 +02:00
tools
.browserslistrc
.dockerignore
.editorconfig
.env.example
.gitattributes
.gitignore
.gitmodules
.gitpod.yml
.npmrc
.nvmrc
.prettierignore
.prettierrc.json
.stylelintrc.mjs
AGENTS.md docs(sync): add sync simplification roadmap (#9062) 2026-07-16 13:42:38 +02:00
angular.json
ARCHITECTURE-DECISIONS.md fix(sync): make marked project deletions win LWW conflicts (#9009) 2026-07-14 19:58:33 +02:00
capacitor.config.ts
CLAUDE.md
CONTRIBUTING.md
docker-compose.e2e.fast.yaml
docker-compose.e2e.yaml
docker-compose.supersync.yaml
docker-compose.yaml
docker-entrypoint.sh
Dockerfile
Dockerfile.e2e.dev
Dockerfile.e2e.dev.fast
electron-builder.yaml
eslint.config.js docs(sync): add sync simplification roadmap (#9062) 2026-07-16 13:42:38 +02:00
funding.json
Gemfile
Gemfile.lock
LICENSE
ngsw-config.json
package-lock.json 18.14.0 2026-07-10 17:23:35 +02:00
package.json chore: update npm for release-age policy 2026-07-13 10:31:37 +02:00
README.md
SECURITY.md
tsconfig.base.json
tsconfig.json
webdav.yaml

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An advanced todo list app with timeboxing & time tracking capabilities that supports importing tasks from your calendar, Jira, GitHub and others

🌐 Open Web App or 💻 Download


MIT license   GitHub Discussions

Reddit Community   Super Productivity on Mastodon   Tweet

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💻 Downloads & Install

Get it on Flathub Get it from the Snap Store English badge Play Store Badge F-Droid Badge Obtanium Badge App Store Badge

For all current downloads, package links, and platform-specific notes: check the wiki
Get it on GitHub


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Humanitarian Aid for Ukraine
Support humanitarian relief via the official National Bank of Ukraine account.


✔️ Features

  • Keep organized and focused! Plan and categorize your tasks using sub-tasks, projects and tags and color code them as needed.
  • Use timeboxing and track your time. Create time sheets and work summaries in a breeze to easily export them to your company's time tracking system.
  • Helps you to establish healthy & productive habits:
    • A break reminder reminds you when it's time to step away.
    • The anti-procrastination feature helps you gain perspective when you really need to.
    • Need some extra focus? A Pomodoro timer is also always at hand.
    • Collect personal metrics to see, which of your work routines need adjustments.
  • Integrate with Jira, Trello, GitHub, GitLab, Gitea, OpenProject, Linear, ClickUp and Azure DevOps. Auto import tasks assigned to you, plan the details locally, automatically create work logs, and get notified immediately, when something changes.
  • Basic CalDAV integration.
  • Back up and synchronize your data across multiple devices with Dropbox and WebDAV support
  • Attach context information to tasks and projects. Create notes, attach files or create project-level bookmarks for links, files, and even commands.
  • Super Productivity respects your privacy and does NOT collect any data and there are no user accounts or registration. You decide where you store your data!
  • It's free and open source and always will be.

And much more!

Work View with global links

Note

The web version has some limitations: See the Web App vs Desktop comparison for more details.

📖 Documentation and Guides

Getting Started

Starting Point in Wiki:
First stepsReferenceHow-To

Productivity Tips:
Keyboard ShortcutsShort Syntax

Need Help?
Visit the discussions page

See the bottom of the README for more information on the documentation.

Advanced Topics

Here are some other topics covered in the official wiki:

Development:
Run dev serverPackage the appBuild for AndroidRun with Docker

Data Management:
User DataIssue ProvidersSync Providers

Customization:
PluginsThemes

APIs:
Sync ServerPluginsREST

Community

The development of Super Productivity is driven by a wonderful community of users and contributors. Thank you all so much for your support!

👀 Check out our awesome curated list of community-created resources about Super Productivity

♥️ Contributing

If you want to get involved, please check out the CONTRIBUTING.md

There are several ways to help.

  1. Spread the word: More users mean more people testing and contributing to the app which in turn means better stability and possibly more and better features. You can vote for Super Productivity on Slant, Product Hunt, Softpedia or on AlternativeTo, you can tweet about it, share it on LinkedIn, reddit or any of your favorite social media platforms. Every little bit helps!

  2. Provide a Pull Request: Here is a list of the most popular community requests and here some info on how to run the development build (wiki). Please make sure that you're following the commit message format and to also include the issue number in your commit message, if you're fixing a particular issue (e.g.: feat: add nice feature #31).

  3. Answer questions: You know the answer to another user's problem? Share your knowledge!

  4. Provide your opinion: Some community suggestions are controversial. Your input might be helpful and if it is just an up- or down-vote.

  5. Provide a more refined UI spec for existing feature requests

  6. Report bugs

  7. Make a feature or improvement request: Something can be done better? Something essential missing? Let us know!

  8. Translations, Icons, etc.: You don't have to be a programmer to help; learn how to contribute translations!

  1. Sponsor the project

  2. Create custom plugins or custom themes

Special Thanks to our Sponsors!!!

Recently support for Super Productivity has been growing! A big thank you to all our sponsors!

(If you are, intend to or have been a sponsor and want to be shown here, please let me know!)

Code Signing

Windows binaries are signed. Free code signing is provided by SignPath.io, certificate by SignPath Foundation.

Documentation: Manual versus Automated

There are two wikis: the official one hosted in by GitHub and the autonomously generated variant using DeepWiki.com. The manually curated version is a more stable and approachable resource designed to help you understand the app from a more human-focused perspective whereas DeepWiki is optimized for explaining the code itself with little regard for context beyond that.

Official Wiki

It is preferable to maintain local documentation rather than rely on an external service. It also preferable that the documentation is updated in tandem with the code changes as demonstrated in this commit.

Changes to files within ./docs/wiki are linted in CI before being automatically sync'd to the repository's official Wiki hosted by GitHub.

Migrating to Docusaurus is a long-term goal once the content and structure of the wiki has matured and the remaining "legacy docs" have either been reworked or removed. There are some automations in development to help reduce the difference between the published docs and the state of the code while retaining a human-in-the-loop.

DeepWiki.com

If you have very specific questions about how the code works or why a bug might be producing a particular message it might be useful to Ask DeepWiki . It can help "cite your sources" when discussing functionality and code that you don't fully understand as part of feature requests or bug reports.

This automated reference does come with some significant drawbacks:

  1. Intent: Describes what code does, not why decisions or tradeoffs were made.
  2. Staleness: Will *always* lag behind the code.
  3. Code-Focused: Does not provide guides or conceptual explanations.
  4. Cost: Potential future cost and higher resource usage than static docs.