In the wild, ships that were live pre-OS1 still had launch subscriptions
open to the clock on the /tile path, instead of the currently-used
/clocktile path. Additionally, launch state for the clock tile seemed
incomplete.
Here, we simply re-%add the clock to launch.
Note that launch currently does not clean up old subscriptions on
path change. For the pre-OS1 case, the old path is no longer in use,
rendering the subscription harmless. For cases where the correct
subscription was already in place, it'll print a %watch-wire-not-unique,
but doesn't do any harm besides that.
A syntax typo led the array for nested notebooks to not have paths
pushed into it. Only the last item in the group would be pushed into the
array. This commit fixes that typo.
Across every OS1 module (including the launch/home screen context) I edited some padding/margin/sizing for navigational elements for consistency across paging.
During the #2607 upgrade, strictly local collections got left out of the
listening set. (Because they did not have any outgoing subscriptions.)
This led to personal collections not being available on the frontend.
Here, we add upgrade logic for adding those back to our listening set again.
If a user had explicitly left a personal collection (instead of deleted it, for
whatever reason), they will have to leave it again. This case seems much more
rare than the "my collection is gone" one.
Events always pass through these, adding to the stack trace on-crash.
This information is practically never useful, however. Adding !. leaves
these cores out of the traces.
(Re)subscribing gets us a %contacts update, containing the full set of
contacts as it currently exists.
Previously, we would fully delete our local state, only to recreate it
using the data from the update.
Now, we never delete existing data, instead only creating if we don't
have it yet, and adding, removing or recreating contacts if they
changed.
In the future, we'll want an easy way to turn two contacts into an %edit
diff, to let us apply correct semantics to individual contacts, too.