Placement-as-grant, replacing the inferred auto-place idea. api_token_target_zones is an
ADDITIVE second table (does NOT touch the proven api_token_targets), structurally anchored:
a composite FK to api_token_targets(token_id, playlist_id) makes a zone grant orphan-
impossible and cascade away when the playlist grant is revoked - "narrow" is structural, not
conventional. zone_id FK -> layout_zones cascades on zone/layout delete.
Confinement (lib/agency-targets.resolveGrantedZone, called in the item-add): grants exist ->
the item MUST land in a granted zone (a body zone_id picks among grants, never escapes them);
none -> whole-playlist/full-screen as before. The item-add stamps the granted zone_id.
Bite-tested (6, all proven incl. neutralize->red on the confinement): granted YES; non-
granted/cross-playlist/ambiguous blocked; orphan-grant rejected by the FK; cascade on
playlist-grant revoke, on playlist delete, on zone/layout delete; and foreign_keys=ON
asserted (a cascade that no-ops because FKs are off is the trap). 153 suite green.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
So the agency can size/place content: returns the canvas size + zone positions/sizes for the
layouts its designated playlists feed, marking which zones are theirs. DEVICE-FREE BY
CONSTRUCTION - the query path is playlist_items.zone_id -> layout_zones -> layouts and never
touches devices/groups/schedules, so device names/locations/IPs/topology are structurally
absent, not filtered. Geometry only - no sibling-zone content. layout.name included (admin's
canvas name); thumbnail_data omitted (could render other zones' content).
Confinement query in lib/agency-layouts.js, bite-tested: own layout YES, a non-designated
playlist's layout NO, response has NO device fields (asserted on a db where a location-named
device exists), and neutralizing the t.token_id filter goes red. 142 suite green.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
The portal needs to show an agency which playlists it may post to. New read surface on the
security primitive, built with write-path rigor: the confinement query lives in
lib/agency-targets.js (own token + bound workspace only) and is bite-tested four ways -
own targets yes; another token's, outside the allowlist, and cross-workspace all NO;
neutralizing the t.token_id filter makes it go red. Real-path wiring + the portal's
graceful 401 trigger asserted in the integration suite. No :playlistId, so router.param
doesn't apply - the query is the seam.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
routes/content.js POST / processing (thumbnail/dimensions/duration) + insert moved to
lib/content-ingest.js so the agency router produces byte-identical first-class content.
content.js POST / is now a thin caller; behavior-preserving - the 52 content regression
tests (api/operator-permissions/config-paths) pass unchanged.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
lib/totp.js: otplib wrapper; secret stored via secretbox (must be reversible to recompute
codes); recovery codes SHA-256-hashed (api_tokens discipline); verifyCode returns the
matched step and blocks intra-window replay via totp_last_step; decrypt failures return
null (no throw). lib/totp-lockout.js: per-user lockout for /totp/verify (#87 model).
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
The 6-digit pairing code is generated client-side, so the server can't raise its entropy
without a player change. Instead, harden server-side (no client change):
- lib/pair-lockout.js: lock an IP out of POST /api/provision/pair after 5 failed claims
(15-min lockout), and expire stale provisioning codes after 15 min so a code is not
claimable indefinitely. A successful claim resets the IP.
- /pair enforces both. Only an UNKNOWN code (404) counts toward the lockout (a real guess);
an EXPIRED code (410) is a legitimate-but-stale code and does NOT count, so a slow bulk
rollout from one shared-NAT IP can't lock itself out. getClientIp is Cloudflare-aware
(CF-Connecting-IP validated against a trusted edge peer), so the lockout keys on the real
per-client IP, never a shared edge.
Unit-tested deterministically with injected time, incl. the bulk-rollout-never-locks case.
Closes#87
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Each playlist item can carry schedule blocks (active days, start/end
time-of-day, optional start/end dates). An item plays when the screen's
local "now" matches at least one block; an item with no blocks always
plays. #74 covers time-of-day/day-of-week windows including overnight
wrap; #75 covers inclusive date ranges (auto-expiry). Evaluation is
on-device, so dayparting and expiry work offline.
- Shared evaluator contract: shared/schedule-vectors.json (39 vectors —
DST US+AU, overnight-wrap anchoring, timezone correctness, date
boundaries). Canonical JS evaluator in server/lib/schedule-eval.js;
Kotlin and Tizen ports kept in lockstep by drift guards (Tizen byte-diff
test, Kotlin JUnit reads the shared JSON, new android-test CI job).
- All three players (web, Android, Tizen) filter by schedule against their
own clock, idle with a "Nothing scheduled" message + 30s re-check when
everything is filtered, and fail open on any evaluator error.
- Editor: per-item schedule modal + row badge in the playlist editor;
client validation mirrors the server; editing marks the playlist draft.
- Part B (behaviour change): device/group schedule overrides now evaluate
in each device's effective timezone instead of server-local time.
- Device detail shows the reported timezone + a clock-skew warning.
- i18n for en/es/fr/de/pt across all new strings (namespaced itemsched.*
to avoid colliding with the device-schedule calendar's schedule.*).
- CHANGELOG documents the feature, the Part B change, the fail-open
guarantee, and the scheduled-single-video re-render tradeoff.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
A prompt now produces a full sign: the LLM writes the design AND image prompts,
the server generates the images and composites them with the crisp text layer.
- lib/image-gen.js: text-to-image with 3 BYO/self-hostable backends, all behind
the SSRF guard: 'sdcpp' (local stable-diffusion.cpp OpenAI-compatible server,
exact small sizes that fit VRAM), 'openai' (cloud / OpenAI-compatible, snapped
sizes), 'comfyui' (prompt/history/view API).
- ai.js: prompt asks for a background_prompt (preferred — full-bleed atmosphere)
and an optional foreground image element; after the design is normalized, the
bg + fg images are generated best-effort (a failed image never fails the sign)
and returned as data URLs. New image_* settings (provider/base_url/model),
image_provider whitelist, schema column + migration.
- designer.js: AI-images section in settings; generate applies the background
image; publish bakes the background image into the HTML so it survives.
- server.js: raise JSON body limit to 12mb for embedded image data URLs.
Verified end-to-end on local Vulkan SDXL (RTX 5090): prompt -> bg+fg images on
the canvas -> publish creates a widget with the images embedded. 63/63.
Note: prod (not self-hosted) requires a PUBLIC image endpoint (e.g. OpenAI); the
SSRF guard blocks localhost there. Follow-up: upload generated images to the
content store and reference by URL to avoid multi-MB widget configs.
Competitor pressure (Mandoe 'AI Magic Create'): prompt -> signage. We answer it
in a way that's actually BETTER for signage and costs the operator nothing.
Key idea: don't generate raw images (AI garbles text - fatal for menus/promos).
The LLM returns a STRUCTURED design spec (headline, supporting text, accent
shapes, palette) that the existing Designer renders with real fonts - crisp and
fully editable. Reuses the whole Designer.
BYOK, fully under the customer's control: each workspace configures its own
OpenAI-COMPATIBLE endpoint + key - OpenAI cloud OR self-hosted (Ollama / LM Studio
/ llama.cpp). Operator bears zero AI cost/liability.
- server/lib/secretbox.js: AES-256-GCM for the key at rest (never returned).
- routes/ai.js: GET/PUT /api/ai/settings (admin; key write-only) + POST
/generate-design (editor+). Output is strictly validated/normalized (cap count,
clamp ranges, px->%, strip HTML, validate colors) - never trust the model.
SSRF guard: hosted instances block private/internal targets; self-hosted (the
whole point of local AI) may point at localhost/LAN.
- Designer: an 'AI generate' panel (prompt + Generate) + a settings modal.
Verified end-to-end against local Ollama (llama3.1:8b): prompt -> editable design
on the canvas. Unit tests cover normalization + the SSRF guard. Suite 61/61.
Phase 2 (next): AI background images (OpenAI images / AUTOMATIC1111).
Self-hosters rebuilding could end up schema-behind-code, failing only at runtime
(a missing users.must_change_password locked out all logins). Two root causes:
1. The migration loop swallowed EVERY error (catch {}), so a real ALTER failure
was indistinguishable from the benign 'duplicate column' on an already-migrated
DB. Now only 'duplicate column'/'already exists' is treated as a no-op; any
other error is logged loudly, and a one-line summary reports how many new
column migrations actually applied this boot.
2. Nothing verified the schema after migrations. Added lib/schema-check.js:
verifyAndRepairSchema() checks the tables + columns the request path REQUIRES,
idempotently repairs missing repairable columns (logging each), and if anything
required is STILL missing, prints a loud FATAL block and exits - failing fast at
boot instead of at the first authed request.
Note: the reported 'audit_log missing' was a misdiagnosis - the code uses
activity_log (0 refs to audit_log), created by schema.sql on every boot.
Tests: healthy (no-op), auto-repair of must_change_password, missing-table report.
Platform admins can now cleanly remove a customer org (account ends) or a stray
workspace from the UI, instead of raw SQL that risks orphaning resources.
The tenant cascade isn't pure DB CASCADE - workspace-scoped tables (devices,
content, playlists, ...) are NO ACTION and must be purged before the workspace.
Extracted that logic out of deleteUserCascade into shared deleteWorkspaceCascade /
deleteOrgCascade helpers (one tested implementation; deleteUserCascade now reuses
the purgeWorkspaces extraction).
Backend (platform-admin only): GET /api/admin/orgs (list + owner + counts +
workspaces), DELETE /api/admin/orgs/:id, DELETE /api/admin/workspaces/:id.
UI: an Organizations section in Admin listing every org/workspace with a
type-the-name confirmation before the irreversible delete.
Tests: org/workspace cascade (real FKs) + endpoint gating/404. Suite 53/53.
Five low-risk, high-value fixes surfaced by the security review:
#3 Branding lockdown — `custom_domain`/`custom_css` (which feed the PUBLIC,
pre-auth branding resolver and the login-page <style>) are now settable only
by platform admins; a workspace_admin can no longer hijack the platform login
page by claiming its domain. The public /api/branding (+ /domain) now return
only presentational fields via publicBranding() (no id/user_id/workspace_id/
custom_domain/timestamps leak).
#6 Strip device_token — the device WS auth secret (validated with
timingSafeEqual) was returned in device list/get/update + pairing responses
(SELECT d.* / *). New lib/device-sanitize.js strips it everywhere; prevents
device impersonation by any workspace user.
#7 must_change_password enforced server-side — was a frontend-only redirect, so
a provisioned temp password worked indefinitely via the API. requireAuth now
403s every route except GET/PUT /api/auth/me (the password change, which
clears the flag) and logout while the flag is set.
#8 XSS — escape user data interpolated into innerHTML in teams.js, kiosk.js,
layout-editor.js (team/page/layout/zone names, member name/email, kiosk
config fields). scriptSrcAttr 'unsafe-inline' made these exploitable via
injected event handlers, not just markup.
#9 Thumbnail IDOR — /api/content/:id/thumbnail had no auth/scope gate (any UUID
served any tenant's thumbnail). Now mirrors the /file route's playlist/widget
workspace-scoped reference check.
Tests: new test/security-fixes.test.js (device strip, publicBranding field
allowlist, must_change_password gate). Full suite 41/41. Verified live against a
prod-data copy: device_token absent from /api/devices, /api/branding trimmed.
Not addressed here (tracked for follow-up): Android OTA signature verification
(Critical), public widget-render XSS, token revocation/logout, pairing-code
strength, validateRemoteUrl hardening, import quota.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
White-label is stored per-workspace (white_labels.workspace_id); unbranded and
new workspaces - and the login page - fell back to hardcoded ScreenTinker. Add a
single platform default that everything inherits beneath the per-workspace layer.
Resolution (lib/branding.js): workspace row -> custom-domain match -> platform
default -> hardcoded ScreenTinker. Row-level override: a workspace with its own
row keeps it (current behavior); only row-less workspaces inherit the default,
so editing the default propagates instantly (no row-copying at creation).
The platform default is a white_labels row with a FIXED id ('platform-default'),
not a "workspace_id IS NULL" sentinel - legacy pre-multitenancy rows can also
have a null workspace_id, which would be ambiguous.
- routes/admin.js: GET/PUT /api/admin/branding (requirePlatformAdmin) to read/
upsert the single platform-default row; audit-logged.
- server.js: public GET /api/branding (domain match -> platform default ->
hardcoded) for pre-login/pre-workspace contexts.
- routes/white-label.js: authed GET now falls back to the platform default
(was hardcoded) for row-less workspaces.
- Frontend: login page resolves + applies branding (logo, name, colors, favicon,
custom CSS) pre-auth; Admin page gets a "Default branding" form.
Tests: resolver order incl. legacy null-ws safety; admin GET/PUT (single row,
upsert, platform-admin-only 403). Full suite 37/37. Verified end-to-end:
public + authed + login-page all inherit the platform default; per-workspace
override preserved.
Closes#15.
The #18 user-delete bug was the first symptom of a broader gap: 13 tables
reference workspaces(id) (and activity_log also organizations(id)) with NO
ACTION, so deleting a workspace or organization fails the same FK wall once it
holds any content. SQLite can't ALTER an FK action, so this migration rebuilds
each table (the create-copy-rename pattern the assignments/schedules migrations
already use), changing only the tenant FK clause:
workspace_id -> ON DELETE CASCADE (resources belong to the workspace)
activity_log.workspace_id / organization_id -> ON DELETE SET NULL (keep audit)
user_id FKs are intentionally left as-is - user deletion stays handled app-side
by lib/user-deletion.js (the #18 fix).
- lib/tenant-cascade-migration.js: pure, idempotent core (table-existence
guarded; transforms the stored CREATE text, copies rows verbatim, recreates
indexes; fixes activity_log's AUTOINCREMENT sequence; baseline-vs-after
foreign_key_check so pre-existing orphan rows don't abort it but a botched
rebuild does).
- db/database.js: boot wrapper owns the pre-migration snapshot + process.exit
on failure, matching the other heavy migrations.
Tests (node:test): reproduces the workspace-delete FK failure, applies the
migration, verifies FK actions (CASCADE / SET NULL), index recreation, data
preserved, and that workspace/org delete now cascades (activity_log preserved).
Full suite 27/27. Verified on a copy of a real DB: 13 tables rebuilt,
integrity_check ok, workspace delete cascades, no new FK violations.
DELETE /api/auth/users/:id ran a bare `DELETE FROM users`, but 23 columns
reference users(id) and only 4 cascade, so with foreign_keys=ON the delete
fails the moment the user is referenced anywhere - and a real user always is
(owns an org, created a workspace, has login activity). Reproduces on a fresh
DB, exactly as reported.
The schema also lacks cascades from workspaces -> tenant resources, so the DB
can't clean up on its own. New lib/user-deletion.js resolves every reference in
one transaction (defer_foreign_keys=ON for forgiving order; table-existence
guard for resilience):
- Refuse (409) if the user OWNS an organization that has other members -
don't nuke a shared tenant; transfer ownership first.
- Hard-delete the organizations they SOLELY own (workspaces + all contents).
- In orgs they don't own, PRESERVE resources: SET NULL the nullable
creator/inviter columns, and reassign the NOT NULL legacy creator user_id to
the resource's org owner (fallback: the acting admin).
- Memberships (organization_members/workspace_members/team_members/
content_folders) cascade on the user delete; pending invites they sent and
legacy teams they own are removed.
The handler now 404s an unknown id and 409s the shared-org case.
Tests (node:test): reproduces the FK failure, then verifies provisioned-member
delete (resources preserved + unlinked/reassigned), solo-org-owner cascade,
shared-org refusal (409), self-delete 400, non-superadmin 403, unknown 404.
Full suite 22/22. Verified end-to-end on a copy of a real DB: deleted a user
owning 2 solo orgs, foreign_key_check clean.
Closes#18.
platform_operator is cross-org STAFF: it can see and act-as into every
org and read/write workspace-scoped resources (content, playlists,
layouts, schedules, devices, widgets, kiosk) anywhere - but holds NO
owner-level power.
Design is deny-by-default: operator is NEVER added to PLATFORM_ROLES /
isPlatformRole, so every owner capability (billing, org/workspace
deletion, user/role management, shared & template asset curation,
branding, workspace member mgmt/rename) stays denied, and any NEW owner
endpoint added later inherits that denial automatically.
Operator gets power from exactly two levers:
- middleware/auth.js: new PLATFORM_STAFF set + isPlatformStaff(); owner
guards (PLATFORM_ROLES, requireAdmin, requireSuperAdmin) unchanged.
- tenancy.js: accessContext + resolveTenancy treat staff as act-as
capable; new req.isPlatformStaff / req.isPlatformOperator (req.isPlatformAdmin
stays owner-only); accessibleWorkspaceIds + switch-workspace guard use staff.
- permissions.js: canRead/canWrite + canAccessWorkspace (read) grant staff;
canAdmin / canAdminWorkspace / isOrgAdmin / isOrgOwner stay owner-gated.
Read-only edges (per review): operator may VIEW workspace member lists
(canAccessWorkspace) and the unassigned device pool (devices.js), but
cannot mutate either.
Frontend: platform role dropdown adds "Platform operator"; the user-mgmt
view stays isPlatformAdmin-gated so operators can't open it. EN i18n only.
Behaviour identical under HOSTED_INSTANCE set or unset.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
The legacy /api/auth/users dropdown could write 'superadmin' and 'admin'
role strings that not every code path recognized. Some checks matched only
'platform_admin' (tenancy accessContext/resolveTenancy), so a 'superadmin'
user could list orgs but not act-as into them.
Normalize to the current two-tier platform model (users.role holds the
PLATFORM role only; org/workspace roles live in the membership tables):
- Migration (idempotent, exact-string): superadmin -> platform_admin,
admin -> user. No-ops on rows already in the current model.
- Add isPlatformRole() helper in middleware/auth.js; route the two
superadmin-excluding checks in tenancy.js through it so a stray
'superadmin' is never treated as lower-privileged (fixes act-as).
- Remove the dead/stricter requirePlatformAdmin in permissions.js (bare
=== 'platform_admin'); the single guard is the one in middleware/auth.js.
- Recovery-token default role admin -> platform_admin so emergency
recovery keeps full access once 'admin' no longer implies elevation.
- PUT /api/auth/users/:id/role whitelist -> ['user','platform_admin'];
self-demote guard retargeted via isPlatformRole.
- Frontend: platform user-management dropdown now offers User / Platform
admin only; owner-delete guard and settings highlight use isPlatformAdmin.
EN i18n: add admin.role.platform_admin.
Behaviour is identical under HOSTED_INSTANCE set or unset; the migration
only touches exact legacy strings.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Slice 1 + 3 of the user-management feature from the May 12 plan.
Backend-only - no UI yet (slice 2 ships separately). Backend +
accept-handler together so the email accept link is functional
from day one without a half-state.
Endpoints added:
- GET /api/workspaces/:id/members (any member; via_org=true
for org-level entries,
read-only from ws context)
- GET /api/workspaces/:id/invites (workspace_admin)
- POST /api/workspaces/:id/invites (workspace_admin)
- DELETE /api/workspaces/:id/invites/:inviteId (workspace_admin)
- PUT /api/workspaces/:id/members/:userId (workspace_admin)
- DELETE /api/workspaces/:id/members/:userId (workspace_admin)
- POST /api/auth/accept-invite/:inviteId (requireAuth +
case-insensitive
email match)
Permission gating:
- canAdminWorkspace (existing) for admin-gated endpoints
- canAccessWorkspace (new helper in lib/permissions.js) for the
members read endpoint - mirrors canAdminWorkspace shape but
admits any workspace_members role plus org/platform paths
Security additions vs the original plan:
- Transaction-bounded collision check on POST /invites closes the
TOCTOU race between simultaneous duplicate POSTs (no UNIQUE
constraint on workspace_invites(workspace_id, email))
- Per-(inviter, workspace), hour-window rate limit on POST /invites
to prevent abuse / cost runaway. Env-configurable via
INVITE_RATE_LIMIT_PER_HOUR with conservative 50/hour default.
429 response is generic - does not echo the configured value.
- Invite expiry env-configurable via INVITE_EXPIRY_DAYS (default 7)
- PUBLIC_URL env var (optional) pins the accept-URL origin in prod;
falls back to request-derived for local dev
Rollback rule on email send: only graph_error (real send attempt
failed at Graph) deletes the row and returns 502. not_configured
and dev_restricted are intentional non-sends - keep the row, count
against rate limit, allow local accept-invite testing to proceed.
Other safety blocks:
- Cannot demote/remove the last workspace_admin (409)
- Cannot remove the parent-org's org_owner via workspace path (403)
- Accept-invite is idempotent if user already a member
- Expired invites delete-on-read and return 410
- Wrong-account accept returns 403 without touching the invite
Expired-invite cleanup added to services/heartbeat.js mirroring
the team_invites sweep pattern.
Verification: 9-case curl-driven E2E against the dev DB fixture
(switcher-test + invitee-existing + invitee-new mid-flow register).
All 9 pass: create / collision-409 / second-create / rate-limit-429 /
existing-user-accept / register-then-accept / wrong-account-403 /
expired-410 / viewer-cannot-invite-403.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
The non-admin branch of /me's accessible_workspaces query drove
from workspace_members, so users with org_owner or org_admin on
an organization but no direct workspace_members row were missing
those workspaces from their /me response - and therefore from the
switcher dropdown. Mirrors the access logic in
accessibleWorkspaceIds() (lib/tenancy.js) while keeping the
full-row SELECT shape /me needs.
Verified end-to-end with switcher-test@local.test acting as
org_owner of Acme Studios with no workspace_members row on
Studio B - Studio B now appears in /me's accessible_workspaces
with workspace_role: null, can_admin: true.
Also updates the stale TODO comment in tenancy.js that flagged
this exact gap.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Short-lived per-device queue covers the TV-flap window (issue #3):
when a device is mid-reconnect, prior code emitted to an empty room
and the event vanished. Now playlist-updates and commands targeting
an offline device are queued and flushed in order on the next
device:register for that device_id.
server/lib/command-queue.js (new):
- pendingPlaylistUpdate: per-device marker (rebuild via builder on
flush -> always fresh DB state, no stale snapshots)
- pendingCommands: per-device Map<type, payload> with last-of-type
dedup (most recent screen_off wins)
- TTL via COMMAND_QUEUE_TTL_MS env (default 30000)
- Active sweep every 30s prunes expired entries
Memory bounds: ~6 entries per device worst case (1 playlist marker
+ 5 command types), unref'd sweep timer.
Wired emit sites (8 total; the four direct socket.emit calls in
deviceSocket register handlers are intentionally NOT queued because
the socket is alive by definition at those points):
- server/routes/video-walls.js (pushWallPayloadToDevice)
- server/routes/device-groups.js (pushPlaylistToDevice)
- server/routes/content.js (content-delete fan-out)
- server/routes/playlists.js (pushToDevices + assign)
- server/services/scheduler.js (scheduled rotations)
- server/ws/deviceSocket.js x2 (wall leader reclaim/reassign)
server/ws/deviceSocket.js register paths now call flushQueue after
heartbeat.registerConnection + socket.join. Existing
socket.emit('device:playlist-update', ...) lines kept - they send
the initial state on register; the flush replays any queued events.
Player's handlePlaylistUpdate fingerprint check dedupes the
overlap.
Refs #3
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Fix: at connect, enumerate the user's accessible workspace_ids (direct workspace_members + org_owner/admin paths + platform_admin 'all') via new accessibleWorkspaceIds() helper in lib/tenancy.js; socket.join one room per workspace. All 12 dashboardNs.emit sites across deviceSocket / heartbeat / server.js / devices route / video-walls route now route via dashboardNs.to(workspaceRoom(...)).emit() with the workspace looked up from the relevant device or wall. New lib/socket-rooms.js holds the helpers and breaks a circular dependency (dashboardSocket already requires heartbeat, so heartbeat can't require dashboardSocket).
Inbound 6 commands rewired to canActOnDevice(socket, deviceId, tier): request-screenshot is read tier (workspace_viewer+); remote-touch/key/start/stop and device-command are write tier (workspace_editor+). Platform_admin and org_owner/admin always pass via actingAs. Legacy admin/superadmin branch dropped.
Lifecycle note: workspace-switch already calls window.location.reload (Phase 3 switcher), which forces a fresh socket with updated memberships - no per-emit re-evaluation needed.
Smoke tested with 3 simultaneous socket.io-client connections (switcher-test, swninja, dw5304 platform_admin) + direct canActOnDevice invocation for 6 user/device/tier combinations. All 9 outbound isolation cells and all 6 permission gates pass. Fixture mutation: switcher-test's Field Crew membership flipped from workspace_editor to workspace_viewer to exercise the read/write tier split in one login.