* Limit the number of ids passed to the different queries to render the tooltip details to 10, for products, product types and shipping options
* Add changeset
* Extract common additional field computation into variable
## Summary
**What** — What changes are introduced in this PR?
This PR is part of a series of PRs to fix HTTP and request type arguments.
This is the last PR in the series. It includes a changeset for the changes made.
**Why** — Why are these changes relevant or necessary?
These types impact the outputted OAS which we show on the API reference. By fixing up the types, we ensure accurate request parameters in the API reference.
**How** — How have these changes been implemented?
Made changes to HTTP types and request type arguments
**Testing** — How have these changes been tested, or how can the reviewer test the feature?
-
---
## Examples
-
---
## Checklist
Please ensure the following before requesting a review:
- [ ] I have added a **changeset** for this PR
- Every non-breaking change should be marked as a **patch**
- To add a changeset, run `yarn changeset` and follow the prompts
- [ ] The changes are covered by relevant **tests**
- [ ] I have verified the code works as intended locally
- [ ] I have linked the related issue(s) if applicable
---
## Additional Context
-
* virtual i18n module
* changeset
* fallback ns
fallback to the default "translation" ns if the key isnt found. Allows to use a single "useTranslation("customNs")" hook for both custom and medusa-provided keys
* simplify merges
* optional for backward compat
* fix HMR
* fix generated deepMerge
* test
* feat(): version order credit lines
* undo last change
* adjust where
* remove date on ui
* Create five-donuts-obey.md
* add test
* nit comment
* woops
## Summary
**What** — What changes are introduced in this PR?
This PR fixes a bug where async workflow steps with retry intervals would get stuck after the first retry attempt due to Bull queue jobId collisions preventing retry jobs from executing.
**Why** — Why are these changes relevant or necessary?
Workflows using async steps with retry configurations (e.g., `retryInterval: 1`, `maxRetries: 5`) would fail once, schedule a retry, but the retry job would never execute, causing workflows to hang indefinitely.
**How** — How have these changes been implemented?
**Root Cause:** Bull queue was rejecting retry jobs because they had identical jobIds to the async execution jobs that already completed. Both used the format: `retry:workflow:transaction:step_id:attempts`.
**Solution:** Modified `getJobId()` in `workflow-orchestrator-storage.ts` to append a `:retry` suffix when `interval > 0`, creating unique jobIds:
- Async execution (interval=0): `retry:...:step_id:1`
- Retry scheduling (interval>0): `retry:...:step_id:1:retry`
Updated methods: `getJobId()`, `scheduleRetry()`, `removeJob()`, and `clearRetry()` to pass and handle the interval parameter.
**Testing** — How have these changes been tested, or how can the reviewer test the feature?
Added integration test `retry-interval.spec.ts` that verifies:
1. Step with `retryInterval: 1` and `maxRetries: 3` executes 3 times
2. Retry intervals are approximately 1 second between attempts
3. Workflow completes successfully after retries
4. Uses proper async workflow completion pattern with `subscribe()` and `onFinish` event
---
## Examples
```ts
// Example workflow step that would previously get stuck
export const testRetryStep = createStep(
{
name: "test-retry-step",
async: true,
retryInterval: 1, // 1 second retry interval
maxRetries: 3,
},
async (input: any) => {
// Simulate failure on first 2 attempts
if (attempts < 3) {
throw new Error("Temporary failure - will retry")
}
return { success: true }
}
)
// Before fix: Step would fail once, schedule retry, but retry job never fired (jobId collision)
// After fix: Step properly retries up to 3 times with 1-second intervals
```
---
## Checklist
Please ensure the following before requesting a review:
- [ ] I have added a **changeset** for this PR
- Every non-breaking change should be marked as a **patch**
- To add a changeset, run `yarn changeset` and follow the prompts
- [ ] The changes are covered by relevant **tests**
- [ ] I have verified the code works as intended locally
- [ ] I have linked the related issue(s) if applicable
---
## Additional Context
-
Co-authored-by: Carlos R. L. Rodrigues <37986729+carlos-r-l-rodrigues@users.noreply.github.com>
Fixes#13735
### What
This Pull Request introduces new database migrations to remove multiple redundant indexes across several core modules, including product, cart, order, customer, and inventory.
### Why
As detailed in issue #13735, a fresh Medusa installation produces numerous "Duplicate Index" warnings. These legacy indexes add unnecessary write overhead and provide no performance benefit. This PR cleans up the schema to resolve these warnings and improve database health.
### How
I have added one new, reversible migration file for each of the five affected modules:
- `@medusajs/product`
- `@medusajs/cart`
- `@medusajs/order`
- `@medusajs/customer`
- `@medusajs/inventory`
Each migration's `up()` method safely drops the older, redundant index, and its `down()` method re-creates it, ensuring the change is fully reversible and non-destructive.
### Testing
I have tested these migrations by following the local development workflow outlined in the `CONTRIBUTING.md` guide.
1. **Setup:**
* Cloned my forked Medusa repository locally .
* Created a separate, fresh test project using `npx create-medusa-app@latest my-medusa-store`.
* The test project's PostgreSQL database, which already contained the schema with the duplicate indexes.
2. **Linking Local Source Code:**
* In the test project's `package.json`, I modified all `@medusajs/*` dependencies and resolutions to point to the local packages in my forked repository (e.g., `"@medusajs/product": "file:../medusa/packages/modules/product"`).
* From the test project's directory, I ran `yarn install` to link the local, modified Medusa source code into its `node_modules`.
3. **Build & Migration:**
* Inside my forked Medusa repository, I ran `yarn build` to compile the new TypeScript migration files.
* From the root of the **test project**, I then executed the migration command: `npx medusa migration run`.
4. **Verification:**
* The command successfully identified and ran only the new migration files I had created.
* I also confirmed via direct SQL queries that the old, redundant indexes were correctly dropped from all affected tables (`product_collection`, `customer_group`, etc.).