## Problem
The submit path in `codeforces.py` guarded `cookie_cache.write_text` on
the presence of a `JSESSIONID` cookie. Codeforces does not use
`JSESSIONID`, so the cookie file was never written after submit,
breaking the fast-path on subsequent submits.
## Solution
Replace the name-specific guard with a non-empty check (`if
browser_cookies:`), matching the unconditional save already used in the
login path.
Closes#301.
## Problem
`:CP <platform> login` blindly caches username/password without
server-side
validation. Bad credentials are only discovered at submit time, which is
confusing and wastes a browser session.
## Solution
Wire `:CP <platform> login` through the scraper pipeline so each
platform
actually authenticates before persisting credentials. On failure, the
user
sees an error and nothing is cached.
- CSES: reuses `_check_token` (fast path) and `_web_login`; returns API
token
in `LoginResult.credentials` so subsequent submits skip re-auth.
- AtCoder/Codeforces: new `_login_headless` functions open a
StealthySession,
solve Turnstile/Cloudflare, fill the login form, and validate success by
checking for the logout link. Cookies only persist on confirmed login.
- CodeChef/Kattis/USACO: return "not yet implemented" errors.
- `scraper.lua`: generalizes submit-only guards (`needs_browser` flag)
to
cover both `submit` and `login` subcommands.
- `credentials.lua`: prompts for username/password, passes cached token
for
CSES fast path, shows ndjson status notifications, only caches on
success.
## Problem
After the initial submit hardening, two issues remained: source code was
read in Lua and piped as stdin to the scraper (unnecessary roundtrip
since
the file exists on disk), and CF's `page.fill()` timed out on the hidden
`textarea[name="source"]` because CodeMirror owns the editor state.
## Solution
Pass the source file path as a CLI arg instead — AtCoder calls
`page.set_input_files(file_path)` directly, CF reads it with
`Path(file_path).read_text()`. Fix CF source injection via
`page.evaluate()`
into the CodeMirror instance. Extract `BROWSER_SUBMIT_NAV_TIMEOUT` as a
per-platform `defaultdict` (CF defaults to 2× nav timeout). Save the
buffer
with `vim.cmd.update()` before submitting.
## Problem
AtCoder file upload always wrote a `.cpp` temp file regardless of
language. CF submit used `solve_cloudflare=True` on the submit page,
causing a spurious "No Cloudflare challenge found" error;
`_wait_for_gate_reload` in `login_action` was dead code. Stale cookies
caused silent auth failures with no recovery path. The `uv.spawn` ndjson
path for submit had no overall timeout.
## Solution
Replace AtCoder's temp file with `page.set_input_files` using an
in-memory buffer and correct extension via `_LANGUAGE_ID_EXTENSION`.
Replace CF's temp-file/fallback dance with a direct
`textarea[name="source"]` fill and set `solve_cloudflare=False` on the
submit fetch. Add a login fast-path that skips the homepage check when
cookies exist, with automatic stale-cookie recovery via `_retried` flag
on redirect-to-login detection. Remove `_wait_for_gate_reload`. Fix
`_ensure_browser` to propagate install errors. Add a 120s kill timer to
the ndjson `uv.spawn` submit path in `scraper.lua`.
## Problem
Codeforces submit was a stub. CSES submit re-ran the full login flow on
every invocation (~1.5s overhead).
## Solution
**Codeforces**: headless browser submit via StealthySession (same
pattern as AtCoder). Solves Cloudflare Turnstile on login, uploads
source via file input, caches cookies at
`~/.cache/cp-nvim/codeforces-cookies.json` so repeat submits skip login.
**CSES**: persist the API token in credentials via a `credentials`
ndjson event. Subsequent submits validate the cached token with a single
GET before falling back to full login.
Also includes a vimdoc table of contents.
## Problem
CSES submit was a stub returning "not yet implemented".
## Solution
Authenticate via web login + API token bridge (POST `/login` form, then
POST `/api/login` and confirm the auth page), submit source to
`/api/courses/problemset/submissions` with base64-encoded content, and
poll for verdict. Uses the same username/password credential model as
AtCoder — no browser dependencies needed. Tested end-to-end with a real
CSES account (verdict: `ACCEPTED`).
Also updates `scraper.lua` to pass the full ndjson event object to
`on_status` and handle `credentials` events for future platform use.
## Problem
`_submit_sync` was a 170-line nested closure with `_solve_turnstile` and
the browser-install block further nested inside it. Status events went
to
stderr, which `run_scraper()` silently discards, leaving the user with a
10–30s silent hang after credential entry. The NDJSON spawn path also
lacked stdin support, so submit had no streaming path at all.
## Solution
Extract `_TURNSTILE_JS`, `_solve_turnstile`, `_ensure_browser`, and
`_submit_headless` to module level in `atcoder.py`; status events
(`installing_browser`, `checking_login`, `logging_in`, `submitting`) now
print to stdout as NDJSON. Add stdin pipe support to the NDJSON spawn
path in `scraper.lua` and switch `M.submit` to streaming with an
`on_status` callback. Wire `on_status` in `submit.lua` to fire
`vim.notify` for each phase transition.
Problem: scrape_contest_list paginated the entire Kattis problem database
(3000+ problems) treating each as a "contest". scrape_contest_metadata
only handled single-problem access. stream_tests_for_category_async could
not fetch tests for multiple problems in a real contest.
Solution: replace the paginated problem loop with a single GET to
/contests that returns ~150 real timed contests. Add contest-aware path
to scrape_contest_metadata that fetches /contests/{id}/problems and
returns all problem slugs; fall back to single-problem path when the ID
is not a contest. Add _stream_single_problem helper and update
stream_tests_for_category_async to fan out concurrently over all contest
problem slugs before falling back to the single-problem path.
Problem: lua typecheck flagged missing start_time field on ContestSummary;
ty flagged BeautifulSoup Tag/NavigableString union on csrf_input.get(),
a 3-tuple unpack where _extract_problem_info now returns 4 values in
cses.py, and an untyped list assignment in usaco.py.
Solution: add start_time? to ContestSummary LuaDoc, guard csrf_input
with hasattr check and type: ignore, unpack precision from
_extract_problem_info in cses.py callers, and use cast() in usaco.py.
Add submit.lua that reads credentials from a local JSON store (prompting
via vim.ui.input/inputsecret on first use), reads the source file, and
delegates to scraper.submit(). Add language_ids.py with platform-to-
language-ID mappings for atcoder, codeforces, and cses.
Add KattisScraper and USACOScraper with contest list, metadata, and
test case fetching. Register kattis and usaco in PLATFORMS,
PLATFORM_DISPLAY_NAMES, and default platform configs.
Problem: problem pages contain floating-point precision requirements and
contest start timestamps that were not being extracted or stored. The
submit workflow also needed a foundation in the scraper layer.
Solution: add extract_precision() to base.py and propagate through all
scrapers into cache. Add start_time to ContestSummary and extract it
from AtCoder and Codeforces. Add SubmitResult model, abstract submit()
method, submit CLI case with get_language_id() resolution, stdin/env_extra
support in run_scraper, and a full AtCoder submit implementation; stub
the remaining platforms.