Replaces the previous "one row, N seats via extra.quantity" model
with proper one-row-per-attendee semantics. Each attendee gets a
unique scannable id; the door PUT /register/{ticket_id} marks
them registered independently — so a buyer can purchase 3 tickets,
hand 2 QRs to friends arriving separately, and each attendee can
enter on their own schedule.
Schema (migrations_fork.py m002):
- ticket.payment_hash: new TEXT column shared across all rows of
a multi-ticket purchase. Backfilled `payment_hash = id` for
pre-migration rows (id WAS the payment_hash by invariant).
Wire:
- TicketPaymentRequest grows `ticket_ids: list[str]` so the
webapp gets every scannable id back in the create response.
- POST /tickets/{event_id}/{payment_hash} polling endpoint now
reports `ticket_ids` (every row) + keeps `ticket_id` for
back-compat.
- api_ticket_create loops quantity times; the first row reuses
payment_hash as id (preserves legacy `id == payment_hash`
invariant for single-ticket purchases), the rest get
urlsafe_short_hash() uuids.
Payment flow:
- on_invoice_paid fetches all rows by payment_hash and marks each
paid via set_ticket_paid, which now increments event.sold by 1
per row (was N per row via extra.quantity — simpler now). The
per-event asyncio lock still serializes counter + republish so
concurrent multi-ticket purchases for the same event don't
reorder the published Nostr state.
- Each paid row triggers its own send_ticket_notification_in_
background call — no-op for buyers without nostr_identifier /
email, useful when the buyer set those on the row.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>