With the change to model identifiers from v3 to v4, if a user had persisted redux state with the old format, we could get unexpected runtime errors when rehydrating state if we try to access model attributes that no longer exist.
For example, the CLIP Skip component does this:
```ts
CLIP_SKIP_MAP[model.base].maxClip
```
In v3, models had a `base_type` attribute, but it is renamed to `base` in v4. This code therefore causes a runtime error:
- `model.base` is `undefined`
- `CLIP_SKIP_MAP[undefined]` is also undefined
- `undefined.maxClip` is a runtime error!
Resolved by adding a migration for the redux slices that have model identifiers. The migration simply resets the slice or the part of the slice that is affected, when it's simple to do a partial reset.
Closes#6000
- Display a toast on UI launch if the HF token is invalid
- Show form in MM if token is invalid or unable to be verified, let user set the token via this form
When consolidating all the model queries I messed up the query tags. Fixed now, so that when a model is installed, removed, or changed, the list refreshes.
In order to allow for null and undefined metadata values, this hook returned a symbol to indicate that parsing failed or was pending.
For values where the parsed value will never be null or undefined, it is useful get the value or null (instead of a symbol).
The graph builders used awaited functions within `Array.prototype.forEach` loops. This doesn't do what you'd think. This caused graphs to be enqueued before they were fully constructed.
Changed to `for..of` loops to fix this.
There wasn't enough validation of control adapters during graph building. It would be possible for a graph to be built with empty collect node, causing an error. Addressed with an extra check.
This should never happen in practice, because the invoke button should be disabled if an invalid CA is active.