paperclip/scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs

469 lines
14 KiB
JavaScript
Raw Normal View History

Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
#!/usr/bin/env node
import { pathToFileURL } from "node:url";
const CANARY_VERSION_RE = /-canary\.\d+$/;
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
const EXIT_RETRIABLE_FAILURE = 1;
const EXIT_NON_RETRIABLE_FAILURE = 2;
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
export function isCanaryVersion(version) {
return CANARY_VERSION_RE.test(version);
}
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
function createExitError(message, exitCode = EXIT_RETRIABLE_FAILURE) {
return Object.assign(new Error(message), { exitCode });
}
function createProblem(message, { retriable = true } = {}) {
return { message, retriable };
}
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
function usage() {
process.stderr.write(
[
"Usage:",
" node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs --channel <canary|stable> --dist-tag <tag> --target-version <version> --package <name> [--package <name> ...] [--allow-canary-latest]",
"",
].join("\n"),
);
}
function parseArgs(argv) {
const options = {
channel: "",
distTag: "",
targetVersion: "",
allowCanaryLatest: false,
packages: [],
};
for (let index = 0; index < argv.length; index += 1) {
const arg = argv[index];
switch (arg) {
case "--channel":
options.channel = argv[index + 1] ?? "";
index += 1;
break;
case "--dist-tag":
options.distTag = argv[index + 1] ?? "";
index += 1;
break;
case "--target-version":
options.targetVersion = argv[index + 1] ?? "";
index += 1;
break;
case "--package":
options.packages.push(argv[index + 1] ?? "");
index += 1;
break;
case "--allow-canary-latest":
options.allowCanaryLatest = true;
break;
case "-h":
case "--help":
usage();
process.exit(0);
default:
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
throw createExitError(`unexpected argument: ${arg}`, EXIT_NON_RETRIABLE_FAILURE);
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
}
}
if (options.channel !== "canary" && options.channel !== "stable") {
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
throw createExitError("--channel must be canary or stable", EXIT_NON_RETRIABLE_FAILURE);
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
}
if (!options.distTag) {
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
throw createExitError("--dist-tag is required", EXIT_NON_RETRIABLE_FAILURE);
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
}
if (!options.targetVersion) {
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
throw createExitError("--target-version is required", EXIT_NON_RETRIABLE_FAILURE);
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
}
if (options.packages.length === 0 || options.packages.some((name) => !name)) {
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
throw createExitError("at least one non-empty --package value is required", EXIT_NON_RETRIABLE_FAILURE);
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
}
if (options.allowCanaryLatest && options.channel !== "canary") {
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
throw createExitError("--allow-canary-latest only applies to canary releases", EXIT_NON_RETRIABLE_FAILURE);
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
}
return options;
}
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
function createRegistryUrl(packageName, version = "") {
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
const registry = process.env.npm_config_registry ?? process.env.NPM_CONFIG_REGISTRY ?? "https://registry.npmjs.org/";
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
const baseUrl = registry.endsWith("/") ? registry : `${registry}/`;
const encodedPackage = encodeURIComponent(packageName);
if (!version) {
return new URL(encodedPackage, baseUrl);
}
return new URL(`${encodedPackage}/${encodeURIComponent(version)}`, baseUrl);
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
}
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
export async function fetchRegistryJson(url, { allowMissing = false, timeoutMs = 30_000 } = {}) {
const controller = new AbortController();
const timeout = setTimeout(() => controller.abort(), timeoutMs);
let response;
try {
response = await fetch(url, {
signal: controller.signal,
headers: {
accept: "application/vnd.npm.install-v1+json, application/json;q=0.9",
},
});
} catch (error) {
if (error instanceof Error && error.name === "AbortError") {
throw new Error(`npm registry request timed out for ${url} after ${timeoutMs}ms`);
}
throw error;
} finally {
clearTimeout(timeout);
}
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
if (response.status === 404 && allowMissing) {
return null;
}
if (!response.ok) {
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
throw new Error(`npm registry request failed for ${url}: ${response.status} ${response.statusText}`);
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
}
return response.json();
}
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
async function fetchPackageDocument(packageName, { allowMissing = false } = {}) {
return fetchRegistryJson(createRegistryUrl(packageName), { allowMissing });
}
async function fetchPackageManifest(packageName, version, { allowMissing = false } = {}) {
return fetchRegistryJson(createRegistryUrl(packageName, version), { allowMissing });
}
export function createManifestLookupKey(packageName, version) {
return `${packageName}@${version}`;
}
function isRangeVersionSpecifier(version) {
return /[\^~*xX><| ]/.test(version);
}
function resolvePublishedManifest(packageName, version, packageDoc, packageManifestsByKey = new Map()) {
const directManifest = packageManifestsByKey.get(createManifestLookupKey(packageName, version));
if (directManifest) {
return directManifest;
}
if (directManifest === null) {
return null;
}
return packageDoc?.versions?.[version] ?? null;
}
function collectInternalDependencyProblemEntries(
manifest,
packageDocsByName,
packageManifestsByKey = new Map(),
) {
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
const problems = [];
const sections = [
["dependencies", manifest.dependencies ?? {}],
["optionalDependencies", manifest.optionalDependencies ?? {}],
["peerDependencies", manifest.peerDependencies ?? {}],
];
for (const [sectionName, deps] of sections) {
for (const [dependencyName, dependencyVersion] of Object.entries(deps)) {
if (!dependencyName.startsWith("@paperclipai/")) {
continue;
}
if (typeof dependencyVersion !== "string" || !dependencyVersion) {
problems.push(
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
createProblem(
`${sectionName} declares ${dependencyName} with a non-string version: ${JSON.stringify(dependencyVersion)}`,
),
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
);
continue;
}
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
// Peer dependency ranges express compatibility, not a manifest that can be fetched directly.
if (sectionName === "peerDependencies" && isRangeVersionSpecifier(dependencyVersion)) {
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
continue;
}
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
const dependencyManifest = resolvePublishedManifest(
dependencyName,
dependencyVersion,
packageDocsByName.get(dependencyName),
packageManifestsByKey,
);
const dependencyLookupKey = createManifestLookupKey(dependencyName, dependencyVersion);
if (!dependencyManifest) {
const dependencyDoc = packageDocsByName.get(dependencyName);
if (!dependencyDoc && !packageManifestsByKey.has(dependencyLookupKey)) {
problems.push(
createProblem(
`${sectionName} requires ${dependencyName}@${dependencyVersion}, but npm publication metadata was not fetched for that dependency`,
),
);
continue;
}
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
problems.push(
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
createProblem(
`${sectionName} requires ${dependencyName}@${dependencyVersion}, but npm does not expose that version`,
),
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
);
}
}
}
return problems;
}
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
export function collectInternalDependencyProblems(
manifest,
packageDocsByName,
packageManifestsByKey = new Map(),
) {
return collectInternalDependencyProblemEntries(
manifest,
packageDocsByName,
packageManifestsByKey,
).map((problem) => problem.message);
}
function requireManifest(packageName, version, packageDoc, packageManifestsByKey, problems) {
const manifest = resolvePublishedManifest(packageName, version, packageDoc, packageManifestsByKey);
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
if (!manifest) {
if (problems) {
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
problems.push(createProblem(`${packageName}: npm registry is missing manifest data for ${version}`));
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
}
return null;
}
return manifest;
}
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
export function verifyPackageRegistryProblems({
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
packageName,
packageDoc,
packageDocsByName,
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
packageManifestsByKey = new Map(),
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
channel,
distTag,
targetVersion,
allowCanaryLatest,
}) {
const problems = [];
const distTags = packageDoc["dist-tags"] ?? {};
const taggedVersion = distTags[distTag];
if (taggedVersion !== targetVersion) {
problems.push(
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
createProblem(
`${packageName}: dist-tag ${distTag} resolves to ${taggedVersion ?? "<missing>"}, expected ${targetVersion}`,
),
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
);
}
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
const targetManifest = requireManifest(packageName, targetVersion, packageDoc, packageManifestsByKey, problems);
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
if (targetManifest) {
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
for (const problem of collectInternalDependencyProblemEntries(
targetManifest,
packageDocsByName,
packageManifestsByKey,
)) {
problems.push(createProblem(`${packageName}@${targetVersion}: ${problem.message}`, problem));
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
}
}
if (channel === "canary") {
const latestVersion = distTags.latest;
if (latestVersion && isCanaryVersion(latestVersion) && !allowCanaryLatest) {
problems.push(
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
createProblem(
`${packageName}: latest dist-tag still resolves to canary ${latestVersion}; if that state is intentional, rerun the verification script directly with --allow-canary-latest`,
{ retriable: false },
),
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
);
}
if (latestVersion && isCanaryVersion(latestVersion)) {
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
const latestManifest = requireManifest(
packageName,
latestVersion,
packageDoc,
packageManifestsByKey,
problems,
);
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
if (latestManifest) {
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
for (const problem of collectInternalDependencyProblemEntries(
latestManifest,
packageDocsByName,
packageManifestsByKey,
)) {
problems.push(createProblem(`${packageName}@${latestVersion} via latest: ${problem.message}`, problem));
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
}
}
}
}
return problems;
}
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
export function verifyPackageRegistryState(options) {
return verifyPackageRegistryProblems(options).map((problem) => problem.message);
}
function collectInternalDependencyVersions(manifest) {
const dependencyVersions = [];
for (const [sectionName, deps] of [
["dependencies", manifest.dependencies ?? {}],
["optionalDependencies", manifest.optionalDependencies ?? {}],
["peerDependencies", manifest.peerDependencies ?? {}],
]) {
for (const [dependencyName, dependencyVersion] of Object.entries(deps)) {
if (!dependencyName.startsWith("@paperclipai/")) {
continue;
}
if (typeof dependencyVersion !== "string" || !dependencyVersion) {
continue;
}
if (sectionName === "peerDependencies" && isRangeVersionSpecifier(dependencyVersion)) {
continue;
}
dependencyVersions.push({
packageName: dependencyName,
version: dependencyVersion,
});
}
}
return dependencyVersions;
}
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
async function main() {
const options = parseArgs(process.argv.slice(2));
const packageNames = [...new Set(options.packages)];
const packageDocsByName = new Map();
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
const packageManifestsByKey = new Map();
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
await Promise.all(
packageNames.map(async (packageName) => {
packageDocsByName.set(packageName, await fetchPackageDocument(packageName));
}),
);
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
const versionsToFetchByPackage = new Map();
for (const packageName of packageNames) {
const packageDoc = packageDocsByName.get(packageName);
const versionsToFetch = new Set([options.targetVersion]);
const latestVersion = packageDoc?.["dist-tags"]?.latest;
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
if (latestVersion && isCanaryVersion(latestVersion)) {
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
versionsToFetch.add(latestVersion);
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
}
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
versionsToFetchByPackage.set(packageName, versionsToFetch);
}
await Promise.all(
[...versionsToFetchByPackage.entries()].flatMap(([packageName, versionsToFetch]) =>
[...versionsToFetch].map(async (version) => {
packageManifestsByKey.set(
createManifestLookupKey(packageName, version),
await fetchPackageManifest(packageName, version, { allowMissing: true }),
);
}),
),
);
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
const dependencyVersionsByKey = new Map();
for (const [packageName, versionsToFetch] of versionsToFetchByPackage.entries()) {
for (const version of versionsToFetch) {
const manifest = resolvePublishedManifest(
packageName,
version,
packageDocsByName.get(packageName),
packageManifestsByKey,
);
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
if (!manifest) {
continue;
}
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
for (const dependencyVersion of collectInternalDependencyVersions(manifest)) {
dependencyVersionsByKey.set(
createManifestLookupKey(dependencyVersion.packageName, dependencyVersion.version),
dependencyVersion,
);
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
}
}
}
await Promise.all(
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
[...dependencyVersionsByKey.values()].map(async ({ packageName, version }) => {
const lookupKey = createManifestLookupKey(packageName, version);
if (packageManifestsByKey.has(lookupKey)) {
return;
}
packageManifestsByKey.set(
lookupKey,
await fetchPackageManifest(packageName, version, { allowMissing: true }),
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
);
}),
);
const problems = [];
for (const packageName of packageNames) {
process.stdout.write(` Verifying ${packageName} on dist-tag ${options.distTag}\n`);
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
const packageProblems = verifyPackageRegistryProblems({
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
packageName,
packageDoc: packageDocsByName.get(packageName),
packageDocsByName,
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
packageManifestsByKey,
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
channel: options.channel,
distTag: options.distTag,
targetVersion: options.targetVersion,
allowCanaryLatest: options.allowCanaryLatest,
});
if (packageProblems.length === 0) {
process.stdout.write(` ✓ dist-tag and published internal dependencies are consistent\n`);
continue;
}
for (const problem of packageProblems) {
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
process.stderr.write(`${problem.message}\n`);
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
problems.push(problem);
}
}
if (problems.length > 0) {
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
const exitCode = problems.some((problem) => !problem.retriable)
? EXIT_NON_RETRIABLE_FAILURE
: EXIT_RETRIABLE_FAILURE;
throw createExitError(`npm registry verification failed for ${problems.length} problem(s)`, exitCode);
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
}
}
const isDirectRun = process.argv[1] && import.meta.url === pathToFileURL(process.argv[1]).href;
if (isDirectRun) {
main().catch((error) => {
process.stderr.write(`Error: ${error.message}\n`);
fix: harden release registry verification against npm lag (#4816) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Its release automation publishes canary packages to npm and then validates the published registry state before considering the release healthy > - The failing canary run `25139465018` showed that npm can expose a newly published version through version-specific endpoints before the root package document has fully converged > - That made a successful canary publish look like a failed release because the verifier trusted stale root metadata too early > - This pull request hardens the registry verification path by preferring version-specific manifest checks, retrying convergence-sensitive failures, and distinguishing permanent failures from propagation lag > - While validating that change in CI, a separate teardown race in `heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` surfaced and was hardened so the PR could pass reliably > - The benefit is that transient npm propagation lag no longer fails a successful canary publish, while genuine registry-state and dependency-integrity failures still stop the release flow promptly ## What Changed - Hardened `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` so it prefers version-specific manifest resolution over stale root metadata, adds bounded registry-fetch timeouts, and classifies failures as retriable vs non-retriable. - Updated `scripts/release-lib.sh` and `scripts/release.sh` so post-publish registry verification retries only convergence-sensitive failures and reports immediate permanent failures clearly. - Expanded `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` with regression coverage for stale root metadata, fetch timeout behavior, peer dependency range handling, non-retriable canary-latest cases, and related verifier edge cases. - Hardened `server/src/__tests__/heartbeat-stale-queue-invalidation.test.ts` teardown to tolerate the late-comment foreign-key race that CI exposed while validating this branch. ## Verification - `pnpm run test:release-registry` - `node --check scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` - `bash -n scripts/release.sh && bash -n scripts/release-lib.sh` - PR checks passed on head `5c422600fc12acac61f6b7c267a4dc915df622b1`: `policy`, `verify`, `e2e`, `security/snyk`, and `Greptile Review` ## Risks - Low risk. The main behavioral changes are limited to release automation and verifier retry semantics, plus a test-only teardown hardening for a CI race. > I checked [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md). This is a narrow release bugfix and does not overlap planned core feature work. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via Paperclip `codex_local` with tool use and local code execution enabled. This agent session runs on a GPT-5-class coding model; the exact backend model ID/context window is not exposed by the local adapter runtime. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [ ] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I have addressed all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-05-09 22:18:12 -07:00
process.exit(error.exitCode ?? EXIT_RETRIABLE_FAILURE);
Harden release flow with registry verification and dist-tag checks (#4800) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies > - Paperclip is distributed as npm packages, including plugins like `plugin-e2b` > - The release process publishes canary and stable builds via npm dist-tags > - But there was no automated verification that published packages actually landed with the correct dist-tags, and broken canary publishes could silently ship to users > - This PR adds a registry verification script that checks published packages match their expected dist-tags, and wires it into PR CI so regressions are caught before merge > - The benefit is release integrity is verified automatically, and broken dist-tag states are caught early ## What Changed - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — verifies that published npm packages have correct dist-tag assignments and detects orphaned or mispointed tags - Added `scripts/verify-release-registry-state.test.mjs` — test coverage for the verification logic - Updated `scripts/release.sh` to include canary dist-tag safety checks before publishing - Updated `.github/workflows/pr.yml` to run registry verification as a CI step - Updated `doc/PUBLISHING.md` and `doc/RELEASING.md` with the new verification workflow ## Verification - `pnpm test` — all tests pass including new verification script tests - `node scripts/verify-release-registry-state.mjs` — runs against the live npm registry and reports current state - CI: the new PR workflow step runs on every PR push ## Risks - Low risk. This is additive CI and tooling — no runtime code changes. The registry verification is read-only (queries npm, does not publish). The release script changes add safety checks that abort before publishing if state is unexpected. ## Model Used Codex GPT 5.4 high via Paperclip. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-29 15:56:20 -07:00
});
}