## Summary
- revert the Bun standalone desktop packaging path and restore the
server's original `dist/bin.js` bootstrap flow
- add a managed Node runtime for Electron and Tauri that downloads only
the current platform/arch artifact into `~/.config/codenomad`
- update desktop startup and packaging scripts so packaged apps use the
managed runtime consistently, and clean up Electron's expected
navigation-abort log noise
## Testing
- npm run typecheck --workspace @neuralnomads/codenomad-electron-app
- cargo check
- npm run build --workspace @neuralnomads/codenomad
- npm run build:mac --workspace @neuralnomads/codenomad-electron-app
- launch
`packages/electron-app/release/mac-arm64/CodeNomad.app/Contents/MacOS/CodeNomad`
and verify the packaged server reaches ready with the managed Node
runtime
## Summary
- package `packages/server` as a standalone desktop executable so
Electron and Tauri no longer depend on a system-installed Node runtime
in production
- align Electron and Tauri startup logic around launching the packaged
server, resolving binaries from the user shell, and bundling the same
server resources into both desktop apps
- replace the workspace instance proxy path that used
`@fastify/reply-from` with a direct streaming proxy so packaged
standalone builds can talk to spawned `opencode` instances correctly
## Why
Desktop production builds were still depending on a user-provided Node
runtime to launch `packages/server`, which made packaging less
self-contained and created different behavior across machines. While
moving to a standalone server executable, we also found that
Bun-compiled standalone builds could start `opencode` successfully but
failed when proxying requests to those instances through `reply-from`.
The goal of this change is to make desktop production startup
self-contained, keep Electron and Tauri behavior aligned, and restore
correct communication with local `opencode` instances in packaged
builds.
## What Changed
- added a standalone build path for `packages/server` and bundle
`codenomad-server` into desktop resources
- updated Electron production startup to resolve and launch the
standalone server executable
- updated Tauri production startup to resolve and launch the standalone
server executable with matching cwd and shell behavior
- added runtime path helpers so the packaged server can reliably find
its bundled UI, auth templates, config template, and package metadata
- improved bare binary resolution so commands like `opencode` can be
resolved from the user's login shell environment
- upgraded the server stack to newer Fastify-compatible packages needed
for the standalone/runtime work
- replaced the workspace instance proxy implementation with a direct
streaming proxy for requests to spawned `opencode` instances
- updated Electron and Tauri build/prebuild scripts to generate and
package the standalone server, while also repairing missing
platform-specific optional binaries during packaging
## Benefits
- desktop production builds no longer require Node to be installed on
the user's system
- Electron and Tauri now use the same packaged server model in
production, reducing platform drift
- packaged desktop apps can successfully create workspaces, launch
`opencode`, and proxy health/session traffic to those instances
- the server bundle is more self-contained and resilient to different
launch environments
- desktop packaging is more predictable because the required server
executable is built and bundled as part of the app build flow
- Add build scripts for platform-specific builds with zip bundles
- Update CI workflow to use --bundles flag for explicit target selection
- macOS: use app,zip (removed dmg)
- Windows: use nsis,zip
- Linux: use appimage,deb,rpm
Restrict non-dev pull requests to an allowlisted set of actors and skip cross-platform PR builds unless that authorization check passes. Keep dev open for general contributions while guiding other PRs back to the dev branch.
Run the full cross-platform build matrix on pull request creation and updates so build regressions are caught before merge without publishing release artifacts.
Replace dev push builds with nightly schedule that only runs when dev head advances; still runs on manual dispatch. Plumb a ref input through reusable workflows so scheduled runs build the dev commit.
Switch dev workflow to publish the server under @neuralnomads/codenomad-dev with dist-tag latest, avoiding @dev dist-tags. Add workflow input to override package name at publish time.
Publish bleeding-edge builds from dev to GitHub prereleases and npm dist-tag 'dev'. Dev builds poll GitHub prereleases and surface update availability via /api/meta for UI notifications.