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2026-04-24 16:15:48 -05:00

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DeepSeek TUI Release Runbook

This runbook is the source of truth for shipping Rust crates, GitHub release assets, and the deepseek-tui npm wrapper.

Current packaging note:

  • deepseek-tui is the live runtime and TUI package shipped to users today.
  • deepseek-tui-core is a supporting workspace crate for the extraction/parity effort, not a replacement for the shipping runtime.

Canonical Publish Targets

  • End-user crates:
    • deepseek-tui
    • deepseek-tui-cli
  • Supporting crates published from this workspace:
    • deepseek-config
    • deepseek-protocol
    • deepseek-state
    • deepseek-agent
    • deepseek-execpolicy
    • deepseek-hooks
    • deepseek-mcp
    • deepseek-tools
    • deepseek-core
    • deepseek-app-server
    • deepseek-tui-core
  • deepseek-cli on crates.io is an unrelated crate and is not part of this release flow.

Version Coordination

  • Rust crates inherit the shared workspace version from Cargo.toml.
  • Internal path dependency versions should match the shared workspace version; stale older pins are release blockers once the workspace version moves.
  • The npm wrapper version lives in npm/deepseek-tui/package.json.
  • deepseekBinaryVersion controls which GitHub release binaries the npm wrapper downloads.
  • Packaging-only npm releases are allowed:
    • bump the npm package version
    • leave deepseekBinaryVersion pinned to the previously released Rust binaries
    • rerun npm pack smoke checks before npm publish

Preflight

Run these from the repository root before cutting a tag:

cargo fmt --all -- --check
cargo check --workspace --all-targets --locked
cargo clippy --workspace --all-targets --all-features --locked -- -D warnings
cargo test --workspace --all-features --locked
cargo publish --dry-run --locked --allow-dirty -p deepseek-tui
./scripts/release/publish-crates.sh dry-run

publish-crates.sh dry-run performs a full cargo publish --dry-run for crates without unpublished workspace dependencies and a packaging preflight for dependent workspace crates. That avoids false negatives from crates.io not yet containing the new workspace version while still validating package contents before publish.

For npm wrapper verification:

cargo build --release --locked -p deepseek-tui-cli -p deepseek-tui
node scripts/release/prepare-local-release-assets.js
python3 -m http.server 8123 --directory target/npm-release-assets
cd npm/deepseek-tui
DEEPSEEK_TUI_FORCE_DOWNLOAD=1 DEEPSEEK_TUI_RELEASE_BASE_URL=http://127.0.0.1:8123/ npm pack

Then install the generated tarball in a clean temp directory and smoke the entrypoints:

tmpdir="$(mktemp -d)"
cd "${tmpdir}"
npm init -y
DEEPSEEK_TUI_FORCE_DOWNLOAD=1 DEEPSEEK_TUI_RELEASE_BASE_URL=http://127.0.0.1:8123/ npm install /path/to/deepseek-tui-*.tgz
DEEPSEEK_TUI_FORCE_DOWNLOAD=1 DEEPSEEK_TUI_RELEASE_BASE_URL=http://127.0.0.1:8123/ npx --no-install deepseek --help
DEEPSEEK_TUI_FORCE_DOWNLOAD=1 DEEPSEEK_TUI_RELEASE_BASE_URL=http://127.0.0.1:8123/ npx --no-install deepseek-tui --help

To exercise npm run release:check locally as well, regenerate the local asset directory with a full asset matrix fixture before starting the server:

DEEPSEEK_TUI_PREPARE_ALL_ASSETS=1 node scripts/release/prepare-local-release-assets.js
cd npm/deepseek-tui
DEEPSEEK_TUI_VERSION=X.Y.Z DEEPSEEK_TUI_RELEASE_BASE_URL=http://127.0.0.1:8123/ npm run release:check

Set DEEPSEEK_TUI_VERSION to the npm package version you are verifying for that local run.

The CI workflow runs the same tarball install + smoke test on Linux and macOS.

Rust Crates Release

  1. Update the workspace version in Cargo.toml.
  2. Tag the release as vX.Y.Z.
  3. Let .github/workflows/crates-publish.yml verify the workspace version and dry-run each crate.
  4. Publish crates in this order:
    • deepseek-config
    • deepseek-protocol
    • deepseek-state
    • deepseek-agent
    • deepseek-execpolicy
    • deepseek-hooks
    • deepseek-mcp
    • deepseek-tools
    • deepseek-core
    • deepseek-app-server
    • deepseek-tui-core
    • deepseek-tui-cli
    • deepseek-tui
  5. Wait for each published crate version to appear on crates.io before publishing dependents.

The publish helper is idempotent for reruns: already-published crate versions are skipped.

GitHub Release Assets

.github/workflows/release.yml builds these binaries:

  • deepseek-linux-x64
  • deepseek-macos-x64
  • deepseek-macos-arm64
  • deepseek-windows-x64.exe
  • deepseek-tui-linux-x64
  • deepseek-tui-macos-x64
  • deepseek-tui-macos-arm64
  • deepseek-tui-windows-x64.exe

The release job also uploads deepseek-artifacts-sha256.txt. The npm installer and release verification script both depend on that checksum manifest.

npm Wrapper Release

  1. Set the npm package version in npm/deepseek-tui/package.json.
  2. Set deepseekBinaryVersion to the GitHub release tag that should supply binaries.
  3. For GitHub Actions publishing, configure npm Trusted Publishing for:
    • Publisher: GitHub Actions
    • Repository: Hmbown/DeepSeek-TUI
    • Workflow filename: release.yml
  4. If the GitHub release succeeded but npm publishing failed, rerun only npm publication from Actions → Release → Run workflow with the failed version. This keeps npm's single trusted publisher pointed at release.yml.
  5. For local manual publication, run:
cd npm/deepseek-tui
npm pack
npm publish

prepublishOnly verifies that all expected release assets and the checksum manifest exist. The tag release workflow publishes through npm Trusted Publishing, so it does not use NPM_TOKEN. npm requires Node 22.14.0+ and npm 11.5.1+ for that OIDC path; the workflow uses Node 24.

Recovery and Rollback

  • Crates publish partially:
    • rerun ./scripts/release/publish-crates.sh publish
    • already-published crate versions will be skipped
  • GitHub assets missing or checksum manifest incomplete:
    • fix .github/workflows/release.yml
    • retag or upload corrected assets before npm publish
  • npm packaging-only problem:
    • bump only the npm package version
    • keep deepseekBinaryVersion on the last known-good Rust release
    • repack and republish the wrapper
  • A bad npm publish cannot be overwritten:
    • publish a new npm version with corrected metadata or install logic