## 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
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Publishing to npm
Low-level reference for how Paperclip packages are prepared and published to npm.
For the maintainer workflow, use doc/RELEASING.md. This document focuses on packaging internals.
Current Release Entry Points
Use these scripts:
scripts/release.shfor canary and stable publish flowsscripts/create-github-release.shafter pushing a stable tagscripts/rollback-latest.shto repointlatestscripts/build-npm.shfor the CLI packaging build
Paperclip no longer uses release branches or Changesets for publishing.
Why the CLI needs special packaging
The CLI package, paperclipai, imports code from workspace packages such as:
@paperclipai/server@paperclipai/db@paperclipai/shared- adapter packages under
packages/adapters/
Those workspace references are valid in development but not in a publishable npm package. The release flow rewrites versions temporarily, then builds a publishable CLI bundle.
build-npm.sh
Run:
./scripts/build-npm.sh
This script:
- runs the forbidden token check unless
--skip-checksis supplied - runs
pnpm -r typecheck - bundles the CLI entrypoint with esbuild into
cli/dist/index.js - verifies the bundled entrypoint with
node --check - rewrites
cli/package.jsoninto a publishable npm manifest and stores the dev copy ascli/package.dev.json - copies the repo
README.mdintocli/README.mdfor npm metadata
After the release script exits, the dev manifest and temporary files are restored automatically.
Package discovery and versioning
Public packages are discovered from:
packages/server/ui/cli/
The version rewrite step now uses scripts/release-package-map.mjs, which:
- finds all public packages
- sorts them topologically by internal dependencies
- rewrites each package version to the target release version
- rewrites internal
workspace:*dependency references to the exact target version - updates the CLI's displayed version string
Those rewrites are temporary. The working tree is restored after publish or dry-run.
@paperclipai/ui packaging
The UI package publishes prebuilt static assets, not the source workspace.
The ui package uses scripts/generate-ui-package-json.mjs during prepack to swap in a lean publish manifest that:
- keeps the release-managed
nameandversion - publishes only
dist/ - omits the source-only dependency graph from downstream installs
After packing or publishing, postpack restores the development manifest automatically.
Manual first publish for @paperclipai/ui
If you need to publish only the UI package once by hand, use the real package name:
@paperclipai/ui
Recommended flow from the repo root:
# optional sanity check: this 404s until the first publish exists
npm view @paperclipai/ui version
# make sure the dist payload is fresh
pnpm --filter @paperclipai/ui build
# confirm your local npm auth before the real publish
npm whoami
# safe preview of the exact publish payload
cd ui
pnpm publish --dry-run --no-git-checks --access public
# real publish
pnpm publish --no-git-checks --access public
Notes:
- Publish from
ui/, not the repo root. prepackautomatically rewritesui/package.jsonto the lean publish manifest, andpostpackrestores the dev manifest after the command finishes.- If
npm view @paperclipai/ui versionalready returns the same version that is inui/package.json, do not republish. Bump the version or use the normal repo-wide release flow inscripts/release.sh.
If the first real publish returns npm E404, check npm-side prerequisites before retrying:
npm whoamimust succeed first. An expired or missing npm login will block the publish.- For an organization-scoped package like
@paperclipai/ui, thepaperclipainpm organization must exist and the publisher must be a member with permission to publish to that scope. - The initial publish must include
--access publicfor a public scoped package. - npm also requires either account 2FA for publishing or a granular token that is allowed to bypass 2FA.
Version formats
Paperclip uses calendar versions:
- stable:
YYYY.MDD.P - canary:
YYYY.MDD.P-canary.N
Examples:
- stable:
2026.318.0 - canary:
2026.318.1-canary.2
Publish model
Canary
Canaries publish under the npm dist-tag canary.
Example:
paperclipai@2026.318.1-canary.2
This keeps the default install path unchanged while allowing explicit installs with:
npx paperclipai@canary onboard
The release script now verifies two things after a canary publish:
- the
canarydist-tag resolves to the version that was just published - every published internal
@paperclipai/*dependency referenced by that manifest exists on npm
It also treats latest -> canary as a failure by default, because npm metadata can otherwise leave the default install path pointing at an unreleased canary dependency graph. Only pass ./scripts/release.sh canary --allow-canary-latest when that latest behavior is explicitly intended.
Stable
Stable publishes use the npm dist-tag latest.
Example:
paperclipai@2026.318.0
Stable publishes do not create a release commit. Instead:
- package versions are rewritten temporarily
- packages are published from the chosen source commit
- git tag
vYYYY.MDD.Ppoints at that original commit
Trusted publishing
The intended CI model is npm trusted publishing through GitHub OIDC.
That means:
- no long-lived
NPM_TOKENin repository secrets - GitHub Actions obtains short-lived publish credentials
- trusted publisher rules are configured per workflow file
See doc/RELEASE-AUTOMATION-SETUP.md for the GitHub/npm setup steps.
Rollback model
Rollback does not unpublish anything.
It repoints the latest dist-tag to a prior stable version:
./scripts/rollback-latest.sh 2026.318.0
This is the fastest way to restore the default install path if a stable release is bad.