Frontend Enhancements: - Complete React TypeScript frontend with modern UI components - Distributed workflows management interface with real-time updates - Socket.IO integration for live agent status monitoring - Agent management dashboard with cluster visualization - Project management interface with metrics and task tracking - Responsive design with proper error handling and loading states Backend Infrastructure: - Distributed coordinator for multi-agent workflow orchestration - Cluster management API with comprehensive agent operations - Enhanced database models for agents and projects - Project service for filesystem-based project discovery - Performance monitoring and metrics collection - Comprehensive API documentation and error handling Documentation: - Complete distributed development guide (README_DISTRIBUTED.md) - Comprehensive development report with architecture insights - System configuration templates and deployment guides The platform now provides a complete web interface for managing the distributed AI cluster with real-time monitoring, workflow orchestration, and agent coordination capabilities. 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.ai/code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
package-json-from-dist
Sometimes you want to load the package.json into your
TypeScript program, and it's tempting to just import '../package.json', since that seems to work.
However, this requires tsc to make an entire copy of your
package.json file into the dist folder, which is a problem if
you're using something like
tshy, which uses the
package.json file in dist for another purpose. Even when that
does work, it's asking the module system to do a bunch of extra
fs system calls, just to load a version number or something. (See
this issue.)
This module helps by just finding the package.json file appropriately, and reading and parsing it in the most normal fashion.
Caveats
This only works if your code builds into a target folder called
dist, which is in the root of the package. It also requires
that you do not have a folder named node_modules anywhere
within your dev environment, or else it'll get the wrong answers
there. (But, at least, that'll be in dev, so you're pretty likely
to notice.)
If you build to some other location, then you'll need a different approach. (Feel free to fork this module and make it your own, or just put the code right inline, there's not much of it.)
USAGE
// src/index.ts
import {
findPackageJson,
loadPackageJson,
} from 'package-json-from-dist'
const pj = findPackageJson(import.meta.url)
console.log(`package.json found at ${pj}`)
const pkg = loadPackageJson(import.meta.url)
console.log(`Hello from ${pkg.name}@${pkg.version}`)
If your module is not directly in the ./src folder, then you need
to specify the path that you would expect to find the
package.json when it's not built to the dist folder.
// src/components/something.ts
import {
findPackageJson,
loadPackageJson,
} from 'package-json-from-dist'
const pj = findPackageJson(import.meta.url, '../../package.json')
console.log(`package.json found at ${pj}`)
const pkg = loadPackageJson(import.meta.url, '../../package.json')
console.log(`Hello from ${pkg.name}@${pkg.version}`)
When running from CommmonJS, use __filename instead of
import.meta.url.
// src/index.cts
import {
findPackageJson,
loadPackageJson,
} from 'package-json-from-dist'
const pj = findPackageJson(__filename)
console.log(`package.json found at ${pj}`)
const pkg = loadPackageJson(__filename)
console.log(`Hello from ${pkg.name}@${pkg.version}`)
Since tshy builds both
CommonJS and ESM by default, you may find that you need a
CommonJS override and some //@ts-ignore magic to make it work.
src/pkg.ts:
import {
findPackageJson,
loadPackageJson,
} from 'package-json-from-dist'
//@ts-ignore
export const pkg = loadPackageJson(import.meta.url)
//@ts-ignore
export const pj = findPackageJson(import.meta.url)
src/pkg-cjs.cts:
import {
findPackageJson,
loadPackageJson,
} from 'package-json-from-dist'
export const pkg = loadPackageJson(__filename)
export const pj = findPackageJson(__filename)