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>
signal-exit
When you want to fire an event no matter how a process exits:
- reaching the end of execution.
- explicitly having
process.exit(code)called. - having
process.kill(pid, sig)called. - receiving a fatal signal from outside the process
Use signal-exit.
// Hybrid module, either works
import { onExit } from 'signal-exit'
// or:
// const { onExit } = require('signal-exit')
onExit((code, signal) => {
console.log('process exited!', code, signal)
})
API
remove = onExit((code, signal) => {}, options)
The return value of the function is a function that will remove the handler.
Note that the function only fires for signals if the signal would cause the process to exit. That is, there are no other listeners, and it is a fatal signal.
If the global process object is not suitable for this purpose
(ie, it's unset, or doesn't have an emit method, etc.) then the
onExit function is a no-op that returns a no-op remove method.
Options
alwaysLast: Run this handler after any other signal or exit handlers. This causesprocess.emitto be monkeypatched.
Capturing Signal Exits
If the handler returns an exact boolean true, and the exit is a
due to signal, then the signal will be considered handled, and
will not trigger a synthetic process.kill(process.pid, signal) after firing the onExit handlers.
In this case, it your responsibility as the caller to exit with a
signal (for example, by calling process.kill()) if you wish to
preserve the same exit status that would otherwise have occurred.
If you do not, then the process will likely exit gracefully with
status 0 at some point, assuming that no other terminating signal
or other exit trigger occurs.
Prior to calling handlers, the onExit machinery is unloaded, so
any subsequent exits or signals will not be handled, even if the
signal is captured and the exit is thus prevented.
Note that numeric code exits may indicate that the process is already committed to exiting, for example due to a fatal exception or unhandled promise rejection, and so there is no way to prevent it safely.
Browser Fallback
The 'signal-exit/browser' module is the same fallback shim that
just doesn't do anything, but presents the same function
interface.
Patches welcome to add something that hooks onto
window.onbeforeunload or similar, but it might just not be a
thing that makes sense there.