Files
llmx/llmx-cli/bin/llmx.js
Sebastian Krüger 3c7efc58c8 feat: Complete LLMX v0.1.0 - Rebrand from Codex with LiteLLM Integration
This release represents a comprehensive transformation of the codebase from Codex to LLMX,
enhanced with LiteLLM integration to support 100+ LLM providers through a unified API.

## Major Changes

### Phase 1: Repository & Infrastructure Setup
- Established new repository structure and branching strategy
- Created comprehensive project documentation (CLAUDE.md, LITELLM-SETUP.md)
- Set up development environment and tooling configuration

### Phase 2: Rust Workspace Transformation
- Renamed all Rust crates from `codex-*` to `llmx-*` (30+ crates)
- Updated package names, binary names, and workspace members
- Renamed core modules: codex.rs → llmx.rs, codex_delegate.rs → llmx_delegate.rs
- Updated all internal references, imports, and type names
- Renamed directories: codex-rs/ → llmx-rs/, codex-backend-openapi-models/ → llmx-backend-openapi-models/
- Fixed all Rust compilation errors after mass rename

### Phase 3: LiteLLM Integration
- Integrated LiteLLM for multi-provider LLM support (Anthropic, OpenAI, Azure, Google AI, AWS Bedrock, etc.)
- Implemented OpenAI-compatible Chat Completions API support
- Added model family detection and provider-specific handling
- Updated authentication to support LiteLLM API keys
- Renamed environment variables: OPENAI_BASE_URL → LLMX_BASE_URL
- Added LLMX_API_KEY for unified authentication
- Enhanced error handling for Chat Completions API responses
- Implemented fallback mechanisms between Responses API and Chat Completions API

### Phase 4: TypeScript/Node.js Components
- Renamed npm package: @codex/codex-cli → @valknar/llmx
- Updated TypeScript SDK to use new LLMX APIs and endpoints
- Fixed all TypeScript compilation and linting errors
- Updated SDK tests to support both API backends
- Enhanced mock server to handle multiple API formats
- Updated build scripts for cross-platform packaging

### Phase 5: Configuration & Documentation
- Updated all configuration files to use LLMX naming
- Rewrote README and documentation for LLMX branding
- Updated config paths: ~/.codex/ → ~/.llmx/
- Added comprehensive LiteLLM setup guide
- Updated all user-facing strings and help text
- Created release plan and migration documentation

### Phase 6: Testing & Validation
- Fixed all Rust tests for new naming scheme
- Updated snapshot tests in TUI (36 frame files)
- Fixed authentication storage tests
- Updated Chat Completions payload and SSE tests
- Fixed SDK tests for new API endpoints
- Ensured compatibility with Claude Sonnet 4.5 model
- Fixed test environment variables (LLMX_API_KEY, LLMX_BASE_URL)

### Phase 7: Build & Release Pipeline
- Updated GitHub Actions workflows for LLMX binary names
- Fixed rust-release.yml to reference llmx-rs/ instead of codex-rs/
- Updated CI/CD pipelines for new package names
- Made Apple code signing optional in release workflow
- Enhanced npm packaging resilience for partial platform builds
- Added Windows sandbox support to workspace
- Updated dotslash configuration for new binary names

### Phase 8: Final Polish
- Renamed all assets (.github images, labels, templates)
- Updated VSCode and DevContainer configurations
- Fixed all clippy warnings and formatting issues
- Applied cargo fmt and prettier formatting across codebase
- Updated issue templates and pull request templates
- Fixed all remaining UI text references

## Technical Details

**Breaking Changes:**
- Binary name changed from `codex` to `llmx`
- Config directory changed from `~/.codex/` to `~/.llmx/`
- Environment variables renamed (CODEX_* → LLMX_*)
- npm package renamed to `@valknar/llmx`

**New Features:**
- Support for 100+ LLM providers via LiteLLM
- Unified authentication with LLMX_API_KEY
- Enhanced model provider detection and handling
- Improved error handling and fallback mechanisms

**Files Changed:**
- 578 files modified across Rust, TypeScript, and documentation
- 30+ Rust crates renamed and updated
- Complete rebrand of UI, CLI, and documentation
- All tests updated and passing

**Dependencies:**
- Updated Cargo.lock with new package names
- Updated npm dependencies in llmx-cli
- Enhanced OpenAPI models for LLMX backend

This release establishes LLMX as a standalone project with comprehensive LiteLLM
integration, maintaining full backward compatibility with existing functionality
while opening support for a wide ecosystem of LLM providers.

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-Authored-By: Sebastian Krüger <support@pivoine.art>
2025-11-12 20:40:44 +01:00

178 lines
4.9 KiB
JavaScript

#!/usr/bin/env node
// Unified entry point for the LLMX CLI.
import { spawn } from "node:child_process";
import { existsSync } from "fs";
import path from "path";
import { fileURLToPath } from "url";
// __dirname equivalent in ESM
const __filename = fileURLToPath(import.meta.url);
const __dirname = path.dirname(__filename);
const { platform, arch } = process;
let targetTriple = null;
switch (platform) {
case "linux":
case "android":
switch (arch) {
case "x64":
targetTriple = "x86_64-unknown-linux-musl";
break;
case "arm64":
targetTriple = "aarch64-unknown-linux-musl";
break;
default:
break;
}
break;
case "darwin":
switch (arch) {
case "x64":
targetTriple = "x86_64-apple-darwin";
break;
case "arm64":
targetTriple = "aarch64-apple-darwin";
break;
default:
break;
}
break;
case "win32":
switch (arch) {
case "x64":
targetTriple = "x86_64-pc-windows-msvc";
break;
case "arm64":
targetTriple = "aarch64-pc-windows-msvc";
break;
default:
break;
}
break;
default:
break;
}
if (!targetTriple) {
throw new Error(`Unsupported platform: ${platform} (${arch})`);
}
const vendorRoot = path.join(__dirname, "..", "vendor");
const archRoot = path.join(vendorRoot, targetTriple);
const llmxBinaryName = process.platform === "win32" ? "llmx.exe" : "llmx";
const binaryPath = path.join(archRoot, "llmx", llmxBinaryName);
// Use an asynchronous spawn instead of spawnSync so that Node is able to
// respond to signals (e.g. Ctrl-C / SIGINT) while the native binary is
// executing. This allows us to forward those signals to the child process
// and guarantees that when either the child terminates or the parent
// receives a fatal signal, both processes exit in a predictable manner.
function getUpdatedPath(newDirs) {
const pathSep = process.platform === "win32" ? ";" : ":";
const existingPath = process.env.PATH || "";
const updatedPath = [
...newDirs,
...existingPath.split(pathSep).filter(Boolean),
].join(pathSep);
return updatedPath;
}
/**
* Use heuristics to detect the package manager that was used to install LLMX
* in order to give the user a hint about how to update it.
*/
function detectPackageManager() {
const userAgent = process.env.npm_config_user_agent || "";
if (/\bbun\//.test(userAgent)) {
return "bun";
}
const execPath = process.env.npm_execpath || "";
if (execPath.includes("bun")) {
return "bun";
}
if (
process.env.BUN_INSTALL ||
process.env.BUN_INSTALL_GLOBAL_DIR ||
process.env.BUN_INSTALL_BIN_DIR
) {
return "bun";
}
return userAgent ? "npm" : null;
}
const additionalDirs = [];
const pathDir = path.join(archRoot, "path");
if (existsSync(pathDir)) {
additionalDirs.push(pathDir);
}
const updatedPath = getUpdatedPath(additionalDirs);
const env = { ...process.env, PATH: updatedPath };
const packageManagerEnvVar =
detectPackageManager() === "bun"
? "LLMX_MANAGED_BY_BUN"
: "LLMX_MANAGED_BY_NPM";
env[packageManagerEnvVar] = "1";
const child = spawn(binaryPath, process.argv.slice(2), {
stdio: "inherit",
env,
});
child.on("error", (err) => {
// Typically triggered when the binary is missing or not executable.
// Re-throwing here will terminate the parent with a non-zero exit code
// while still printing a helpful stack trace.
// eslint-disable-next-line no-console
console.error(err);
process.exit(1);
});
// Forward common termination signals to the child so that it shuts down
// gracefully. In the handler we temporarily disable the default behavior of
// exiting immediately; once the child has been signaled we simply wait for
// its exit event which will in turn terminate the parent (see below).
const forwardSignal = (signal) => {
if (child.killed) {
return;
}
try {
child.kill(signal);
} catch {
/* ignore */
}
};
["SIGINT", "SIGTERM", "SIGHUP"].forEach((sig) => {
process.on(sig, () => forwardSignal(sig));
});
// When the child exits, mirror its termination reason in the parent so that
// shell scripts and other tooling observe the correct exit status.
// Wrap the lifetime of the child process in a Promise so that we can await
// its termination in a structured way. The Promise resolves with an object
// describing how the child exited: either via exit code or due to a signal.
const childResult = await new Promise((resolve) => {
child.on("exit", (code, signal) => {
if (signal) {
resolve({ type: "signal", signal });
} else {
resolve({ type: "code", exitCode: code ?? 1 });
}
});
});
if (childResult.type === "signal") {
// Re-emit the same signal so that the parent terminates with the expected
// semantics (this also sets the correct exit code of 128 + n).
process.kill(process.pid, childResult.signal);
} else {
process.exit(childResult.exitCode);
}