[Claude Code Desktop 자동 설치 환경]
- setup/CLAUDE.md: 트리거 키워드 + 설치 패키지 설명
- setup/.claude/skills/guardia-install/SKILL.md: 6단계 설치 오케스트레이터
Phase 0: 의도 파악 → Phase 1: OS 감지 → Phase 2: 사전 확인
Phase 3: 설치 실행 → Phase 4: 라이선스 발급 → Phase 5: 검증 → Phase 6: 완료보고
[통합 자동 설치 스크립트]
- setup/install_auto.sh: Linux 통합 (OS 자동 감지 ubuntu/centos/rhel)
- --license trial30|trial7|<key> 파라미터
- 설치 완료 후 GUARDiA 자동 실행 + 브라우저 자동 열기
- --test 검증 모드
- setup/install_auto.ps1: Windows 통합 (ASCII 전용, PS 5.1 호환)
- 설치 후 NSSM 서비스 자동 시작 + 브라우저 자동 열기
- -Test 파라미터로 검증 전용 실행
[라이선스 엔진 개선]
- core/license.py: generate_trial_key(days=None) 파라미터 추가
- TRIAL_DURATION_DAYS = TRIAL_DURATION_DAYS 환경변수로 조정 가능
- routers/license.py: TrialRequest.days 필드 + 30일 체험판 지원
POST /api/license/trial {"days": 30} 로 30일 발급
사용자 경험:
1. setup/ 폴더를 새 PC에 복사
2. Claude Code Desktop 열고 해당 폴더 open
3. "GUARDiA 시스템 1달 사용자로 설치해 줘" 입력
4. 자동으로 OS 감지 → 설치 → 30일 라이선스 → 브라우저 열림
Co-Authored-By: Claude Sonnet 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
7.5 KiB
asynckit 
Minimal async jobs utility library, with streams support.
AsyncKit provides harness for parallel and serial iterators over list of items represented by arrays or objects.
Optionally it accepts abort function (should be synchronously return by iterator for each item), and terminates left over jobs upon an error event. For specific iteration order built-in (ascending and descending) and custom sort helpers also supported, via asynckit.serialOrdered method.
It ensures async operations to keep behavior more stable and prevent Maximum call stack size exceeded errors, from sync iterators.
| compression | size |
|---|---|
| asynckit.js | 12.34 kB |
| asynckit.min.js | 4.11 kB |
| asynckit.min.js.gz | 1.47 kB |
Install
$ npm install --save asynckit
Examples
Parallel Jobs
Runs iterator over provided array in parallel. Stores output in the result array,
on the matching positions. In unlikely event of an error from one of the jobs,
will terminate rest of the active jobs (if abort function is provided)
and return error along with salvaged data to the main callback function.
Input Array
var parallel = require('asynckit').parallel
, assert = require('assert')
;
var source = [ 1, 1, 4, 16, 64, 32, 8, 2 ]
, expectedResult = [ 2, 2, 8, 32, 128, 64, 16, 4 ]
, expectedTarget = [ 1, 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64 ]
, target = []
;
parallel(source, asyncJob, function(err, result)
{
assert.deepEqual(result, expectedResult);
assert.deepEqual(target, expectedTarget);
});
// async job accepts one element from the array
// and a callback function
function asyncJob(item, cb)
{
// different delays (in ms) per item
var delay = item * 25;
// pretend different jobs take different time to finish
// and not in consequential order
var timeoutId = setTimeout(function() {
target.push(item);
cb(null, item * 2);
}, delay);
// allow to cancel "leftover" jobs upon error
// return function, invoking of which will abort this job
return clearTimeout.bind(null, timeoutId);
}
More examples could be found in test/test-parallel-array.js.
Input Object
Also it supports named jobs, listed via object.
var parallel = require('asynckit/parallel')
, assert = require('assert')
;
var source = { first: 1, one: 1, four: 4, sixteen: 16, sixtyFour: 64, thirtyTwo: 32, eight: 8, two: 2 }
, expectedResult = { first: 2, one: 2, four: 8, sixteen: 32, sixtyFour: 128, thirtyTwo: 64, eight: 16, two: 4 }
, expectedTarget = [ 1, 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64 ]
, expectedKeys = [ 'first', 'one', 'two', 'four', 'eight', 'sixteen', 'thirtyTwo', 'sixtyFour' ]
, target = []
, keys = []
;
parallel(source, asyncJob, function(err, result)
{
assert.deepEqual(result, expectedResult);
assert.deepEqual(target, expectedTarget);
assert.deepEqual(keys, expectedKeys);
});
// supports full value, key, callback (shortcut) interface
function asyncJob(item, key, cb)
{
// different delays (in ms) per item
var delay = item * 25;
// pretend different jobs take different time to finish
// and not in consequential order
var timeoutId = setTimeout(function() {
keys.push(key);
target.push(item);
cb(null, item * 2);
}, delay);
// allow to cancel "leftover" jobs upon error
// return function, invoking of which will abort this job
return clearTimeout.bind(null, timeoutId);
}
More examples could be found in test/test-parallel-object.js.
Serial Jobs
Runs iterator over provided array sequentially. Stores output in the result array,
on the matching positions. In unlikely event of an error from one of the jobs,
will not proceed to the rest of the items in the list
and return error along with salvaged data to the main callback function.
Input Array
var serial = require('asynckit/serial')
, assert = require('assert')
;
var source = [ 1, 1, 4, 16, 64, 32, 8, 2 ]
, expectedResult = [ 2, 2, 8, 32, 128, 64, 16, 4 ]
, expectedTarget = [ 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 ]
, target = []
;
serial(source, asyncJob, function(err, result)
{
assert.deepEqual(result, expectedResult);
assert.deepEqual(target, expectedTarget);
});
// extended interface (item, key, callback)
// also supported for arrays
function asyncJob(item, key, cb)
{
target.push(key);
// it will be automatically made async
// even it iterator "returns" in the same event loop
cb(null, item * 2);
}
More examples could be found in test/test-serial-array.js.
Input Object
Also it supports named jobs, listed via object.
var serial = require('asynckit').serial
, assert = require('assert')
;
var source = [ 1, 1, 4, 16, 64, 32, 8, 2 ]
, expectedResult = [ 2, 2, 8, 32, 128, 64, 16, 4 ]
, expectedTarget = [ 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 ]
, target = []
;
var source = { first: 1, one: 1, four: 4, sixteen: 16, sixtyFour: 64, thirtyTwo: 32, eight: 8, two: 2 }
, expectedResult = { first: 2, one: 2, four: 8, sixteen: 32, sixtyFour: 128, thirtyTwo: 64, eight: 16, two: 4 }
, expectedTarget = [ 1, 1, 4, 16, 64, 32, 8, 2 ]
, target = []
;
serial(source, asyncJob, function(err, result)
{
assert.deepEqual(result, expectedResult);
assert.deepEqual(target, expectedTarget);
});
// shortcut interface (item, callback)
// works for object as well as for the arrays
function asyncJob(item, cb)
{
target.push(item);
// it will be automatically made async
// even it iterator "returns" in the same event loop
cb(null, item * 2);
}
More examples could be found in test/test-serial-object.js.
Note: Since object is an unordered collection of properties,
it may produce unexpected results with sequential iterations.
Whenever order of the jobs' execution is important please use serialOrdered method.
Ordered Serial Iterations
TBD
For example compare-property package.
Streaming interface
TBD
Want to Know More?
More examples can be found in test folder.
Or open an issue with questions and/or suggestions.
License
AsyncKit is licensed under the MIT license.