Deploy Runbook
Two things live here: deploying the MuseHub server and publishing a new Muse CLI build.
See versioning.md for why pyproject.toml and muse release
tags use two different, both-correct version formats (PEP 440 vs SemVer 2.0),
and for the alpha/beta/rc/nightly channel definitions referenced below.
Standard release flow
Both repos share the same version string — in PEP 440 canonical form
(e.g. 0.2.0rc16, 0.2.0.dev1 — no hyphen, no v prefix; see
versioning.md). Bump, deploy server, publish CLI — in that
order.
# 1. Bump version in muse/pyproject.toml AND musehub/pyproject.toml, commit each on dev
# (the bump commit is a simple chore: on a short-lived branch, merged back to dev)
# Use PEP 440 canonical form: 0.2.0rc17, 0.2.0.dev1, 0.2.0 — never a hyphen or "v" prefix here.
# Nightly counters are sequential, starting at dev1 (never date/timestamp-based — see versioning.md).
# 2. Push muse source to hub (local + staging)
muse -C ~/ecosystem/muse push local dev
muse -C ~/ecosystem/muse push staging dev
# 3. Deploy MuseHub server first — install.sh is generated from the server's MUSE_VERSION,
# so the server must be at the new version before the tarball is published
cd ~/ecosystem/musehub
bash deploy/push.sh staging
# 4. Publish the Muse CLI tarball and smoke-test it
bash deploy/publish_muse_release.sh
# Steps: build sdist → upload S3 → SSM copy to staging → prune old → HTTP check → smoke (18 checks).
# If smoke fails, the tarball URL is live but broken — investigate before announcing.
# 5. Verify the installer picks up the new version
curl -fsSL https://staging.musehub.ai/install.sh | sh
muse --version # should print the new version
0 — Build frontend assets (required before deploying MuseHub)
The Docker image copies compiled assets directly from the working tree. app.css and app.js are in .museignore (not committed), so they must be built locally before running push.sh.
cd ~/ecosystem/musehub
npm run build # compiles src/scss → app.css and src/ts → app.js
Or rebuild only what changed:
npm run build:css # SCSS only (src/scss/app.scss → musehub/templates/musehub/static/app.css)
npm run build:js # TS only (src/ts/app.ts → musehub/templates/musehub/static/app.js)
Source files to edit (never edit the compiled output directly):
| Asset | Source |
|---|---|
static/app.css |
src/scss/ — entry point app.scss, partials _*.scss |
static/app.js |
src/ts/ — entry point app.ts |
static/embed.css |
src/scss/embed.scss |
static/embed-player.js |
src/ts/embed-player.ts |
During local development, use the watch commands to rebuild automatically on save:
npm run watch:css # rebuilds app.css on every SCSS change
npm run watch:js # rebuilds app.js on every TS change
1 — Deploy MuseHub (server)
cd ~/ecosystem/musehub
bash deploy/push.sh staging # build, push to ECR, blue-green deploy
bash deploy/push.sh prod # same for prod
bash deploy/push.sh staging prod # staging then prod in sequence
IMAGE_TAG=<prev-tag> bash deploy/push.sh staging # rollback to a prior image
push.sh does a full blue-green deploy: builds a Docker image for linux/amd64, pushes it to ECR, starts the inactive slot, health-checks /healthz, switches nginx, and stops the old slot. The image tag is <short-commit-id>-<YYYYMMDDHHMMSS>.
For full infrastructure details (instance IDs, slot switching, SSM recovery) see infrastructure.md.
2 — Publish a new Muse CLI build
cd ~/ecosystem/musehub
bash deploy/publish_muse_release.sh
Must be run after step 1 (server deploy). Reads the version from ~/ecosystem/muse/pyproject.toml automatically.
What it does:
- Builds
muse-<version>.tar.gzfrom~/ecosystem/museusingpython3 -m build - Uploads the tarball to
s3://musehub-releases/ - SSMs into staging and copies it to
/data/releases/on the instance volume - Prunes S3 and the instance to keep only the 3 most recent tarballs
- Smoke-tests
https://staging.musehub.ai/releases/muse-<version>.tar.gz— exits non-zero on failure
After a successful run, the new version is live and anyone running the installer gets it:
curl -fsSL https://staging.musehub.ai/install.sh | sh
Prerequisites
- Python 3.14 +
buildpackage:pip install build - AWS CLI configured with credentials that can write to
s3://musehub-releasesand send SSM commands toi-07547cd20bee2dea5
Override version label
MUSE_VERSION=0.2.1 bash deploy/publish_muse_release.sh
Useful if you need to re-publish a tarball under a different version label without editing pyproject.toml.
3 — Smoke test the installed CLI
deploy/smoke_muse.sh runs 18 checks against the installed binary. It is called automatically at the end of publish_muse_release.sh, but can be run standalone to verify any staging or prod build:
cd ~/ecosystem/musehub
# Default: staging, version read from ~/ecosystem/muse/pyproject.toml
bash deploy/smoke_muse.sh
# Explicit URL (prod)
bash deploy/smoke_muse.sh --url https://musehub.ai
# Explicit version (re-smoke a prior build)
bash deploy/smoke_muse.sh --version 0.2.0rc13
Exit code 0 = all 18 checks passed. Exit code 1 = one or more checks failed. Exit code 2 = setup error (tarball not found, venv failed).
The checks cover: version, init, add, commit, status, log, read, ls-files, branch, diff, checkout -b, checkout, branch -d, tag add, tag list, verify.
4 — Push benchmarking (manual, not a release gate)
tools/bench_push.py creates real repos on a hub, builds N commits of random content, times the first push and the re-push (all objects already present), then cleans up. Use it to verify push performance after changes to the wire protocol or to reproduce timeout issues.
cd ~/ecosystem/musehub
# Sizes: xs=1c/5f/512B s=10c/10f/1KB m=100c/20f/2KB l=500c/50f/4KB xl=1000c/100f/8KB
python tools/bench_push.py xs # local hub
python tools/bench_push.py --hub https://staging.musehub.ai xs s m
This is not a release gate. It creates real gabriel/bench-* repos on the hub — clean them up afterwards if needed.