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Ypack 1.2.3 (2024)

On another machine without internet:

# Step 1: Initialize manifest ypack init my-bundle ypack add /app --include node_modules --exclude .git Step 3: Set entry point ypack config set entrypoint start.sh Step 4: Build the bundle ypack build --output myapp.ypk Step 5: Verify integrity (new in 1.2.3) ypack verify-integrity --bundle myapp.ypk Step 6: Test extraction locally ypack unpack myapp.ypk -O ./test-run ypack 1.2.3

Community feedback on has been overwhelmingly positive. According to the official forum poll (as of October 2026), 94% of users recommend upgrading immediately, citing the security fixes alone as justification. Conclusion: Is ypack 1.2.3 Right for You? If you are already leveraging ypack for dependency management, air-gapped installs, or reproducible builds, ypack 1.2.3 is a must-have upgrade. The security patches alone make it worth the five-minute update process. For new users, version 1.2.3 represents the most stable, documented, and performant entry point into the ypack ecosystem. On another machine without internet: # Step 1:

export YPACK_ZSTD_THREADS=2 Then rerun the decompression or run command. The ypack roadmap hints at version 1.3 (due Q4 2026) which will introduce delta updates —only changed files instead of full rebundling. However, the team has stated that ypack 1.2.3 will be the last minor release to support Python 2.7-based build scripts. If your CI relies on that, plan a migration. If you are already leveraging ypack for dependency