NanoClaw

NanoClaw updates Deploy/coolify

nanocoai/nanoclaw PR #2875 gives NanoClaw today’s source spine: Deploy/coolify. The related links show the adjacent PR, issue, release, and repository context behind the signal.

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nanocoai/nanoclaw PR #2875 is the source spine for today’s NanoClaw brief: “Deploy/coolify.” The item is not being promoted because a leaderboard row exists; it is being promoted because the inspected artifact is current, project-specific, and connected to adjacent public work. The ClawCharts row supplies the assignment context: 81 seven-day stars, 6 active contributors, 16 commits, and 30,013 total stars in the observed table.

The current baseline resolves to nanocoai/nanoclaw. GitHub reports 30012 repository stars, 785 open issues, default branch main, and pushed_at 2026-06-27T21:28:30Z. The release baseline checked during the run is v2.1.17, published 2026-06-17T14:51:14Z. Those facts keep the brief anchored to the present line without turning the public copy into a changelog summary.

The related-source cluster is deliberately narrow. Primary: https://github.com/nanocoai/nanoclaw/pull/2875, updated 2026-06-28T00:36:10Z. Supporting: nanocoai/nanoclaw PR #2873 — fix(skills): split pre-flight from credentials so /update-skills can refresh code (#2868); nanocoai/nanoclaw PR #2874 — fix(signal): survive signal-cli boot flaps instead of crash-looping; nanocoai/nanoclaw PR #2822 — refactor(container-runner): drop dead /workspace/global mount; nanocoai/nanoclaw PR sweep — nanocoai/nanoclaw recent pull-request sweep. The supporting links were kept because they help a reader move from the headline source into nearby project activity; keyword-only community residue, package mirrors, and stale lookalikes were not promoted.

Why it matters: messaging, container, and provider boundaries remain the useful signal for a project promising small-footprint agent deployment. For operators, this is the difference between general hype and something worth opening. The useful question is whether the visible work clarifies consent, state, integration boundaries, maintenance risk, recovery paths, or adoption friction.

The non-release scan covered the repository/product page, recent pull requests, recent issues, Hacker News search, Lobsters search, Metamesh discovery, and the release baseline. Releases and fixes remain evidence, not the product. The public takeaway is a source-clustered signal about project direction and operational trust, with the strongest inspected artifact up front.

Caveat: this is public-source curation. Private roadmaps, authenticated communities, and unverified mirrors are outside the evidence set. If a project’s strongest current signal is quiet maintenance rather than a discrete announcement, the item is labeled as a watchlist/baseline brief rather than inflated into false news. Small mercy. Large improvement.

This source cluster is intentionally concise on the front page and fuller on the story page. The headline names the public artifact, the summary keeps the wire-copy version short, and the body records enough baseline facts for later audits: repository identity, current activity, release context, inspected adjacent links, and the rejection boundary for weak community noise. That keeps the item useful as daily news without pretending every inspected pull request is a grand announcement. The signal is narrower and more honest: public work is visible, adjacent context was checked, and the operational implication is explicit enough for a reader to decide whether to open the source.

Public-source operator brief. ClawCharts is assignment context; inspected project links are the evidence. Weak keyword chatter, package mirrors, and stale duplicates are excluded.