* chore(kimi-desktop): rename installers to kcd-beta-alpha-crazy-internal New artifact name: kcd-beta-alpha-crazy-internal-v50-<arch>-<MMDD>.<ext>, where MMDD is the build date in UTC+8. This makes leaked or forwarded installers harder to mistake for an official release, and the date makes each build easy to identify. * chore(kimi-desktop): uppercase KCD in installer name |
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| build | ||
| scripts | ||
| src/main | ||
| .gitignore | ||
| electron-builder.config.cjs | ||
| package.json | ||
| README.md | ||
| tsconfig.json | ||
| tsdown.config.ts | ||
Kimi Code Desktop
An Electron desktop client for Kimi Code (product name Kimi Code Desktop;
workspace package @moonshot-ai/kimi-desktop). It is a thin shell + process manager
around the existing web UI (apps/kimi-web): it does not reimplement any UI or
backend, it just opens a native window onto the local Kimi server.
How it works
The web UI cannot run on its own — it needs the Kimi Code server (REST + WS
under /api/v1). That server already ships as a self-contained single-file
executable (SEA) built from apps/kimi-code, with the web UI bundled inside it.
On launch the app:
- Runs the bundled SEA's
server run, which reuses a live shared daemon if one is already running, or starts one — exactly the sameensureDaemonflow the CLI (kimi web) uses. The daemon binds the well-known port (58627) and writes~/.kimi-code/server/lock, so the CLI, the browser and the TUI all share the same server. - Reads that lock file for the real port and loads the web UI from the daemon's
origin (e.g.
http://127.0.0.1:58627) — same-origin, no CORS, no preload.
On quit the daemon is left running; it self-exits ~60s after the last client disconnects, so closing the desktop app never tears down a server another client is still using.
Key files:
src/main/ensure-server.ts— run the SEA, read the lock, confirm/healthz.src/main/sea-path.ts— resolve the bundled SEA path (dev vs packaged).src/main/index.ts— window, native menu, window-state, loading/error screens.
Develop
The dev build loads the SEA from apps/kimi-code/dist-native/bin/<target>/, so
build the backend once for your platform first:
# one-time (rebuild when kimi-code / kimi-web change):
pnpm --filter @moonshot-ai/kimi-web run build
node apps/kimi-code/scripts/copy-web-assets.mjs
pnpm --filter @moonshot-ai/kimi-code run build:native:sea
# then run the desktop app (builds the main process, launches Electron):
pnpm -C apps/kimi-desktop run dev # or: pnpm dev:desktop (from repo root)
Checks:
pnpm -C apps/kimi-desktop run typecheck
Package
dist builds the main process and runs electron-builder for the current
platform. scripts/before-pack.cjs stages the matching-platform SEA into the
app's resources (<resources>/bin/<target>/).
# unsigned local build (for your own machine):
CSC_IDENTITY_AUTO_DISCOVERY=false pnpm -C apps/kimi-desktop run dist
# -> apps/kimi-desktop/dist-app/
Do not rename a built
.appbundle — renaming invalidates its code signature and macOS will report it as "damaged".
Cross-platform installers are produced in CI (.github/workflows/desktop-build.yml),
which builds the SEA on each platform runner and packages there. SEA injection
is per-platform (the blob is injected into the host Node binary), so each OS must
be built on its own runner.
macOS signing + notarization
An unsigned macOS build shows "app is damaged and can't be opened" once it
has been transferred to another Mac (Gatekeeper quarantine). To distribute it,
the app must be signed with a Developer ID Application certificate and
notarized by Apple. The config (electron-builder.config.cjs) applies the
hardened runtime + entitlements (build/entitlements.mac.plist) to the app and
the nested SEA, and signing/notarization are environment-driven:
KIMI_DESKTOP_NOTARIZE=true \
CSC_NAME="Developer ID Application: … (TEAMID)" \
APPLE_API_KEY=/path/AuthKey_XXX.p8 APPLE_API_KEY_ID=XXXX APPLE_API_ISSUER=…uuid… \
pnpm -C apps/kimi-desktop run dist
In CI, run the desktop-build workflow with sign-macos: true; it reuses the
same Apple secrets / keychain action as the TUI native build
(APPLE_CERTIFICATE_P12, APPLE_NOTARIZATION_KEY_*). The resulting .dmg opens
on any Mac without warnings.
An
Apple Developmentcertificate is not enough — it can sign for your own machine but cannot be notarized. You need aDeveloper ID Applicationcert.
v1 scope / not done yet
- Auto-update: not implemented (v2).
- Windows / Linux signing: unsigned in v1 (Windows shows a SmartScreen prompt). Only macOS is signed + notarized.
- App icon: builds ship the Kimi logo (sourced from the docs site art) on macOS, Windows, and Linux.
- First launch may need network: the SEA resolves its native sidecars (clipboard / koffi) the same way the installed CLI does.