aman/docs/persona-and-distribution.md
Thales Maciel a3368056ff
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Ship the portable X11 bundle lifecycle
Implement milestone 2 around a portable X11 release bundle instead of\nkeeping distro packages as the only end-user path.\n\nAdd make/package scripts plus a portable installer helper that builds the\ntarball, creates a user-scoped venv install, manages the user service, handles\nupgrade rollback, and supports uninstall with optional purge.\n\nFlip the end-user docs to the portable bundle, add a dedicated install guide\nand validation matrix, and leave the roadmap milestone open only for the\nremaining manual distro validation evidence.\n\nValidation: python3 -m py_compile src/*.py packaging/portable/portable_installer.py tests/test_portable_bundle.py; PYTHONPATH=src python3 -m unittest tests.test_portable_bundle; PYTHONPATH=src python3 -m unittest tests.test_aman_cli tests.test_diagnostics tests.test_portable_bundle; PYTHONPATH=src python3 -m unittest discover -s tests -p 'test_*.py'
2026-03-12 15:01:26 -03:00

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# Aman Target Persona and Distribution Strategy
## Primary Persona: Desktop Professional
This is the canonical Aman user.
- Uses Linux desktop daily on X11, across mainstream distros.
- Wants fast dictation and rewriting without learning Python tooling.
- Prefers GUI setup and tray usage over CLI.
- Expects a simple end-user install plus a normal background service lifecycle.
Design implications:
- End-user install path must not require `uv`.
- Runtime defaults should work with minimal input.
- Supported daily use should be a `systemd --user` service.
- Foreground `aman run` should remain available for setup, support, and
debugging.
- Diagnostics should be part of the user workflow, not only developer tooling.
- Documentation should distinguish current release channels from the long-term
GA contract.
## Secondary Persona: Power User
- Comfortable with CLI, package internals, and model customization.
- Uses advanced config, external APIs, or custom models.
- Can run diagnostics and debug logs when needed.
Design implications:
- Keep Make and Python workflows available.
- Keep explicit expert-mode knobs in settings and config.
- Keep docs for development separate from standard install docs.
## Current Release Channels
The current release channels are:
1. Current canonical end-user channel: portable X11 bundle (`aman-x11-linux-<version>.tar.gz`).
2. Secondary packaged channel: Debian package (`.deb`) for Ubuntu/Debian users.
3. Secondary maintainer channel: Arch package inputs (`PKGBUILD` + source tarball).
4. Developer: wheel and sdist from `python -m build`.
## GA Target Support Contract
For X11 GA, Aman supports:
- X11 desktop sessions only.
- System CPython `3.10`, `3.11`, or `3.12` for the portable installer.
- Runtime dependencies installed from the distro package manager.
- `systemd --user` as the supported daily-use path.
- `aman run` as the foreground setup, support, and debugging path.
- Representative validation across Debian/Ubuntu, Arch, Fedora, and openSUSE.
- The recovery sequence `aman doctor` -> `aman self-check` ->
`journalctl --user -u aman` -> `aman run --verbose`.
"Any distro" means mainstream distros that satisfy these assumptions. It does
not mean native-package parity or exhaustive certification for every Linux
variant.
## Canonical end-user lifecycle
- Install: extract the portable bundle and run `./install.sh`.
- Update: extract the newer portable bundle and run its `./install.sh`.
- Uninstall: run `~/.local/share/aman/current/uninstall.sh`.
- Purge uninstall: run `~/.local/share/aman/current/uninstall.sh --purge`.
- Recovery: `aman doctor` -> `aman self-check` -> `journalctl --user -u aman` -> `aman run --verbose`.
## Out of Scope for X11 GA
- Wayland production support.
- Flatpak/snap-first distribution.
- Cross-platform desktop installers outside Linux.
- Native-package parity across every distro.
## Release and Support Policy
- App versioning follows SemVer (`0.y.z` until API/UX stabilizes).
- Config schema versioning is independent (`config_version` in config).
- Docs must always separate:
- Current release channels
- GA target support contract
- Developer setup paths
- The public support contract must always identify:
- Supported environment assumptions
- Daily-use service mode versus manual foreground mode
- Canonical recovery sequence
- Representative validation families
- GA means the support contract, validation evidence, and release surface are
consistent. It does not require a native package for every distro.