
Lonny Wong focused on cross-platform software packaging and distribution, delivering new and updated installers for lightweight SSH and file-transfer tools across repositories such as chromebrew/chromebrew, ScoopInstaller/Extras, and chenrui333/homebrew-core. He automated package management workflows using Ruby, Go, and YAML, ensuring accurate metadata, architecture support, and localization for tools like tssh, trzsz, and tsshd. His work included implementing CI-friendly test automation, versioned manifests, and auto-update mechanisms, which improved deployment reliability and reduced maintenance overhead. By formalizing installation and testing procedures, Lonny enhanced release quality and streamlined adoption of these utilities across Linux, Windows, and macOS environments.
March 2026 monthly performance summary for chenrui333/homebrew-core focused on delivering packaging for a new server component and establishing robust test procedures. The key accomplishment was introducing a Homebrew formula for tsshd (UDP SSH server with roaming support), including installation and testing procedures to ensure reliable end-user deployment.
March 2026 monthly performance summary for chenrui333/homebrew-core focused on delivering packaging for a new server component and establishing robust test procedures. The key accomplishment was introducing a Homebrew formula for tsshd (UDP SSH server with roaming support), including installation and testing procedures to ensure reliable end-user deployment.
January 2026 monthly summary focusing on delivering up-to-date dependencies, distribution improvements, and packaging automation across three repositories. Key efforts include coordinated trzsz-related upgrades, expanded installers/localization, and test coverage for auto-updatable packages. No major bug fixes were reported; work emphasized stability, compatibility, and maintainability with an emphasis on business value.
January 2026 monthly summary focusing on delivering up-to-date dependencies, distribution improvements, and packaging automation across three repositories. Key efforts include coordinated trzsz-related upgrades, expanded installers/localization, and test coverage for auto-updatable packages. No major bug fixes were reported; work emphasized stability, compatibility, and maintainability with an emphasis on business value.
Month 2025-11 summary for ScoopInstaller/Extras focusing on delivering roaming support for Trzsz-SSH Server (tsshd) 0.1.5 with auto-update and firewall guidance. The work enhanced roaming migration reliability, simplified deployment across architectures, and provided explicit firewall recommendations to ensure smooth operation in restricted networks.
Month 2025-11 summary for ScoopInstaller/Extras focusing on delivering roaming support for Trzsz-SSH Server (tsshd) 0.1.5 with auto-update and firewall guidance. The work enhanced roaming migration reliability, simplified deployment across architectures, and provided explicit firewall recommendations to ensure smooth operation in restricted networks.
Summary for 2025-10: This period focused on expanding distribution and installability of lightweight SSH and file-transfer tools through Chromebrew and Winget-pkgs. Key features delivered include packaging for tssh and trzsz in chromebrew, enabling straightforward distribution with proper metadata, architectures, licenses, source URLs, and build dependencies. In Winget-pkgs, the Trzsz.tssh package manifest was updated to version 0.1.23 with a new installer and locale settings to support publish workflows, and a new Trzsz.lrzsz package was added to enable zmodem/xmodem/ymodem transfers across Windows. No explicit user-facing bug fixes are recorded in this period; the focus was on packaging correctness, manifest accuracy, and release readiness. Overall impact: expanded installability and adoption across Linux (Chromebrew) and Windows (Winget), reducing time-to-deploy for end users and improving cross-platform tooling. Technologies/skills demonstrated: packaging automation and metadata (architectures, licenses, source URLs, dependencies), versioned manifests, cross-repo collaboration, installer creation, locale handling, and release process discipline.
Summary for 2025-10: This period focused on expanding distribution and installability of lightweight SSH and file-transfer tools through Chromebrew and Winget-pkgs. Key features delivered include packaging for tssh and trzsz in chromebrew, enabling straightforward distribution with proper metadata, architectures, licenses, source URLs, and build dependencies. In Winget-pkgs, the Trzsz.tssh package manifest was updated to version 0.1.23 with a new installer and locale settings to support publish workflows, and a new Trzsz.lrzsz package was added to enable zmodem/xmodem/ymodem transfers across Windows. No explicit user-facing bug fixes are recorded in this period; the focus was on packaging correctness, manifest accuracy, and release readiness. Overall impact: expanded installability and adoption across Linux (Chromebrew) and Windows (Winget), reducing time-to-deploy for end users and improving cross-platform tooling. Technologies/skills demonstrated: packaging automation and metadata (architectures, licenses, source URLs, dependencies), versioned manifests, cross-repo collaboration, installer creation, locale handling, and release process discipline.

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