Security required attention too. The app’s sync protocol sent plaintext payloads. While the repack’s mission wasn’t to re-architect the protocol, Amir added optional local encryption: the bootstrap could generate a per-installation key and keep the data at rest encrypted, and the stubbed service accepted an encrypted tunnel for local-only use. He wrote clear notes in the repack README explaining that end-to-end security across networks remained a future task, but at least the repack would not leave user data trivially exposed on disk.
Feedback arrived. Some users wanted a full installer again for mass deployment; others asked for real server support rather than the local stub. Amir collected these requests and documented paths forward: build a modern server endpoint, migrate the protocol to TLS, or reimplement a lightweight cross-platform client in .NET Core. For now, the repack had bought time and restored function. jenganet for winforms repack
Once the functional issues were resolved, Amir automated the repack build. He set up a lightweight pipeline that pulled the binaries, applied the binding redirects and private assemblies, generated the bootstrapper, embedded the stub service, produced a signed ZIP, and produced a SHA-256 checksum for distribution. Tests were simple: the bootstrap should install into a non-admin profile, the app should start, the stubbed service should respond, and basic sync flows should complete locally. The tests passed, mostly. Security required attention too