Generic Electron App for various use-cases
The only development dependency of this project is Node.js, so just make sure you have it installed. Then type few commands known to every Node developer...
git clone https://github.com/szwacz/electron-boilerplate.git
cd electron-boilerplate
npm install
npm start
npm start
The version of Electron runtime your app is using is declared in package.json
:
"devDependencies": {
"electron": "1.6.2"
}
Remember to respect the split between dependencies
and devDependencies
in package.json
file. Only modules listed in dependencies
will be included into distributable app when you run the release script.
Side note: If the module you want to use in your app is a native one (not pure JavaScript but compiled C code or something) you should first run npm install name_of_npm_module --save
and then npm run postinstall
to rebuild the module for Electron. This needs to be done only once when you're first time installing the module. Later on postinstall script will fire automatically with every npm install
.
Thanks to rollup you can (and should) use ES6 modules for all code in src
folder. But because ES6 modules still aren't natively supported you can't use them in the app
folder.
Use ES6 syntax in the src
folder like this:
import myStuff from './my_lib/my_stuff';
But use CommonJS syntax in app
folder. So the code from above should look as follows:
var myStuff = require('./my_lib/my_stuff');
npm test
Using electron-mocha test runner with the chai assertion library. This task searches for all files in src
directory which respect pattern *.spec.js
(so you can put unit test file in the same directory as the tested file).
npm run e2e
Using mocha test runner and spectron. This task searches for all files in e2e
directory which respect pattern *.e2e.js
.
npm run coverage
Using istanbul code coverage tool.
You can set the reporter(s) by setting ISTANBUL_REPORTERS
environment variable (defaults to text-summary
and html
). The report directory can be set with ISTANBUL_REPORT_DIR
(defaults to coverage
).
Electron can be plugged into CI systems. Here two CIs are preconfigured for you. Travis CI tests on macOS and Linux, App Veyor tests on Windows.
To package your app into an installer use command:
npm run release
It will start the packaging process for operating system you are running this command on. Ready for distribution file will be outputted to dist
directory.
You can create Windows installer only when running on Windows, the same is true for Linux and macOS. So to generate all three installers you need all three operating systems.
All packaging actions are handled by electron-builder. It has a lot of customization options, which you can declare under "build" key in package.json file.
Released under the MIT license.