Skip to content

Package and distribute your Electron app in OS executables (.app, .exe etc) via JS or CLI. Maintained by the community

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

btelintelo/electron-packager

 
 

Repository files navigation

electron-packager

Package your Electron app into OS-specific bundles (.app, .exe, etc.) via JavaScript or the command line. Supports building Windows, Linux or Mac executables.

Build Status

About

Electron Packager is a command line tool that packages electron app source code into executables like .app or .exe along with a copy of Electron.

This module was developed as part of Dat, a grant funded non-profit open source project. It is maintained by volunteers. If you are benefitting from this module please consider making contributions back.

Note that packaged Electron applications can be relatively large. A zipped barebones OS X Electron application is around 40MB.

Installation

# for use in npm scripts
npm install electron-packager --save-dev

# for use from cli
npm install electron-packager -g

Usage

From the Command Line

Running electron-packager from the command line has this basic form:

electron-packager <sourcedir> <appname> --platform=<platform> --arch=<arch> --version=<Electron version> [optional flags...]

This will:

  • Find or download the correct release of Electron
  • Use that version of Electron to create a app in <out>/<appname>-<platform>-<arch> (this can be customized via an optional flag)

For details on the optional flags, run electron-packager --help or see usage.txt.

You should be able to launch the app on the platform you built for. If not, check your settings and try again.

Be careful not to include node_modules you don't want into your final app. electron-packager, electron-prebuilt and .git will be ignored by default. You can use --ignore to ignore files and folders via a regular expression. For example, --ignore=node_modules/electron-packager or --ignore="node_modules/(electron-packager|electron-prebuilt)".

Example

Given the app FooBar with the following file structure:

foobar
├─package.json
└┬src
 ├─index.html
 ├─script.js
 └─style.css

When one runs the following command for the first time in the foobar directory:

electron-packager . FooBar --platform=darwin --arch=x64 --version=0.28.2

electron-packager will do the following:

  • downloads Electron 0.28.2 for OS X on x64 (and caches the download in ~/.electron)
  • builds the OS X FooBar.app
  • places FooBar.app in foobar/FooBar-darwin-x64/ (since an out directory was not specified)

The file structure now looks like:

foobar
├┬FooBar-darwin-x64
│├┬FooBar.app
││└[…Mac app contents…]
│├─LICENSE
│└─version
├─package.json
└┬src
 ├─index.html
 ├─script.js
 └─style.css

The FooBar.app folder generated can be executed by a system running OS X, which will start the packaged Electron app.

Programmatic API

var packager = require('electron-packager')
packager(opts, function done (err, appPath) { })

packager(opts, callback)

opts

Required

dir - String

The source directory.

name - String

The application name.

platform - String

Allowed values: linux, win32, darwin, all

Not required if all is used. Arbitrary combinations of individual platforms are also supported via a comma-delimited string or array of strings. The non-all values correspond to the platform names used by Electron releases.

arch - String

Allowed values: ia32, x64, all

Not required if all is used. The non-all values correspond to the architecture names used by Electron releases.

version - String

Electron version (without the 'v') - for example, 0.33.9. See Electron releases for valid versions.

Optional

all - Boolean

When true, sets both arch and platform to all.

app-bundle-id - String

app-category-type - String

The application category type, as shown in the Finder via View -> Arrange by Application Category when viewing the Applications directory (OS X only).

For example, app-category-type=public.app-category.developer-tools will set the application category to Developer Tools.

Valid values are listed in Apple's documentation.

app-version - String

asar - Boolean

asar-unpack - String

asar-unpack-dir - String

Unpacks the dir to app.asar.unpacked directory whose names exactly match this string. The asar-unpack-dir is relative to dir. For example, asar-unpack-dir=sub_dir will unpack the directory /<dir>/sub_dir.

build-version - String

cache - String

helper-bundle-id - String

icon - String

Currently you must look for conversion tools in order to supply an icon in the format required by the platform:

If the file extension is omitted, it is auto-completed to the correct extension based on the platform, including when --platform=all is in effect.

ignore - RegExp

out - String

overwrite - Boolean

prune - Boolean

sign - String

strict-ssl - Boolean

Whether SSL certificates are required to be valid when downloading Electron. Defaults to true.

version-string - Object

Object hash of application metadata to embed into the executable (Windows only):

  • CompanyName
  • LegalCopyright
  • FileDescription
  • OriginalFilename
  • FileVersion
  • ProductVersion
  • ProductName
  • InternalName
callback

err - Error

Contains errors, if any.

appPath - String

Path to the newly created application.

Building Windows apps from non-Windows platforms

Building an Electron app for the Windows platform with a custom icon requires editing the Electron.exe file. Currently, electron-packager uses node-rcedit to accomplish this. A Windows executable is bundled in that node package and needs to be run in order for this functionality to work, so on non-Windows platforms, Wine needs to be installed. On OS X, it is installable via Homebrew.

Related

About

Package and distribute your Electron app in OS executables (.app, .exe etc) via JS or CLI. Maintained by the community

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • JavaScript 100.0%