/native-path-loader

Loader for Node native electron multi-platform use

Primary LanguageJavaScriptMIT LicenseMIT

native-path-loader

Loader for Node native electron multi-platform use. The project is inspired by the native-ext-loader.

Installation

Add the package to the development dependencies:

# using npm:
$ npm install native-path-loader --save-dev

# using yarn:
$ yarn add --dev native-path-loader

Usage

Update rules entry in the Webpack configuration file:

module: {
  rules: [
    {
      test: /\.node$/,
      loader: "native-path-loader"
    }
  ];
}

Options

Options are configurable using options hash:

module: {
  rules: [
    {
      test: /\.node$/,
      loader: "native-path-loader",
      options: {
        rewritePath: path.resolve(__dirname, "dist")
      }
    }
  ];
}

basePath (default: [])

It allows adjusting path to the native module. The array will be concatenated with the resource name and then used in the runtime. For example, when the compile application lives inside app.asar/renderer subdirectory (Electron package), the path to the native module can be adjusted by using basePath: ['app.asar', 'renderer'].

Note that basePath is ignored when rewritePath option is used.

rewritePath (default: undefined)

It allows to set an absolute paths to native files.

Note that it needs to remain undefined if you are building a package with embedded files. This way, the compiled application will work no matter of its location. This is important when building Electron applications that can be placed in any directory by the end user.

emit (default: true)

Specifies whether the imported .node file will be copied to the output directory.

Releasing a new version

  1. Bump version number in the package.json and CHANGELOG.md files.
  2. Run npm install to update package-lock.json file.
  3. Commit changes (include changes)
  4. Add a new tag (use -a and include changes)
  5. Push commits and tag
  6. Run npm publish