/nwjs-builder-phoenix

Primary LanguageNSISMIT LicenseMIT

nwsign - test signing nw.js app

nwjs-builder-phoenix npm version Standard Version

A possible solution to build and package a ready for distribution nw.js app for Windows, macOS and Linux.

Why Bother?

nw-builder and nwjs-builder were built before nw-builder supported 0.13.x and later versions. Both have stalled along the way.

When I became an Electron user, electron-builder inspired me: one can exclude files, support various targets, support auto-updating, publish artifacts, and support code signing. It really is a step ahead of nw.js.

nw.js still supports many use cases not supported by Electron, so we need something more modern like electron-builder, but for nw.js. That's why nwjs-builder-phoenix exists.

Features

  • Building for Windows, macOS and Linux
    • Common: zip, 7z
    • Windows: nsis, nsis7z
    • macOS: TODO
    • Linux: TODO
  • Building for different platforms concurrently
  • Configurable executable fields and icons for Windows and macOS
  • Exclusion of loose files from node_modules
  • Chrome App support
  • nwjs-ffmpeg-prebuilt integration
  • Auto Updater
  • TODO Rebuilding native modules
  • Code signing (mac and windows)
  • Ideas appreciated :)

Getting Started

  • Make sure your NW.js project has a valid package.json (e.g. generated by npm init), and have basic fields like name, description and version filled.

  • Install nwjs-builder-phoenix as a devDependencies of your NW.js project as follows:

# Optional wine for building for Windows on other platforms.
# The command may differ in different Linux distributions.
#sudo apt-get install wine
npm install nwjs-builder-phoenix --save-dev

By installing it locally, build and run commands will be available in npm scripts. You can access option lists via ./node_modules/.bin/{ build, run } --help.

DO NOT install it globally, as the command names are just too common.

  • Add build properties at the root of the package.json, for example:
// package.json
{
    "build": {
        "nwVersion": "0.14.7"
    }
}

This will specify the NW.js version we are using. See more in the following Options section.

  • Add some helper npm scripts, for example:
// package.json
{
    "scripts": {
        // Deprecated. "dist": "build --win --mac --linux --x86 --x64 --mirror https://dl.nwjs.io/ .",
        "dist": "build --tasks win-x86,win-x64,linux-x86,linux-x64,mac-x64 --mirror https://dl.nwjs.io/ .",
        "start": "run --x86 --mirror https://dl.nwjs.io/ ."
    }
}

The above code snippet enables npm run dist and npm run start/npm start. The former builds for all major platforms and both x86 and x64 arch, and the latter runs the project with x86 binaries, both with the specified version of NW.js and use specified mirror to accelerate the download.

  • Well done.

This should be the common use case, read the following Options section and FAQs if something is missing.

See also sample project and test cases for reference.

Options

Passing and managing commandline arguments can be painful. In nwjs-builder-phoenix, we configure via the build property of the package.json of your NW.js project.

Also see all available options here.

Differences to nwjs-builder

  • nwjs-builder-phoenix queries versions.json only when a symbol like lts, stable or latest is used to specify a version.
  • nwjs-builder-phoenix uses rcedit instead of node-resourcehacker, thus it's up to you to create proper .ico files with different sizes.
  • nwjs-builder-phoenix supports node.js 4.x and later versions only.
  • nwjs-builder-phoenix writes with TypeScript and benefits from strong typing and async/await functions.

Development

git clone https://github.com/evshiron/nwjs-builder-phoenix
cd nwjs-builder-phoenix
npm install

npm test

By the way, I use some custom strings in NSIS scripts which might not be fully translated, if anyone is interested in translating them into languages that aren't available, feel free to fork and send PRs.

Available Mirrors

If you have difficulties connecting to the official download source, you can specify a mirror via --mirror argument of both build and run, or by setting NWJS_MIRROR environment variable. Environment variables like HTTP_PROXY, HTTPS_PROXY and ALL_PROXY should be useful too.

License

MIT.