npm package discovery and stats viewer.

Discover Tips

  • General search

    [free text search, go nuts!]

  • Package details

    pkg:[package-name]

  • User packages

    @[username]

Sponsor

Optimize Toolset

I’ve always been into building performant and accessible sites, but lately I’ve been taking it extremely seriously. So much so that I’ve been building a tool to help me optimize and monitor the sites that I build to make sure that I’m making an attempt to offer the best experience to those who visit them. If you’re into performant, accessible and SEO friendly sites, you might like it too! You can check it out at Optimize Toolset.

About

Hi, 👋, I’m Ryan Hefner  and I built this site for me, and you! The goal of this site was to provide an easy way for me to check the stats on my npm packages, both for prioritizing issues and updates, and to give me a little kick in the pants to keep up on stuff.

As I was building it, I realized that I was actually using the tool to build the tool, and figured I might as well put this out there and hopefully others will find it to be a fast and useful way to search and browse npm packages as I have.

If you’re interested in other things I’m working on, follow me on Twitter or check out the open source projects I’ve been publishing on GitHub.

I am also working on a Twitter bot for this site to tweet the most popular, newest, random packages from npm. Please follow that account now and it will start sending out packages soon–ish.

Open Software & Tools

This site wouldn’t be possible without the immense generosity and tireless efforts from the people who make contributions to the world and share their work via open source initiatives. Thank you 🙏

© 2024 – Pkg Stats / Ryan Hefner

@ingstory/prebuild

v13.0.1

Published

A command line tool for easily making prebuilt binaries for multiple versions of node, electron or node-webkit on a specific platform

Downloads

6

Readme

prebuild

A command line tool for easily making prebuilt binaries for multiple versions of Node.js, Node-API, Electron and NW.js on a specific platform.

$ npm install -g prebuild

npm Node version js-standard-style

Features

  • Builds native modules for any version of Node.js, Node-API, Electron or NW.js, without having to switch between different versions to do so. This works by only downloading the correct headers and telling node-gyp to use those instead of the ones installed on your system.
  • Upload (--upload) prebuilt binaries to GitHub.
  • Support for stripping (--strip) debug information. Strip command defaults to strip but can be overridden by the STRIP environment variable.
  • Install prebuilt modules via prebuild-install.

Building

Building is only required for targets with different ABI versions. To build for all supported ABI versions (example from leveldown):

prebuild --all

Supported ABI versions may change over time without a new prebuild release.

Alternatively, to build for some specific versions you can do:

prebuild -t 0.10.42 -t 0.12.10 -t 4.3.0

To build for Node-API, do:

prebuild -t 3 -r napi

To build against Electron headers, do:

prebuild -t 1.4.10 -r electron

To build against NW.js headers, do:

prebuild -t 0.26.6 -r node-webkit

See allTargets for all available versions.

For more options run prebuild --help. The prebuilds created are compatible with node-pre-gyp

If you'd like to include other files with your prebuilds like additional .node files or other native libraries, you can pass a file-matching regular expression to --include-regex:

prebuild -t 8.0.0 --include-regex "\.(node|a)$"

Note that if you include multiple .node files, you will need to use the prebuild-install's --binary-name parameter to indicate which file should be loaded:

prebuild-install --binary-name main-binary.node

The build file format is selected automatically by node-gyp, however it is possible to specify needed format explicitly with --format parameter. This is particularly useful if unusual flavor is required, which could be specified in 'format-flavor' form (there is no comprehensive list of formats/flavors available so one has to find possible combinations from node-gyp source code). For example, in order to build using Makefiles but assume Android cross-compilation:

prebuild --format make-android

When using the cmake-js backend additional parameters can be passed through.

prebuild --backend cmake-js -- --prefer-clang --CDUV_INCLUDE_DIR=...

Scripts

A prepack script can be specified that is executed once the .node module has been created but before it is compressed and moved. This can be used to perform code signing.

prebuild --prepack 'codesign -v -s MyCompany'

The --preinstall or --prepack parameters can take either a shell command or JS file to be executed.

Uploading

prebuild supports uploading prebuilds to GitHub releases. If the release doesn't exist, it will be created for you. To upload prebuilds simply add the -u <github-token> option:

$ prebuild --all -u <github-token>

If you don't want to use the token on cli you can put it in ~/.prebuildrc:

upload=<github-token>

Note that --upload will only upload the targets that was built and stored in ./prebuilds, so prebuild -u <github-token> -t 4.3.0 will only upload the binary for the 4.3.0 target.

You can use prebuild --upload-all to upload all files from the ./prebuilds folder.

You can use prebuild --upload --tag-prefix <prefix> for specific tag prefixes for the release. The default prefix is v and will result in a tag with an appended version number, for example v1.0.0. For lerna you can use the package name e.g. prebuild --tag-prefix some-package@ and the binaries will be released on the appropriate package's tags, for example [email protected].

You can use prebuild --upload --prerelease to create a prerelease, which will not be shown as the latest release.

Create GitHub Token

A GitHub token is needed for two reasons:

  • Create a GitHub release (leveldown example)
  • Upload the prebuilt binaries to that release

To create a token:

  • Go to this page
  • Click the Generate new token button
  • Give the token a name and click the Generate token button, see below

prebuild-token

The default scopes should be fine.

Node-API Considerations

Declaring Supported Node-API Versions

Native modules that are designed to work with Node-API, which was previously known as N-API, must explicitly declare the Node-API version(s) against which they can build. This is accomplished by including a binary property on the module's package.json file. For example:

"binary": {
  "napi_versions": [2,3]
}

In the absence of a need to compile against a specific Node-API version, the value 3 is a good choice as this is the Node-API version that was supported when Node-API left experimental status.

Modules that are built against a specific Node-API version will continue to operate indefinitely, even as later versions of Node-API are introduced.

Defining the NAPI_VERSION Value

The Node-API header files supplied with Node use the NAPI_VERSION preprocessor value supplied by the user to configure each build to the specific Node-API version for which the native addon is being built. In addition, the module's C/C++ code can use this value to conditionally compile code based on the Node-API version it is being compiled against.

prebuild supports two build backends: node-gyp and cmake-js. The NAPI_VERSION value is configured differently for each backend.

node-gyp

The following code must be included in the binding.gyp file of modules targeting Node-API:

"defines": [
  "NAPI_VERSION=<(napi_build_version)",
]

cmake-js

The following line must be included in the CMakeLists.txt file of modules targeting Node-API:

add_compile_definitions(NAPI_VERSION=${napi_build_version})

prebuild arguments

The --runtime argument must be napi to request Node-API builds. When requesting Node-API builds, the module's package.json file must include a binary property as described above. And the binding.gyp file must include a define for NAPI_VERSION as described above.

One or more --target arguments may be specified to request builds for specific Node-API versions. Node-API versions are positive integer values. Alternatively, --all may be used to request builds for all Node-API versions supported by the module.

In the absence of both --target and --all arguments, prebuild will build the most current version of the module supported by the Node instance performing the build.

Help

$ prebuild -h
prebuild [options]

  --target      -t  version     (version to build or install for)
  --runtime     -r  runtime     (Node runtime [node, napi, electron or node-webkit] to build or install for, default is node)
  --arch        -a  arch        (architecture to build or install for [default: process.arch])
  --all                         (prebuild for all known abi versions)
  --upload      -u  [gh-token]  (upload prebuilds to github)
  --upload-all  -u  [gh-token]  (upload all files from ./prebuilds folder to github)
  --tag-prefix <prefix>         (github tag prefix, default is "v")
  --preinstall  -i  script      (run this script before prebuilding)
  --prepack     -c  script      (run this script before packing, can be used to codesign)
  --path        -p  path        (make a prebuild here)
  --include-regex               (regex to match files that will be distributed [default: '\.node$'])
  --libc                        (use provided libc rather than system default)
  --backend                     (specify build backend, default is 'node-gyp')
  --format                      (specify additional parameters for `node-gyp` backend)
  --strip                       (strip debug information)
  --debug                       (set Debug or Release configuration)
  --verbose                     (log verbosely)
  --version                     (print prebuild version and exit)

JavaScript API

var prebuild = require('prebuild')

.build(opts, version, cb)

Options:

  • .log (optional)
  • .preinstall (optional)
  • .gyp Provide a custom node-gyp instance (optional)
  • .backend Provide a custom node-gyp instance via string. Alternatives are 'node-gyp', 'node-ninja', 'nw-gyp' and 'cmake-js' (optional, defaults to 'node-gyp')
  • .args Additional command line arguments to node-gyp (optional)
  • .debug Pass in --debug on command line to gyp backend (optional)

Example:

prebuild.build({}, version, function (err) {
  // ...
})

Global options:

  • .debug Download or build a debug build (default: false)
  • .arch Processor architecture (default: process.arch)

Develop prebuild

If you want to hack on prebuild you need an environment to play around with. We recommend a setup similar to the following:

  • A fork of prebuild
  • A GitHub token (see above)
  • A native node module
$ git clone [email protected]:<your-nick>/prebuild
$ cd prebuild && npm link && cd ..
$ git clone [email protected]:<your-nick>/some-native-module

Since you did npm link on prebuild it will be installed globally. Now you can go ahead and try things out.

$ cd some-native-module
$ prebuild --all --strip -u <github-token>

This command would:

  • Build some-native-module for all supported targets and store them in ./prebuilds/
  • Strip binaries from debug information
  • Create a release on GitHub, if needed
  • Upload all binaries to that release, if not already uploaded

Before you commit your changes and send us a pull request, do run npm test.

License

MIT