chrome-native-messaging
v0.2.0
Published
Transform streams for writing Chrome App native messaging hosts in Node.js
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Chrome Native Messaging for Node.js
Transform streams for writing Chrome App native messaging hosts in Node.js.
Install
npm i -S chrome-native-messaging
API
The module exports Input
, Output
, and Transform
transform streams.
Input
streams transform bytes to objects.
Output
streams transform objects to bytes.
Use Transform
to easily create custom object-to-object transform streams.
var nativeMessage = require('chrome-native-messaging');
process.stdin
.pipe(new nativeMessage.Input())
.pipe(new nativeMessage.Transform(function(msg, push, done) {
var reply = getReplyFor(msg); // Implemented elsewhere by you.
push(reply); // Push as many replies as you like.
done(); // Call when done pushing replies.
}))
.pipe(new nativeMessage.Output())
.pipe(process.stdout)
;
Example
The app
directory contains a sample Chrome App.
The host
directory contains a native messaging host that you can send "readdir" messages to.
Go to the Chrome Extensions page (chrome://extensions/) and hit "Load unpacked extension...".
Select the app
directory. Look at the ID it received and put it in the host manifest.
The host
directory contains the manifest that must be copied to the correct directory
on OS X.
Install the host manifest:
sudo host/register.sh
On Windows (Run as Administrator):
host\register.bat
Open a new tab and hit Apps in the upper left. Launch the example app and send yourself messages.
Testing
Run npm test
for the unit tests.
json2msg.js
is a script that can convert lines of JSON into native messages.
Use it to send messages to your host to see how it responds.
Pipe the output of your host to msg2json.js
to see what its output looks like.
./json2msg.js < test.json | ./host/my_host.js | ./msg2json.js
On Windows:
node json2msg.js < test.json | node host\my_host.js | node msg2json.js
Logging
Enabling logging in Chrome can help find problems finding the manifest.
Quit Chrome first.
open -a Google\ Chrome --args --enable-logging --v=1
On Windows:
start chrome --enable-logging --v=1
View the log like this:
less ~/Library/Application\ Support/Google/Chrome/chrome_debug.log
On Windows:
type "C:\Users\%USERNAME%\AppData\Local\Google\Chrome\User Data\chrome_debug.log"
More info: http://www.chromium.org/for-testers/enable-logging