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

meteor-electrify

v4.0.0

Published

Package your Meteor apps with Electron, and butter.

Downloads

9

Readme

(Meteor-)Electrify

npm travis windows Dependencies Test Coverage

Easily package your Meteor apps with Electron, and butter.

TL;DR

npm install -g meteor-electrify electron
cd /your/meteor/app
electrify

Compatibility

Works on all Meteor's supported platforms.

Help

$ electrify -h

  Usage: electrify [command] [options]


  Commands:

    run       (default) start meteor app within electrify context
    bundle    bundle meteor app at `.electrify` dir
    package   bundle and package app to `--output` dir

  Options:

    -h, --help                 output usage information
    -V, --version              output the version number
    -i, --input    <path>      meteor app dir        | default = .
    -o, --output   <path>      output dir            | default = .electrify/.dist
    -s, --settings <path>      meteor settings file  | default = null (optional)
    -t, --temp     <path>      electrify temp folder | default = system temp folder
    -a, --arch     <arch>      arch to build for     | default = current arch
    -p, --platform <platform>  platform to build for | default = current platform

  Examples:

    # cd into meteor dir first
    cd /your/meteor/app
    
    electrify
    electrify run
    electrify package
    electrify package -o /dist/dir
    electrify package -o /dist/dir -s file.json
    electrify package -i /app/dir -o /dist/dir -s dev.json
    electrify package -- <electron-packager-options>
    
    # more info about electron packager options:
    # ~> https://www.npmjs.com/package/electron-packager

Installation

Install meteor-electrify and electron globally:

npm install -g meteor-electrify electron

Alternatively you can install meteor-electrify and electron as dev dependency in you meteor application:

npm install --save-dev meteor-electrify electron

For invoking Electron methods from Meteor, you'll also need to install the meteor-electrify-client package in your project. For more info check Meteor x Electron integration.

Running app

cd /your/meteor/app
electrify

Packaging

cd /your/meteor/app
electrify package

The packaging process is done under the hood using electron-packager npm package. The following variables are automatically set:

  • --out -- comes from cli option [-o, --output]
  • --arch -- comes from system [current arch]
  • --platform -- comes from system [current platform]
  • --app-version -- comes from .electrify/package.json [current app version]
  • --electron-version -- comes from the used electron npm package
  • --tmpdir -- disabled

You can overwrite these default values and also set others by passing custom arguments directly to electron-packager after --, i.e:

cd /your/meteor/app
electrify package -- --icon=/folder/x/img/icon.png --app-version=x.y.z

All the available options for electron-packager can be found here: https://github.com/electron-userland/electron-packager/blob/master/usage.txt

Alternatively you can add an electronPackager object in package.json of the .electrify folder with options for the electron-packager. For the icon property it is possible to provide an object instead of string to define different icons for the different platforms. f.e.

{
  "electronPackager": {
     "icon": {
       "win32": "../something.ico",
       "darwin": "../mac.icns"
     }
  }
}

Notes

The output app will match your current operational system and arch type.

  • To get an OSX app, run it from a Osx machine.
  • To get an Linux 32bit app, run it from a 32bit Linux machine.
  • To get an Linux 64bit app, run it from a 64bit Linux machine.
  • To get an Windows 32bit app, run it from a 32bit Windows machine.
  • To get an Windows 64bit app, run it from a 64bit Windows machine.

Due to NodeJS native bindings of such libraries such as Fibers -- which are mandatory for Meteor, you'll need to have your Meteor app fully working on the desired platform before installing this plugin and packaging your app.

So, at this time, you cannot package your app in a cross-platform fashion from one single OS.

Perhaps you can live with it? :)

DO NOT use options to output for multiple arch/platforms at once, such as --arch=all. It won't work, Electrify can bundle Meteor apps only for the platform you're running on.

NOTICE you can use the --arch and --platform of electrify BUT you won't get a working version for different platforms/archs out of the box. It's possible to make the generated application working with further steps that are not in scope of this project.

Options

  1. -i, --input - Meteor app folder, default is current directory (process.cwd()).
  2. -o, --output - Sets output folder for your packaged app, default is /your/meteor/app/.dist
  3. -s, --settings - Sets path for Meteor settings file, this will be available inside your Meteor code both in development and after being packaged.
  4. -t, --temp - Sets a temp folder other than the system temp folder to prevent moving errors (tmp and destination should be on the same partition)
  5. -a, --arch - Sets a different arch for building NOTICE: only the current arch will work "out of the box"
  6. -p, --platform - Sets a different platform for building NOTICE: only the current platform will work "out of the box"

Structure

You'll notice a new folder called .electrify in your meteor app dir, its structure will be like this:

/your/meteor/app
├── .electrify
│   ├── .gitignore
│   ├── electrify.json
│   ├── index.js
│   └── package.json
├── .meteor
└── ...

This is a pure Electron project, so you can use the whole Electron API from JS files in this folder. Also, you can install electron dependencies and store them in the package.json file. Note that the electrify package is itself a dependency.

See this folder as the desktop layer for your Meteor app. Remember to check out the index.js file, it constains the electrify start/stop usage.

The electrify.json file will hold specific preferences for Electrify, such as plugins and so on. If you want other settings during development than for bundling you can create a electrify.local.json file which will be used instead of electrify.json as long the app is not packaged. Be aware that nothing will be merged.

Config (electrify.json / electrify.local.json)

Following options are available:

  1. preserve_db - Set it to true to preserve database between installs. It works by saving the mongo data dir inside user's data folder, instead of being self contained within the app folder (which gets deleted when new version is installed).
  2. port - Set a port to be used while in dev mode (can also be set by PORT environment variable)
  3. mongo - Possibility to use an external Mongo database (ATTENTION: You cannot hide the credentials safely, be sure you want to give them out!) Alternatively you can use DDP connections to connect to an external Meteor server. This option is an object of following Meteor environment variables:
    • MONGO_URL
    • MONGO_OPLOG_URL
    To allow a bit of safety, you can give a filepath to a javascript file that exports a function that sets the variables. So it is on you to secure the URLs (But it cannot be safe!) Filepath is relative to .electrify folder.
// sample file to define mongo urls
// "mongo": "mongo.js" -> .electrify/mongo.js
/**
* Function to set the mongo related env variables
* @param {object} env set mongo url env var to this object
* @param {object} config parsed electrify.json
* @param {function} done call this if you are done
*/
module.exports = function(env, config, done) {
  env.MONGO_URL = '...';
  done();
}

Customizing

Let's see how one would be able to do a simple SplashScreen:

const { app, BrowserWindow } = require('electron');
const electrify = require('meteor-electrify')(__dirname);

let window;
let splash;

app.on('ready', function() {
  splash = new BrowserWindow({ // starts splash window
    // >>> your configs here
  });
  splash.loadUrl('./splash.html'); // create the ".electrify/splash.html" file
  
  // then move along and start electrify
  electrify.start(function(meteor_root_url) {
    // before opening a new window with your app, destroy the splash window
    splash.close(); // >>> or .destroy(), check what works for you

    // from here on, well, nothing changes..

    // creates a new electron window
    window = new BrowserWindow({
      width: 1200, height: 900,
      nodeIntegration: false // node integration must to be off
    });

    // open up meteor root url
    window.loadURL(meteor_root_url);
  });
});

// ....

Meteor x Electron integration

You can seamlessly call Electron methods from your Meteor's client/server code.

Define your Electron methods inside the .electrify folder:

// `.electrify/index.js` file
electrify.methods({
  'hello.world': function(firstname, lastname, done) {
    // do things with electron api, and then call the `done` callback
    // as ~> done(err, res);
    done(null, 'Hello '+ firstname +' '+ lastname +'!');
   }
});

Then, in your Meteor code (client and server), you can use the meteor-electrify-client to call these methods.

Upgrading

When upgrading to newer versions, it's important to know that:

~> templates

Once these files exists on disk, they will not be overwritten.

  • .electrify/index.js
  • .electrify/package.json
  • .electrify/electrify.json
  • .electrify/.gitignore.json

~> api

As these files above will never be overwritten, in case of any API changes that needs adjustments, these will have to be made manually.

~> version matching

Always keep the same electrify version in your Meteor, and inside the .electrify folder, as per specified in .electrify/package.json file.

Questions?

Do not open issues, use the chat channel instead.

Join the chat at https://gitter.im/arboleya/electrify

Problems?

Please make sure your are always up to date before opening an issue. Follow the released fixes through the HISTORY.md file.

If you find any problem, please open a meaningful issue describing in detail how to reproduce the problem, which platform/os/arch type you're using, as well as the version of Meteor and Electrify, and any other info you may find usefull.

License

The MIT License (MIT)

Copyright (c) 2017-2019 Sebastian Große Electrify originally created by Copyright (c) 2015 Anderson Arboleya